Real Estate and *stuff *

Real Estate and *stuff *

A real person helping real people with real estate

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Two Family House at 353 Parker St., Gardner – Only $139,999!

February 8, 2016

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Looking for a super affordable 2-family house? Well, look no further! This two family house is located at 353 Parker Street in Gardner and comes with a sizable driveway and a yard. Both units include 2 or 3 bedrooms, open floor plan and hardwood floors. This house is entirely move-in-ready and has been updated in terms of gas heat, electrical, plumbing and roof. Not a short sale, but looking to close quickly, all this and more for only $139,999! Call us today!

2 Bedroom Condo with wooded views

December 8, 2015

20151017_101018Great commuter location!  Affordable two bedroom condo has prime placement in this building with wooded views from the two bedrooms.  Established complex in Framingham and low condo fees that include hot water, water/sewer and parking for 2 cars.  PETS ALLOWED!

This is a great choice for a first purchase as the commuter rails is close by as well as a public beach and park.  Or pick it up as a investment as it has a strong rental history.  Either way – BUY IT!

137 Winthrop Unit 11A Framingham

MLS:  71920651 $130,000

New rental in Shrewsbury!

February 1, 2012 2 Comments

This one bedroom condo in Shrewsbury Commons is all about VALUE and “living life”! Great commuting location and the rent includes 2 parking spaces, 2 pools, in building laundry, library with free wifi, tennis courts, playground and gym! They take care of the snow removal, grass cutting and hot water. All you have to worry about is what’s in the fridge to cook for dinner! Nice 3rd floor location gives a great view from the balcony. This is great place to call HOME at the end of the day!

Rent includes:

2 parking spaces

hot water

water/sewer

Use of 2 swimming pools

Use of gym

Use of library with free wifi

Storage space

Playground

Tennis courts

Laundry in the building

Snow plowing

 

The Whales…Wayland to Worcester and back with lipstick pigs

November 11, 2011

Wow…the Whales had quite the day!  Part of the huge success I have as a realtor can be attributed to the weekly sales team meeting I have with the 7 Hills BNI Group.  Each week we meet and have a chance to discuss what we do as professionals in our business and then part ways to pass referrals throughout the next six days.  (A huge thanks to Pam Crawford at RE/MAX Professional Associates for getting me started – the support and eduction I have with the fantastic group of people I work with is sometimes staggering!)

But back the Whales…

Fred and Ethel started the morning at 6am with a big cup of coffee and the laptop.  A quick blog post about the open house this Sunday at 72 Glenwood Rutland.  Followed by emails, Craigslist postings, a listing agreement, finalizing a lease agreement for later and verifying that an auction company has received the offer on the short sale listing so we can try to hold off the auction at the end of the month.  And then they are off!

 

Egads…they did not get the offer and YET AGAIN the “find me, fax me” fax upload function is not working!  Off to Office Max for Fred and Ethel to get that offer in!  Luckily there is one nearby!  Fred and Ethel make a note to call into the accessline on Monday morning and get the fax function corrected.  $7.68 for a five page fax is just not okay!

 

 

 

Fred and Ethel with meet with Sonia and Dave at their 2 bedroom condo in Marlborough to list it.  Sonia and Dave have outgrown their space and want to move into a big home.  Fred and Ethel played with their dog Lilly and had a quick game of “what’s in my room” with their daughter before signing the listing agreement and photographing the condo.

 

Now that the sale portion of Sonia and Dave’s day is done, they take off with their daughter, her friend, faithful dog Lilly in one car and Fred and Ethel get in the jeep with me to take a look at a few houses to begin their search.  They are hoping to find the “diamond in the rough” on a lake and we look at lake front in Wayland.  Fred and Ethel say “TEAR DOWN” and wonder if the plot shape will allow a nice 2 to 3 bedroom home to be built after this one has a date with a bulldozer!

 

Off to the next lake house in Wayland.  Much nicer but something is amiss.  The listing was on the market for 129,000 then off for a week and then put back on the market at 179,000.  Fred and Ethel review the house and all the major systems but find no reason for the $50k price increase.  It’s an odd layout and Sonia and Dave decide to call it a day.   The whales are off to stop back home and post up their condo listing.

 

Fred and Ethel sort through the pictures, call on getting a copy of the condo docs and verify all the information with public records.  Inputting the listing into MLS takes them about an hour total with the pictures.  From here, the magic internet will spread the listing to Realtor.com, Remax.com, Trulia, Zillow, amymullenrealestate.com and beyond.  Fred and Ethel will give it 24 hours to populate and then start to revisit the sites to make adjustments and monitor the activity.  This happens daily for all the listings and helps keep them at the top of any buyer’s home search!

 

Again with more coffee…these Whales are picky too…they said something about Starbucks??!!??  Really?

 

 

Fred and Ethel rush out of the house to make a home inspection in Worcester at 4pm with a buyer.  Egads…it didn’t go well.  The house has been completely redone on the inside and is an investor flip from a foreclosure purchase.  As the home inspector says…”It’s lipstick on a pig.  Take off the lipstick and it’s still a pig.”  Adam Camosse is a great home inspector and my buyer thinks the world of him.  We are waiting to find out why the house is held together in the attic with steel cables.  I don’t think we’ll like the answer.

A quick stop at the mail box to drop some prospecting letters in the mail for the morning.  Fred and Ethel learn the value of being “the first kid on the block” with expired listings!

 

Last appointment of the day!  Fred and Ethel meet the new tenants Mike and Amy at the rental listing in Marlborough to do a walk through of the apartment and sign their lease.  The client Lynne is very excited about her new tenants and Fred and Ethel are shown here pulling up the lawn sign!

 

*whew* so the whales had a huge day!  Listed, closed, viewed, inspected, prospected, blogged and of course took calls and meet new people!  They decided that their favorite part of the job was meeting new people and helping them!

If you want to learn more about Fred and Ethel, BNI and RE/MAX – let me know!

 

 

True meanings of real-estate buzzwords

November 16, 2010

I really enjoyed this post that was on MSN Real Estate.  It captures what so many home buyers and apartment hunters face every day while they are looking at their next new possible home.  Sometimes they can be funny – but not when you’ve spent the time to make the appointment and view the home.  Want to have some fun with it though?  Go here and do some random searches to see how many of these buzzwords you can find.  Check out the pictures and see if they relate to the article.

Nothing is ever what it seems, especially real estate.

Chances are that anyone who has looked to rent an apartment or buy a home has at some point been disappointed to find that the property barely resembled what was advertised in the real-estate listing. Perhaps the third bedroom turned out to be a closet or the kitchen that was supposed to be fit for a gourmet chef barely fit a microwave and a fold-up chair.

While real-estate agents may not like to admit it, much of this stems from their deliberate attempt to put a positive spin on the property in real-estate listings, even if that means stretching the truth.

“It’s a numbers game. For those who do it, the goal is to get people to the property and hope they’ll buy it,” says Paul Campano, senior sales associate at Keller Williams Realty in Massachusetts.

As Campano acknowledges, however, he’s unsure how sound the logic behind this method is because prospective tenants will likely just see the place and walk away.

“I’d much rather underpromise and overdeliver,” he says.

Making homeowners happy

As it turns out, there is another big motivation that drives agents to put out dubious listings.

“You have to keep in mind that the agents report to the homeowner or the landlord,” says Tara-Nicholle Nelson, consumer educator for Trulia.com, an online real-estate search engine, and a former real-estate agent herself. “These days, they audit all of the agent’s online marketing, and they want to make sure that the agent is doing their job to market the home in its very best light. So the agent, in turn, is also concerned that they are marketing the property well enough for their client.”

The result is a slew of real-estate listings that exaggerate the good parts of a property and either omit the flaws or couch them in buzzwords and phrases that might have multiple misleading meanings. And according to those familiar with the real-estate industry, these sorts of deceptive listings have become more common during these difficult economic times as agents and landlords have grown more desperate to attract buyers.

We spoke with several real-estate experts to find out the real meaning behind these buzzwords and phrases so that you know what to look out for and how to read between the lines of a listing.

‘Cozy’

It may seem like a harmless word, but it spells trouble when used as an adjective in a real-estate listing, says Paul Campano of Keller Williams Realty.

“Cozy is always a potentially dangerous word. It’s really not describing any physical characteristic. Instead, it’s likely a signal of a very tight space,” he says.

So, for example, if you see the word “cozy” next to bedroom, Campano says it probably means it’s time to consider a twin or full-size bed, rather than something larger.

Other buzzwords that tend to mean the same thing include “cottage” and “intimate.”

‘Needs some work’

Every home and apartment needs some fixing up after it has been lived in for a while, but the question is how much.

“My general rule of thumb is that homes are generally in a little worse condition than the listing’s language would indicate,” says Tara-Nicholle Nelson of Trulia.com. “If it says it needs TLC, it’s probably more of a handyman’s special; if it says it’s a handyman’s special, it probably needs contractor work. And when agents express in a listing that a home needs a whole lot of work, then it probably needs a whole lot of work.”

Moreover, as Nelson points out, buyers and renters should never expect that a property that “needs some work” requires only a small touch-up job.

“If that’s all it needed, a lot of homeowners and agents would do that themselves to make the property more competitive on the market,” she says.

‘Modern’

On the other hand, many listings will highlight just how much work has been done to fix up a place over the years, using buzzwords such as “modern,” “updated” and “remodeled.” It’s important to put these words into perspective.

“People take a lot of liberty with the degree of renovation they’ve done,” says Paul Campano of Keller Williams Realty. “I guess when you’re talking about homes that are 100 years old, a kitchen renovated in the 1970s is modern by comparison, but I think that word lends itself to a great degree of interpretation.”

Tara-Nicholle Nelson of Trulia.com echoes this point: “It’s very common to see these words on homes that have ’40s construction or older that were remodeled in the 1980s. But they are not really up-to-date, so you are still pretty much going to have to redo the home.”

‘Penthouse’

Many people dream of living in a penthouse of their own, but just because a listing says penthouse doesn’t mean it’s exactly that, Paul Campano says.

“There are rooms where, yes, it’s the top unit, so it’s technically a penthouse, but the room itself has no view,” he says. “So it’s a very grandiose way to describe what is just the top floor.”

In this sense, it’s not untrue, but rather misleading.

‘Tree-top view’

Similarly, apartment hunters should be wary when they see the phrase “tree-top view” in a listing.

“If the apartment is on a high floor or has a great view, the listing will mention it,” says Diane Saatchi, senior vice president with Saunders & Associates Realty in Bridgehampton, N.Y. “But a tree-top view usually means you have a view from the second or third floor, which could be nicer than looking at a shaft, but what you want is to be above the trees.”

‘Steps from …’

Anyone who has ever looked for real estate in New York City is likely familiar with the phrase “steps from…” as in, this apartment is “steps from Columbia University” when it is really 70 blocks away in Washington Heights. The same is true in other cities and locations.

“Neighborhood proximity is a big red flag,” says Paul Campano, who markets real estate in Boston. “I’ve seen places listed as being in Davis Square because it’s become a very trendy place. And yeah, they’re close, if you consider a mile and a half close.”

When in doubt, the best thing to do is get the address of the property in question and plug it into an online mapping service to find out exactly where it is and what is nearby.

‘Charming’

It’s a nice word, but according to Diane Saatchi, senior vice president with Saunders & Associates Realty, it usually means only one thing: The house is old. Very old.

‘Tranquil’ versus ‘convenient’

Who doesn’t want a bit of peacefulness in their home? Unfortunately, even tranquility comes with a downside.

“Tranquil may mean that it’s just not near anything that you care about, that it’s kind of far away from any amenities or public transportation and stuff like that,” Tara-Nicholle Nelson says. By the same token, when a listing says the property is in a “convenient” location, that may mean it’s too close to those things and therefore too noisy.

Nelson says, however, that this is one example where buyers and renters have to exercise some common sense.

“I’ve worked with people who want a quiet place that takes them only 10 minutes to get to work,” she says. “But you can’t have it both ways. There are definitely trade-offs.”

‘FSBO’

Real-estate listings are often full of jargon and abbreviations, but one that should cause house hunters to think twice is FSBO, meaning for sale by owner.

“People tend to think there’s an opportunity to save money because there’s no agent involved, but actually FSBO should be a little bit of a red flag,” Trulia.com’s Tara-Nicholle Nelson says. That’s because homeowners looking to sell their property often have “very unrealistic expectations about pricing and other things.” These expectations are usually tempered by the real-estate agent working with them, but without an agent there, you may have to deal directly with the owner’s outsized expectations.

Sins of omission

Ultimately, the biggest red flags in real-estate listings may be the descriptions that the seller leaves out.

“If it’s better for a home to be downtown and the listing doesn’t say that, then you know the home is far away from there,” says Diane Saatchi of Saunders & Associates Realty. “If a house doesn’t have much light, then the listing won’t mention light-filled rooms. And if the property is on the ground floor, the listing probably won’t mention it.”

The photographs

Aside from the misleading words, it’s also important to be mindful of the potentially misleading photographs that accompany real-estate listings.

“Photographs can be very deceiving. There are wide-angle lenses that can make spaces seem bigger than they are,” Paul Campano says.

On top of that, he notes there are “virtual staging” companies that will “virtually impose furniture into a photo of the space,” in order to make it look more filled-in, even if those pieces of furniture might not fit into the room in real life.

By Seth Fiegerman of MainStreet

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