Real Estate and *stuff *

Real Estate and *stuff *

A real person helping real people with real estate

You can scroll the shelf using and keys

New listing! 4 bed, 2 bath in Milford – minutes from EMC and 495 in a great family area

December 7, 2010

Amazing space in this multi-level with over 2k sq ft of living space and a possible in-law in the finished basement. Family room and open concept living/dining/kitchen on the main level with a beautiful screened-in porch.

This is a great space for your family with easy access to 495 and EMC. The street only has four houses on it so there is almost no traffic.

The four bedrooms and possible in-law allow for a growing family and with the many recent improvements (roof, windows, insulated garage, exterior paint) you’ll have nothing to do but ENJOY your weekends with them!

You should see this house! It’s priced right and is a great find! To see a video tour on my youtube site go here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYiLWwiTsa8

Features List
• Catherdral Ceilings • Skylights • New Roof
• New Paint • Insulated garage • Finished basement
• 4 bedrooms • Poss. In-Law • 2000+ sq feet
• Quiet street • Minutes from EMC • Minutes from 495
• Family room • Screened-in porch • New windows
• Well kept • Open concept • Hardwood

High Tech Gift Ideas – Programmable Showers are a Low-Cost Luxury

December 7, 2010

Who doesn’t like the perfect shower?  Especially on a cold morning like this!

Programmable showers feature easy-to-use digital controls that let each member of the family pre-set their ideal water temperature, pressure, and even the type of spray—from a steady stream to pulsating jets. The waterproof control panel mounts right on the shower wall where you can alter any setting at the touch of a button.

Luxurious, programmable showers suit nearly every budget, too, ranging from about $290 for a basic unit to $3,500 and up for one with lots of features and special finishes. Installation costs for a programmable shower will vary widely, depending on your region and whether you’re remodeling or building new.

Programmable shower goodies

  • Digital interface with multiple-user presets. This is the brains of a custom shower, allowing you to select and program a shower experience scenario into the memory. After the initial setup, push a button to recall user presets.
  • Thermostatic shower valves. Controlled by the digital interface, these devices regulate the mix of hot and cold water so you enjoy a constant temperature, even if the hot water runs low in the tank. If cold water pressure drops suddenly, valves are designed to shut off the water to prevent scalding.
  • Adjustable body sprays/massage jets. Installed in the shower wall at varying heights, these jets are directionally adjustable and can also provide a variety of water pressures and pulsations.

For the optimum custom shower experience, plan to install a water heater that’s dedicated to your shower. A 50-gallon tank supplies 8 minutes of hot water to a shower with four shower heads. For more showering time and additional outlets, purchase a 100-gallon water tank.

Two innovative custom showers

  • The Vigo Shower Massage Panel is a flat panel with six fully adjustable body spray massage jets, an integrated thermostatic valve, a fog-free mirror, and an adjustable multi-functional shower head with a 60-inch, chrome-plated brass hose. A tub filler located at the bottom of the shower panel makes this a good choice for a shower/tub combination. The panel sells for about $360.
  • The Moen ioDigital Vertical Spa, comes in an oil-rubbed bronze finish, and offers four programmable presets, a 7-inch rainshower shower head, four body sprays, and an LCD screen interface that displays the water temperature. An optional remote control is also available. The unit retails for about $3,400.

This is the most affordable unit I found with a great name:  MOEN T9031 but this model is more stylish (in my opinion) MOEN Vestige.  Does anyone have one of these?  I would be interested in hearing what the practical application is!

New listing! Historic 5 bed, 2 bath home in Palmer

December 6, 2010

Step back in time with this historic house in downtown Palmer. Former home of John Brown, Town Clerk, this 5 bed, 2 bath home is just waiting for you to come in and make it shine!

Bring your imagination as you stroll on the hardwood floors and imagine what it could be! Many updates done already but this home needs skilled labor of love to bring it back to it’s original pride. Stained glass windows, intricate ceiling moldings, hardwood floors and a feel for yester-year will get your mind racing with possibilities. Wrap around Farmer’s Porch adds to the charm of this historic house.

There is an income producing in-law apartment upstairs complete with kitchen and full bath. Keep it as extra income or convert back into the house!

In a fantastic location for a home office with easy highway access and a large parking area. Directly across the street from the post office and around the corner from the school. This is an ideal location for a busy family and this house has the space for it! It qualifies for USDA 100% financing!

To see a full description click here and call or email for more information or a showing.  Stay tuned for another listing on Tuesday!

Kitchen Cabinets in Motion: Even the Jetsons Would be Impressed

December 4, 2010

Wow!  I want THESE cabinets in my kitchen!  Oh yeah…and the magic food preparation that the Jetson had!

Cabinets in motion obey hand signals to open doors, and touch-sensitive drawers glide out with the brush of a fingertip.

Custom cabinet company Anvil Cabinet and Mill offers a creative approach with Anvil Motion, a luxury custom line with ultra-modern automated features that you can dress in any style.

  • Sliding doors. Motion sensors detect the wave of your hand near the cabinet you want to access and the panels comprising the door slide upward to reveal the contents. Wave your hand again and the door closes. Doors can also hide integrated top-of-the-line appliances and slide open when you need them.
  • Dynamic drawers. Simply touch the front of the drawer that you want to access, and it glides open. Touch it again and it closes.
  • Fingerprint security. You can also integrate biometric locks, which “recognize” your fingerprint and allow only authorized users access to the contents, such as prescriptions, knives, liquor, or valuables.
  • Price points. All these high-tech bells and whistles come at a cost, of course. Expect to pay 40% to 70% more for automated cabinetry than you would standard swinging door cabinets.

So who is getting me these for Christmas?

Holiday lights…energy saving LEDs and a gift card!

November 30, 2010 1 Comment

That’s it…I am decorating with every light strand I can find!  Here is some great information on the energy costs (or lack of energy costs) associated with LED Christmas lights and a holiday lighting contest!  Realtor.com has a contest on their Facebook page with a $250 gift card prize!  (see links at the end of the blog)

Newer decorations that use LED lights are especially light on the pocketbook. Even if you take your holiday decorations to the extreme, you might see little change in your utility bill if you use LED lights. )If you’re reluctant to deck your halls for the holidays because of your own or others’ economic hardships, you may be happy to hear that lighting up for the festivities doesn’t cost nearly as much as it used to.

According to MarketWatch, advancements in energy efficiency have led to big savings for consumers, who now can expect to spend just $1.26 a month to light, for five hours a night, a 70-watt decoration such as an inflatable snow globe that uses LED lighting.

You might not be so lucky if you go the route of the Griswolds from “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation,” since the older, bigger bulbs tend to suck up quite a bit more energy. But if all you need is one strand of 50 minilights on for five hours a night, that’ll put you back 40 cents a month. And if you indulge in the LED strand, it’ll cost just 7 cents a month, MarketWatch reports.

Maybe that’s helping convince more people that it’s time to buy some new holiday decor.

MarketWatch also writes that according to a survey from the National Retail Federation, fewer people, at 31.5%, plan to use the same decorations they used last year, compared with 34% from a similar poll in 2009. Online and brick-and-mortar retailers have seen similar signs of a growth in holiday decor sales.

So if you plan on taking your holiday decorations to the next level this year, why not see if they’re among the nation’s best?

Realtor.com is asking homeowners to upload images of their holiday decorations to its Facebook page, and will award the two homes with the best decorations each a $250 gift card for Bed Bath & Beyond.

Think your home has what it takes to win? Or do you plan to pass on the decorations this year because of utility costs or other reasons?

Don’t want to upload your pictures or join their Facebook page…just email me your pictures with your name and I will make sure it gets in – amymullen@remax.net

How the Foreclosure Crisis Costs You Money

November 27, 2010

Foreclosure may seem like someone else’s problem, but when it happens in your neighborhood, it’s going to cost you money, too.

Each foreclosure within 660 feet (1/8th mile) of your house can drop your home’s value by a factor of almost 0.75%, according to the Center for Responsible Lending, a consumer watchdog group.

The closer a foreclosure is to your house, the bigger the impact. A university of Connecticut study suggests one foreclosure within 300 feet of your home will lower your property value by 1%.

If you live in a neighborhood with few vacant homes and a foreclosure occurs within 250 feet, a University of California, Berkeley study suggests you could lose 2.2% of your home value.

Do troubled owners deserve help?

Some people think the homeowners facing foreclosure got themselves into trouble because they bought more house than they could afford with toxic mortgages for which they never should have been approved. At least one study of the 2007 and 2008 foreclosure crisis suggests that was indeed the case.

Foreclosures become comparable sales

Even if you don’t feel compassion for those facing foreclosure, you might feel sorry for yourself. Homebuyers and mortgage lenders use foreclosures as comparable properties to value your home when you sell or refinance. And the discount at which foreclosures sell is a hefty 27% on average.

Although most appraisers adjust the value of your home upward compared with a foreclosure, a homebuyer may consider the foreclosure equally valuable to your home and base his offer on that instead of your property’s real worth. If that happens, your real estate agent can argue that non-distress sale comparables and better condition make your property worth more.

Foreclosures lower tax revenues

Drops in property values brought on by foreclosures don’t just hurt your property value; they also cut away at the whole property tax base, the source of revenue for local government. Elected officials then have to either charge you higher taxes or cut services to make up for the shortfall.

What you can do about foreclosures

To limit foreclosure damage in your community, ask local officials to pass laws forcing lenders to maintain the properties they now own and to pay the taxes and homeowners association dues on them.

If the town isn’t forcing lenders to maintain a foreclosure in your neighborhood, organize a volunteer effort to cut and trim the shrubs at vacant houses on a round-robin basis, and report vandals or squatters to the police. A well-kept foreclosed home will attract more buyers than one with a weed-filled yard. Take trespassing laws into account as you organize your effort.

If you’re selling or refinancing and the appraiser uses foreclosures as comparable sales to determine the value of your property, ask your real estate agent to make sure the appraiser accounts for the distressed nature of those sales and the condition of the properties as they compare to yours. Ask your agent to seek out other comparable sales the appraiser might have missed, which show your home in a much better light.

By: Lew Sichelman
Syndicated housing columnist Lew Sichelman lives in a ranch house on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay and has been writing about housing for more than 40 years.

Helping out a For Sale By Owner in my neighborhood this weekend…stop in to this incredible open house

November 20, 2010

Come see this amazing house in a very desirable location on the Marlborough/Sudbury line. It’s at the end of the cul-de-sac which means you can enjoy the benefit of the neighborhood while still having your privacy. The lot is nearly twice the size of the rest with trees and no traffic (imagine!).

The house has great flow with high ceilings, 10 rooms and 4 bedrooms.  The basement is nearly finished with full sized windows for daylight and plumbed for a second kitchen (use your creativity and imagination – this space can be anything from an in-law to the best game room/man town in the area).

Master bedroom has it’s own sitting room and throughout the house you’ll find small unique touches such as cut-outs and bump-outs that make this house a champion.

Stop in and see for yourself – this is not a drive-by (because you can’t).

21 Balcom Road
Marlborough
Noon to 1:30

It is For Sale By Owner but I am helping out with this open house because I live in Marlborough myself and want to see my community and neighbors succeed!

For more information, directions or to make an offer, please contact me.

When is Foreclosure Removed from Your Credit Report?

November 19, 2010

Use this handy guide to figure out how quickly you can buy a home after a major financial setback when applying for a loan through FHA, Fannie Mae, or Freddie Mac.

Government entities set guidelines for credit events

The chart below outlines the criteria that government entities FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac follow for major credit-busting events, including foreclosure. Although FHA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac aren’t direct lenders, they wield a lot of behind-the-scenes influence by working with banks to guarantee loans and help lenders free up capital to provide more mortgages.

One of these entities may have made your loan possible without you even knowing it. Although for the most part banks make loans to whomever they want, they’ll likely find themselves following FHA, Fannie Mae, or Freddie Mac guidelines at a minimum in order to keep working with these useful partners.

Some lenders may have more stringent policies and others, willing to take greater risks, may work outside these entities and offer more liberal lending policies.

How to read the chart

This chart offers summaries of what can be complex rules and regulations. So:

1. Look to professionals, such as a bankruptcy lawyer and a CPA specializing in bankruptcy provisions, before making major financial decisions.

2. For HUD-approved counselors, go to http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm. You can also call 1-888-995-HOPE for help from the Homeownership Preservation Foundation.

3. Understand what “extenuating circumstances” means in each case:

FHA: An event that was out of the borrower’s control that made a significant impact on the borrower’s finances and led to bankruptcy or foreclosure.

Fannie Mae: A nonrecurring event that’s beyond the borrower’s control that results in a sudden, significant, and prolonged reduction in income or a catastrophic increase in financial obligations.

Freddie Mac: A nonrecurring or isolated circumstance, or set of circumstances, that was beyond the borrower’s control and that significantly reduced income and/or increased expenses and rendered the borrower unable to repay obligations as agreed, resulting in significant adverse or derogatory credit information.

FHA Fannie Mae Freddie Mac
Foreclosure •3-year wait.
•Reduced wait if borrower has re-established good credit and can show extenuating circumstances.
•7-year wait from the completed foreclosure sale date.
•3-year wait if borrower can show extenuating circumstances (additional underwriting requirements apply for 4 years after 3-year waiting period).
•7-year wait for a second home, investment opportunity, or cash-out refinancing.
•5-year wait from the completed foreclosure sale date.
•3-year wait if borrower can show extenuating circumstances.
Short Sale •No wait if not in default.
•3-year wait if in default at closing of short sale.
•Reduced wait if borrower has re-established good credit and can show extenuating circumstances.
•2-year wait if the borrower puts 20% or more down.
•4-year wait if the borrower puts 10-20% down.
•7-year wait if the borrower puts less than 10% down.
•2-year wait time if borrower can show extenuating circumstances and puts 10% or more down.
•4-year wait.
•2-year wait if borrower can show extenuating circumstances.
Deed in lieu of foreclosure •Same as FHA’s foreclosure policy. •Same as Fannie’s short sale policy. •Same as Freddie’s short sale policy.
Bankruptcy Chapter 7 (liquidation):
•2-year wait from the discharge date of the bankruptcy.
•1-2 year wait if borrower can show extenuating circumstances.

Chapter 13 (repayment plan):
•1-year wait from the discharge date of the bankruptcy.

Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 (reorganization, usually involving corporations or partnerships):
•4-year wait from the discharge or dismissal date of the bankruptcy.
•2-year wait from the discharge or dismissal date may be accepted if borrower can show extenuating circumstances.

Chapter 13:
•2-year wait from the discharge date or 4-year wait  from the dismissal date.
•2-year wait for a dismissal if borrower can show extenuating circumstances.

Multiple bankruptcies:
•5-year wait if the borrower has filed more than one bankruptcy petition in the past 7 years.
•3-year wait if borrower can show extenuating circumstances.

Chapter 7 or Chapter 11:
•Same as Fannie’s bankruptcy policy.

Chapter 13:
•2-year wait from the discharge date of the bankruptcy.
•2-year wait from the discharge or dismissal date of the bankruptcy if borrower can show extenuating circumstances.

Multiple bankruptcies:
•Same as Fannie Mae’s policy for multiple bankruptcies.

Source: FHA Handbook, Fannie Mae Selling Guide, Freddie Mac Selling Guide

Please note that in most cases a short Sale is better than a foreclosure.  If you or someone you know (a friend or family member) is currently faced with this situation, urge them to find out what their options are.  RE/MAX Professional Associates has a short sale team that is ready to review their situation and help.  Call (508-784-0504) or email me (amymullen@remax.net) to find out more information.

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

Looking for your next great home?  Go here!

The weekend…open houses with a twist!

November 12, 2010

It is the weekend and there are only a few more prime open house days left….why not make the most of it!  This weekend, my open houses will include a special visitor, Barry Little from Omega Mortgage Corporation (www.massloaninfo.com).

Barry will be on-site to speak with our attendees about the mortgage process and has offered to do free pre-qualifications for people who are not already pre-qualified.

Stop in…chat about your home search and find out what’s new in the mortgage world while checking-out our great homes for sale.  Have you heard of USDA 100%?  I hadn’t either until today and Sunday’s open house at 298 New Boston Road in Sturbridge qualifies!

Saturday:  Noon to 2pm
26-2 Maple Street in Auburn

This is SPACE!  This townhouse is a colonial in disguise!  Three floors of living with three bedrooms and a possible fourth bedroom in the basement.  Well taken care of with low HOA fees.  Extremely commuter friendly location yet PRIVATE and QUIET.  Seriously…you’ll be surprised!

Sunday:  Noon to 2pm
298 New Boston Road Sturbridge

Yes!  Again!  People LOVE to come and see this very unique house!  Log cabin on nearly five acres of land that borders Wells State Park.  You have to see how nice the sun room is off the back deck in the afternoon.  This home has an open floor plan and so many possibilities.  The sellers are MOTIVATED and waiting for the perfect offer!

We hope to see you there!