Translate

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Demolition underway at former Miami Herald building

From TheRealDeal.com

The former Miami Herald building officially turned its last page Monday morning, as demolition commenced at the one-time home of the media outlet. The site will eventually give way to a resort and residential complex.
herald
Miami Herald building under demolition
 (Credit: exMiami)
The 14-acre site, purchased for $236 million by Malaysian gambling giant Genting in 2011, will house a mix of condo towers, a 500-room hotel and ground-floor commercial space for shops and restaurants. Genting originally planned to build a mega-resort casino on the property located between MacArthur and Venetian causeways on Biscayne Bay, but squashed its proposal after facing a backlash over the project’s size.
Attempts to change Florida’s gambling law to allow for an on-site casino have been unsuccessful. [Miami Herald] – Kerry Barger

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

James Van Der Beek Sells North Hollywood Home to Focus on New Show

AUTHOR:CATHERINE SHERMAN 
ZILLOW

Source: IMDb
Source: IMDb
James Van Der Beek isn’t just focused on “Friends With Better Lives.” The actor, who plays Will Stokes in the new CBS comedy series, is also focused on his better home after selling his North Hollywood investment property for $1.155 million.
Van Der Beek closed the deal Monday, listing agent Kofi Natei Nartey of The Agency confirms. The home first hit the for-sale market in August for $1.295 million and quickly received two price cuts. Van Der Beek, who is best-known for his role on “Dawson’s Creek,” was motivated to sell the place before starting his new show, Nartey explained.
Although the actor has been living in another Los Angeles-area home for several years, the 4-bedroom, 3-bath house is suited to be a primary residence. Highlights include vaulted ceilings with exposed beams, an open kitchen with high-end appliances, a master spa and steam shower, and a heated Pebble Tec pool.
“This house has an amazing great room, open floor plan and great energy throughout,” Nartey said in a previous interview. “It’s perfect for a family or someone who needs the perfect creative space.”
While Van Der Beek ended up with $140,000 less than his initial ask, he still sold the place for more than he bought it for in 2006 and more than the Valley Village median home value of $718,300.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Interior House Painting Tips & Painting Techniques for the Perfect Paint Job

From TheFamilyHandyman.com


Mix several cans of paint in a large bucket for a consistent color throughout the room


Paint color may vary slightly from one can to the next. If you have to open a new can in the middle of a wall, the difference may be noticeable. Mixing the paints together eliminates the problem. It’s best to estimate the amount of paint you’ll need and mix it in a 5-gallon bucket (a process called “boxing”).
When coverage is difficult to estimate, add more rather than less. You can always pour the leftover back into cans. For large jobs, use the bucket and a roller screen rather than a roller tray. It’s much faster to load your roller with the screen than to use a roller pan. Simply dunk the roller into the paint bucket, then roll it along the screen until it stops dripping.
Mix paint in a large bucket Once paint is dry, you can’t just pull the tape off the trim.Paint forms a film between the wall and the tape, and
removing the tape tears pieces of dried paint off the wall..
So before pulling off the tape, cut it loose.
Wait for the paint to completely dry, at least 24 hours, then use a sharp utility knife or box cutter knife to slice through the film. Start in an inconspicuous area to make sure the paint is hard enough to slice cleanly. If you cut the paint while it’s still gummy, you’ll make a mess. As you cut the paint, pull up the tape at a 45-degree angle.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

Construction Loan Info

FROM THE SUPERPAGES.COM
MortgageTechnically speaking, a mortgage construction loan is any loan where the money borrowed is used for construction. However, a mortgage construction loan is a term-of-art that is usually only used for special types of mortgages. This industry-specific definition for a mortgage construction loan refers to a loan in which the collateral is the value that will exist once the property is built.
How Does a Construction Loan Work?
Mortgage debt is usually considered secured debt because the home or property purchased with the money lent serves as collateral. However, in the case of a construction loan, the property does not exist yet. Therefore, the loan is based on the value of the property once it is finished.
Mortgage construction loans are available in both residential and business settings. Residential buyers can use a construction loan to finance a new-home build. The amount of money that the lender lends them is based upon the estimated value of the home once it is complete and this money is used to build the home.
Commercial buyers can also take construction loans to build property that they intend to sell immediately upon completion or property that they intend to use to generate a profit. Again, the loan amount granted is based on the value of the completed project, not on the current worth of the project.
Funds are distributed, usually directly to the contractor or person building the project, at set intervals during the construction process. This payment arrangement and schedule must be negotiated between the lender, buyer and contractor prior to issuing the construction loan.
After the project is completed, the mortgage construction loan usually converts into a standard mortgage, with the newly constructed building or home serving as the collateral for the now-secured loan.
Qualifying for a Construction Loan
Construction loans can be risky for the lender, as the estimated value of the finished product is only speculative. Many lenders require buyers to come up with a large cash sum and use that money to partially finance the project. Most lenders also require good-to-excellent credit from buyers before a buyer can qualify for a mortgage construction loan.
Lenders will also want to ensure that you can afford to pay the mortgage payments once the loan converts into a standard mortgage. Therefore, they will usually verify your monthly income and do calculations to determine your debt-to-income ration and your ability to ultimately pay back the mortgage. This analysis is similar to the type done any time you take a mortgage, although lenders may be more stringent in their guidelines when issuing a mortgage construction loan due to the increased risk associated with a speculative loan.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Whimsical Disney Desert Retreat for Sale

AUTHOR:EMILY HEFFTER
ZILLOW

First there was Disneyland. And then there was the zip line Walt Disney installed at this Palm Desert weekend retreat for his A-list friends. Among the famous stars who partied at this small hillside house while Walt Disney owned it in the 1950s and 60s: Humphrey Bogart, Bob Hope, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz.
The 1-bedroom, 1.5-bath, 1,440-square-foot home sits high above the Coachella Valley at 56160 Las Rocas in Mountain Center, CA. Its rear wall is all windows overlooking the view. Its whimsical features include red kitchen cabinets and a feature not present when Disney owned it: the elaborate ceiling fan system featured in the classic film Casablanca.
Disney and his movie-star friends used to drive to the house — then even smaller before a 1970 remodel — and sleep out under the stars in sleeping bags, said Jason Evans, the listing agent for the home with Coldwell Banker’s Steve and Geri Downs Team.
Frank Sinatra owned a house in the neighborhood, and Disney’s retreat was a Rat Pack party pad.
At some point, Disney installed a concrete pad and a zip line, so he and his friends could zoom through the desert.
The home is listed for only $535,000, and its big selling point is not the home with its Disney history, but the 2.79-acre property which sits at 3,000-feet with grand views of the Coachella Valley. The neighborhood is full of much larger homes, and Evans expects the new owner might tear down the Disney retreat to make way for more square footage.
“It’s not really the size” of the house, Evans said. “It’s the view and the history. It just takes your breath away when you walk into the house.”

Friday, April 25, 2014

Tips for Moving Furniture

From The FamilyHandymancom

“Hook” chairs around corners

Sideways carry
A large easy chair can be the opposite of easy to move. Follow the example of pro movers and “hook” large chairs around corners. Turn the chair on its side so it looks like an “L” and move it back-first through the doorway. Then curl it (hook it) around the door frame and slip it through.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Miami is one of the most expensive places to pay rent

THE NEW YORK TIMES


For rent and utilities to be considered affordable, they are supposed to take up no more than 30 percent of a household’s income. But that goal is increasingly unattainable for middle-income families as a tightening market pushes up rents ever faster, outrunning modest rises in pay.
The strain is not limited to the usual high-cost cities like New York and San Francisco. An analysis for The New York Times by Zillow, the real estate website, found 90 cities where the median rent — not including utilities — was more than 30 percent of the median gross income.
One of the most expensive cities for renters is Miami, where rents, on average, consume 43 percent of the typical household income, up from a historical average of just more than a quarter. Zillow calculated the historical average using data from 1985 to 2000.
Nationally, half of all renters are now spending more than 30 percent of their income on housing, according to a comprehensive Harvard study, up from 38 percent of renters in 2000. In December, Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan declared “the worst rental affordability crisis that this country has ever known.”
Apartment vacancy rates have dropped so low that forecasters at Capital Economics, a research firm, said rents could rise, on average, as much as 4 percent this year, compared with 2.8 percent last year. But rents are rising faster than that in many cities even as overall inflation is running at little more than 1 percent annually.
Stella Santamaria, a divorced 40-year-old math teacher, has been looking for an apartment in Miami for more than six months.
“We’re kind of sick of talking about it,” she said of herself and fellow teachers in the same boat. “It’s like, ‘Are you still living with your mom?’ ‘Yeah, are you?’ ‘Yeah.’ ”
After 11 years as a teacher, Santamaria makes $41,000, considerably less than the city’s median income, which is $48,000, according to Zillow.
Even dual-income professional couples are being priced out of the walkable urban-core neighborhoods where many of them want to live. Stuart Kennedy, 29, a senior program officer at a nonprofit group, said he and his girlfriend, a lawyer, will be losing their $2,300 a month rental house in Buena Vista in June. Since they found the place a year ago, rents in the area have increased sharply.
“If you go by a third of your income, that formula, even with how comfortable our incomes are, it looks like it’s going to be impossible,” Kennedy said.
Part of the reason for the squeeze on renters is simple demand — between 2007 and 2013 the U.S. added, on net, about 6.2 million tenants, compared with 208,000 homeowners, said Stan Humphries, the chief economist of Zillow.
That trend is continuing as young people and doubled-up families move out on their own.
“They’re creating a lot of incremental demand,” Humphries said.
But new households rarely plunge straight into homeownership, especially given that mortgages are much harder to obtain than they were before the financial crisis. “The expectation is that when they strike out into their own units they'll be moving into rental as opposed to the owner side,” he said.
And as rents head higher in the tightest markets, many are discovering that living on their own is proving unaffordable, forcing them to double up again. Arturo Breton, a 37-year-old waiter in Miami Beach, said that after years living on his own, he was joining forces with a roommate who works as a manager at J.C. Penney.
“I’ve come down to the conclusion that in this country, it’s easier for two people to pay the rent than for one person,” he said.
For many middle- and lower-income people, high rents choke spending on other goods and services, impeding the economic recovery. Low-income families that spend more than half their income on housing spend about a third less on food, 50 percent less on clothing, and 80 percent less on medical care compared with low-income families with affordable rents, according to a new report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition. And renters amass less wealth, even nonhousing wealth, than homeowners do.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/04/19/4068539/miami-is-one-of-the-most-expensive.html#storylink=cpy


The problem threatens to get worse before it gets better. Apartment builders have raced to build more units, creating a wave of supply that is beginning to crest. Miami added 2,500 rental apartments last year, and 7,500 more are expected in the next two years, according to the CoStar Group, a real estate research firm.
But demand has shown no signs of slackening. And as long as there are plenty of upper-income renters looking for apartments, there is little incentive to build anything other than expensive units. As a result, there are in effect two separate rental markets that are so far apart in price that they have little effect on each other.
In one extreme case, a glut of new luxury apartments in Washington has pushed high-end rents down, even while mid-range rents have continued to rise.
“Increasing the supply is not going to increase the number of affordable units; that is a complete and utter fallacy,” said Jaimie Ross, the president of the Florida Housing Coalition. “People say if there really was a great need, the market would provide it; the market would correct itself. Well, the market has never corrected itself and it’s only getting worse.”
Money for affordable housing has dried up at a time when it is needed most. Federal housing funds, in a form now known as HOME grants, have been cut in half over the last decade. The percentage of eligible families who receive rental subsidies has shrunk, to 23.8 percent from 27.4 percent, the Harvard study found. And Florida, which like other states faced large budget shortfalls after the financial crisis, has raided its housing trust fund, funded by a real estate transfer tax, for several years running. This year, the Legislature has proposed restoring at least part of the money.
Cities have been left to address the problem on their own, with some granting exceptions to their own zoning laws to allow for things like micro-apartments. Miami has allowed some variances to its urban plan for projects like Brickell View Terrace, which will have 176 units in a prime location near a Metrorail station. Ninety of the units will be affordable for people making 60 percent of the median income, 10 for people making less, and the rest will be market rate.
But a seemingly insatiable demand for luxury condos in Miami, created in part by wealthy Latin Americans, has caused land prices to soar, making affordable housing projects harder to build anywhere close to downtown. Moving farther out is cheaper, but the cost savings on housing can be quickly wiped out by transportation costs. A 2012 study by the Center for Housing Policy found that Miami was the most expensive metropolitan area in the country when housing and transportation costs were combined.
Many of the condo units built in the last boom were purchased by foreign buyers as investments and turned into rentals. But most of them are higher-end units that go for a premium.
A one-bedroom condo unit in most buildings around Brickell Avenue will fetch $1,800 a month or more. For many young professionals, “It’s a bit of a stretch to be honest,” Eli Montag, a real estate agent with Coldwell Banker, told the Miami Herald. Most will team up with one or more roommates, since a two-bedroom at $2,500 is more affordable, he added.
The supply of rental options is expected to increase in the next few years as the spate of new pre-construction condo developments turn over completed units to the buyers — most of them foreign investors who are likely to either sell or rent them. But it’s unclear whether that will ease rents around Miami.
In many markets, buying a home is considerably cheaper than renting, and Miami is no exception. But many people are shut out of buying because their income is too low, they don’t qualify for a mortgage or they are burdened by other debt. In 2008, a quarter of rental applicants were still paying off student loans, according to CoreLogic, but as of last fall half of them were doing so.
Steve Gunn, 25, the marketing director for a Miami real estate brokerage firm, said he could certainly afford an apartment on his salary of $52,500 — if he weren’t paying more than $800 a month in student loan debt. Instead, he commutes 90 minutes to work. From his mother’s house.
Miami Herald real estate reporter Martha Brannigan contributed to this report.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/04/19/4068539/miami-is-one-of-the-most-expensive.html#storylink=cpy

For rent and utilities to be considered affordable, they are supposed to take up no more than 30 percent of a household’s income. But that goal is increasingly unattainable for middle-income families as a tightening market pushes up rents ever faster, outrunning modest rises in pay.
The strain is not limited to the usual high-cost cities like New York and San Francisco. An analysis for The New York Times by Zillow, the real estate website, found 90 cities where the median rent — not including utilities — was more than 30 percent of the median gross income.
One of the most expensive cities for renters is Miami, where rents, on average, consume 43 percent of the typical household income, up from a historical average of just more than a quarter. Zillow calculated the historical average using data from 1985 to 2000.
Nationally, half of all renters are now spending more than 30 percent of their income on housing, according to a comprehensive Harvard study, up from 38 percent of renters in 2000. In December, Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan declared “the worst rental affordability crisis that this country has ever known.”
Apartment vacancy rates have dropped so low that forecasters at Capital Economics, a research firm, said rents could rise, on average, as much as 4 percent this year, compared with 2.8 percent last year. But rents are rising faster than that in many cities even as overall inflation is running at little more than 1 percent annually.
Stella Santamaria, a divorced 40-year-old math teacher, has been looking for an apartment in Miami for more than six months.
“We’re kind of sick of talking about it,” she said of herself and fellow teachers in the same boat. “It’s like, ‘Are you still living with your mom?’ ‘Yeah, are you?’ ‘Yeah.’ ”
After 11 years as a teacher, Santamaria makes $41,000, considerably less than the city’s median income, which is $48,000, according to Zillow.
Even dual-income professional couples are being priced out of the walkable urban-core neighborhoods where many of them want to live. Stuart Kennedy, 29, a senior program officer at a nonprofit group, said he and his girlfriend, a lawyer, will be losing their $2,300 a month rental house in Buena Vista in June. Since they found the place a year ago, rents in the area have increased sharply.
“If you go by a third of your income, that formula, even with how comfortable our incomes are, it looks like it’s going to be impossible,” Kennedy said.
Part of the reason for the squeeze on renters is simple demand — between 2007 and 2013 the U.S. added, on net, about 6.2 million tenants, compared with 208,000 homeowners, said Stan Humphries, the chief economist of Zillow.
That trend is continuing as young people and doubled-up families move out on their own.
“They’re creating a lot of incremental demand,” Humphries said.
But new households rarely plunge straight into homeownership, especially given that mortgages are much harder to obtain than they were before the financial crisis. “The expectation is that when they strike out into their own units they'll be moving into rental as opposed to the owner side,” he said.
And as rents head higher in the tightest markets, many are discovering that living on their own is proving unaffordable, forcing them to double up again. Arturo Breton, a 37-year-old waiter in Miami Beach, said that after years living on his own, he was joining forces with a roommate who works as a manager at J.C. Penney.
“I’ve come down to the conclusion that in this country, it’s easier for two people to pay the rent than for one person,” he said.
For many middle- and lower-income people, high rents choke spending on other goods and services, impeding the economic recovery. Low-income families that spend more than half their income on housing spend about a third less on food, 50 percent less on clothing, and 80 percent less on medical care compared with low-income families with affordable rents, according to a new report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition. And renters amass less wealth, even nonhousing wealth, than homeowners do.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/04/19/4068539/miami-is-one-of-the-most-expensive.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/04/19/4068539/miami-is-one-of-the-most-expensive.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Merlin Unveils Plans for Triple Attraction in Orlando

By Gary White
THE LEDGER


An artist's rendition of the Orlando Sea Life aquarium is seen during a news conference to unveil the I Drive 360 project that will
contain The Orlando Eye, Madame Tussauds and Orlando Sea Life on International Drive in Orlando. (PROVIDED TO THE LEDGER)

ORLANDO | The next major attraction in Orlando's tourist district contains the same DNA as Legoland Florida.
Merlin Entertainments Group, the corporate owner of the Legoland parks, gave media members a glimpse Wednesday morning of a partially constructed Ferris wheel that will be the most visible element of a three-pronged attraction scheduled to open next spring on South International Drive.
The wheel, the centerpiece of The Orlando Eye, will far surpass the tallest existing structure in Orlando with a height of 400 feet. The structure's white metal A-frame base already rises above the surrounding hotels and restaurants at 200 feet tall.
The Orlando Eye will occupy the largest portion of a complex that will also include the Sea Life Orlando Aquarium and Madame Tussauds Orlando, a wax museum.
Adrian Jones, General Manager of Legoland Florida and Vice President of Merlin Entertainments USA, was one of several speakers at Wednesday's media event.
"What this does is underline Merlin's commitment to the Central Florida region in terms of our investment, which we've already done with our Legoland Park and our Legoland Hotel, which also will open in 2015," Jones said.
The Orlando Eye is modeled on the London Eye, located on the south bank of the River Thames. It will have 30 air-conditioned capsules each with capacity for 15 guests. On clear days, the ride will offer views of the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center, Merlin spokeswoman Audrey Padgett said.
Madame Tussauds Orlando will be the 19th location worldwide in the venerable brand of wax museums. Sea Life Orlando Aquarium will be the 46th location in what is billed as the world's largest line of aquariums.
All three brands are owned by England-based Merlin, the world's second-largest attractions company.
Jones said it is unusual for Merlin to create three new attractions together at the same time. He said Orlando will become a "cluster city," as Merlin calls locations with more than one of its facilities.
The three connected attractions are set inside a major development called I-Drive 360. The project will have 250,000 square feet of restaurant and retail space, said Chuck Whittall, President of Unicorp National Developments, the project's developer. The first restaurant, Yard House, opens next week. Other planned tenants include Tin Roof Bistro, Cowgirls Country Western Bar and Sugar Factory.
The property, just south of the junction of Sand Lake Road and International Drive, is surrounded by such tourist sites as Ripley's Believe It Or Not! and Sleuth's Mystery Dinner Shows. The attraction cluster is less than five minutes from the Orange County Convention Center, one of the nation's busiest, and Jones said Merlin expects the towering Ferris wheel to lure convention-goers to visit the complex.
Jones said Merlin will take advantage of the new cluster of attractions to draw more tourists to Legoland Florida in Winter Haven. The new complex will sell tickets to Legoland, and a shuttle bus to Legoland that now leaves from Orlando Premium Outlets will depart from behind The Orlando Eye.
With four Merlin attractions in Central Florida, the company will promote its Merlin Annual Pass USA, which offers admission to all the company's attractions in the country.
Combined with the opening of an on-site hotel at Legoland next year, the net effect will be more tourists viewing the park as a multi-day attraction, Jones said.
The Orlando Eye will be the tallest observational wheel on the east coast of North America, according to a Merlin press release. The hub is scheduled to be attached to the base next month and the wheel should be assembled by November, Whittall said.
The Orlando Eye will include a "4D" theater showing films depicting Florida scenes, an entertainment suite and a retail area. The feet of two of the eight towers supporting the base of the Ferris wheel extend inside the building, inside which workers were welding structures during a media tour Wednesday.
Sea Life Aquarium Orlando will have 350,000 gallons of water in a 12-foot-deep ocean tank. It will also have a 360-degree underwater tunnel, along with an interactive touch pool exhibit and a video theater.
Madame Tussauds is a chain of wax museums founded in London in the 1830s. The Orlando attraction will display more than 60 likenesses of celebrities and historical figures.
A stage for Wednesday's event stood near a fountain pool still under construction and surrounded by freshly planted palm trees. The speakers competed with the humming of electrical saws and the beeping of construction vehicles moving in reverse.
The gathering was attended by Orange County Mayor Teresa Jacobs and officials from Visit Florida, the state's official tourism marketing agency, and Visit Orlando. Jacobs said the new attractions will help the Orlando area surpass its record total of 59 million tourists in 2013.
She recalled her experience of riding The London Eye while attending a convention in the city.
"I could not be more excited about what we are about to have here on I-Drive," Jacobs said. "My family can't wait to come back ... and see the finished product."

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Elvis Presley’s Mid-Century Honeymoon Retreat for Sale

AUTHOR:EMILY HEFFTER
ZILLOW

It’s hard to miss this mid-century home’s most famous residents, since cardboard cut-outs and mannequins of Elvis and Priscilla Presley are propped up throughout the listing photos. But that’s all part of the historic charm behind the Palm Springs residence, which the newlywed Presleys rented in the mid-1960s.
The so-called Honeymoon House at 1350 Ladera Circle in Palm Springs was featured as an example of modern architecture in a 1962 Look magazine article, called the “House of Tomorrow.”
The Presleys sealed its place in history, and it has operated as sort of a Presley museum and rental for several years, offering tours. It is for sale for $9.5 million, and its superstar history is being marketed by another star — Million Dollar Listing’s Josh Altman, a Bravo! reality TV personality and real estate agent with Hilton & Hyland’s Altman Brothers .
The home’s listing explains that the King of Rock and Roll spent his honeymoon at the home in 1967. “Lisa Marie was born nine months later,” it says. (Wink, wink).
According to the home’s website, the Presleys planned to marry at the house, by the pool. But a television gossip columnist who lived around the corner learned of their plans, and they made a last-minute plan to marry in Las Vegas instead.
The 4-bedroom, 5-bath, 5,000-square-foot home was the height of luxury in 1967, with big windows, “peanut-brittle stonework,” and an art deco vibe. It includes a pool, tennis court, fruit orchard and a stage. The three floors of the house are designed in four perfect circles. Walls of glass offer views of the Santa Rosa Mountains and the Coachella Valley.