Archives for May 2011

Mortgage delinquency falls

The number of homeowners who were 60 days or more past due on their mortgages went down in the first quarter of 2011 to 6.19 percent from 6.77 percent at the same time last year, according to reports by TransUnion. This decrease marks the fifth straight quarter of falling rates.

While delinquency is down in many states across the nation, rates need to fall faster to reach the 2 percent pre-recession average. Guy Cecala, publisher of Inside Mortgage Finance, says that while the numbers tell a positive story, the housing market must clear out more distressed properties in order to gain additional traction. Because the foreclosure process can be lengthy, the rate’s movement has been sluggish.

About half of all foreclosures in the U.S. are concentrated in five states — Florida, California, Illinois, New York, and New Jersey. In four out of five states, court approval is required for foreclosures. When problems with paperwork surfaced in the fall of 2010, foreclosed homes got stuck in the bottleneck of legal review, and the process lengthened. With delinquency rates moving at their current pace, slow and steady may win this race.


10 Ways to Boost House Value

brokers tell ten tips to boost your house valueHousing prices may have dropped in your neighborhood, but there are smart ways to invest in your home right now to help hold its value. Here’s what veteran real estate professionals from around the country have to say about what home improvement projects pay off, whether you are selling now or in the future.

Knock out a non-structural wall, or even remove that kitchen island. Anything that opens the space and creates a sense of flow in the house is generating a response from buyers who can afford to be choosy. For the price of a few hundred dollars, you’ll transform the feel of the house. “Right now buyers want a wide open floor plan, the living room right off the kitchen. They are into big spaces,” says Kristin Wellins, Senior Manager of Program Development for ERA Real Estate.

Read the rest here.

Mr. Hermann’s Opus: The Glass Pavilion in Montecito, California

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“This house is my opus. It’s my greatest achievement of a 20-year career” – Steve Hermann

Set within a 3.5 acre estate of oak groves, the Glass Pavilion in Montecito, California envelops you in the natural beauty of its surroundings. There is so much glass, that if you are the ‘stone-throwing’ type, you probably shouldn’t live here…
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THE GLASS PAVILION BY STEVE HERMANN

– List price: $35 million USD
– Location: Montecito, California
– Lot: 3.5 acres
– Size: 13,875 square feet (1,290 sq meters)
– 5 Bedrooms
– 5.5 Bathrooms
– Project duration: 6 years
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How incredible is that couch and fireplace!

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Love the shower and closet on the other side

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UNIQUE FEATURES

– Kitchen with wine room attached, capable of holding several thousand bottles
– A walnut covered art gallery large enough to prominently display 32 cars
– All of the large glass panels are Star Fire glass, an incredibly clear glass usually reserved for jewelry displays
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ARCHITECT’S DESCRIPTION

The Glass Pavilion is a redefining structure within modernism. Steve Hermann has taken the architectural tenets of Mies Van Der Roh’s Barcelona Pavilion and Farnsworth house, as well as Phillip Johnson’s glass house and taken them into the new millennium.

Set within a 3.5 acre estate of oak groves in Montecito, California, lays a home almost entirely of glass. It allows the occupants to be comfortably inside while completely enveloped within nature. Through the use of massive structural beams, the home is able to appear weightless as it hovers above an expansive lawn. No expense has been spared during the six years that it took to complete.
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SOURCES

– Official Site: http://montecitopavilion.com/
Wall Street Journal
Contemporist

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ALL PHOTOGRAPHY BY WM MACCOLLUM

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Young billionaire says I do

Mark Zuckerberg is settling down in Palo Alto. Known for being a month-to-month renter, the young billionaire has just purchased a house for $7 million, located about 10 minutes from Facebook’s new campus in Menlo Park, according to Silicon Valley’s Mercury News.

For a guy who says he found all his rental houses on Craigslist, the new property purchase is a departure. The 5,617 square foot home features a few amenities — outdoor gazebo, salt-water swimming pool, spa, and most luxurious of all, a carport.

According to Mercury News, Tyler Winklevoss (famous for suing Zuckerberg for stealing the idea of Facebook) once described his old Harvard classmate as “the poorest rich person I’ve ever seen in my life.” Zuckerberg remains in solid tech company in Palo Alto, where Steve Jobs and Larry Page also reside. However, this millennial may have the humblest abode of the trio.