01/31/08On the Market—Garden Splendor in Fort Sheridan
List Price: $2.45 million Posted at 12:39 PM in On the Market | Permalink | Comments (1) |
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01/30/08Housing Bulletin—Who Benefits from Another Fed Rate Cut
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to cut its rate again later today, but that doesn’t mean you should call your mortgage broker this afternoon in search of a lower payment. You should have called yesterday. There is a widespread misconception that mortgage rates are directly connected to the Fed’s funds rate. In fact, the relationship is more along the lines of “Me and My Shadow”: the two tend to move approximately in step with one another, but neither one orders the other around. “Mortgage bond markets meet every day, much more often than the Fed,” says Dan Green, a mortgage planner and loan officer at Mobium Mortgage here in Chicago and the author of themortgagereports.com. “Most of what the Fed is responding to has already been... Posted at 05:51 AM in Housing Bulletin | Permalink | Comments (0) |
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01/28/08Deal of the Week—Carlos Zambrano’s New Home
List Price: $2.8 million Posted at 05:51 AM in Sale of the Week | Permalink | Comments (2) |
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01/24/08On the Market—A New (but Authentic) Craftsman in Wilmette
List Price: $1.795 million On a teardown lot in Wilmette, Crittenden and Cohan—whose company is called Round Peg—created a new house that, except for the two-car garage out front, might pass for an original Craftsman, with its abundant use of natural materials, its built-in benches and bookcases, and its reliance on daylight as an essential piece of the residents’... Posted at 08:06 AM in On the Market | Permalink | Comments (3) |
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01/23/08Housing Bulletin—The Resale Condo Squeeze Play
A few years back, when investing in residential real estate seemed like a fast money-maker, two guys went in together on three condos at the Metropolis, a terra cotta-clad building at State and Monroe Streets that was being converted from office and retail into 169 condos. But when the condos were ready for their investors to take possession, the market had changed and the guys couldn’t sell their three units as fast as they had counted on; they ended up in foreclosure. This month, a real-estate agent working for the guys’ lenders sold one of those condos, a two-bedroom unit with parking included that the investors had originally bought for $310,000. The new sale price: $285,000. “That’s hands down a bargain,” says Peter Boland, the @properties agent who sold the condo for... Posted at 08:48 AM in Housing Bulletin | Permalink | Comments (4) |
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01/21/08Sale of the Week—Hinsdale Record-Breaker
List Price: $5.3 million The slate-roofed house is the design of the architect Charles Vincent George and the builder Jim McMahon, who have collaborated on other super-lavish homes in Hinsdale. This one, McMahon says, “is definitely the best we’ve done.” The house’s Country French character is pervasive, extending even to the outdoor fireplace, a monumental stone and stucco... ... Posted at 07:32 AM in Sale of the Week | Permalink | Comments (1) |
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01/17/08On the Market—Pure Prairie in Hyde Park
List price: $1.95 million Posted at 11:17 AM in On the Market | Permalink | Comments (0) |
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01/16/08Housing Bulletin—Transit Funding and the Real-Estate Market
Last week, months of wrangling in the state legislature over how to fund the metro area’s rail and bus lines resulted in a deal that included an increase on the tax on real-estate transfers in Chicago. That increase¬—$3.50 per $1,000 in value of the property sold—will all go to mass transit, presuming the Chicago City Council approves the tax. (The current tax—$7.50 per $1,000—does not fund mass transit.) The reasoning behind the measure was that Chicago was paying less than its share for transit because its sales-tax receipts weren’t up to what the collar counties collected. Since the owners of city property—not just housing, but retail and commercial real estate—clearly benefit from... Posted at 09:56 AM in Housing Bulletin | Permalink | Comments (0) |
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01/14/08Sale of the Week—Chicago’s Old Norwood
The Property: This 128-year-old house is in the heart of Old Norwood, a neighborhood on the city’s far Northwest Side. With its curving streets, charming older homes, relatively big city lots, a big park, and a nearby commuter train station, Old Norwood is “the best-kept secret ‘Mayberry’ in Chicago,” says Lisa Sanders, the Coldwell Banker agent who represented... Posted at 07:34 AM in Sale of the Week | Permalink | Comments (0) |
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01/10/08On the Market—Twin Moderns in Ukrainian Village
List Price: $1,049,000 each Each house has a big double-height front room that combines living and dining with an almost vertiginous view up two flights of stairs. Beyond are a kitchen and... Posted at 10:33 AM in On the Market | Permalink | Comments (6) |
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01/09/08Housing Bulletin—Where is the Bottom?
In the late 1990s, economists, real-estate analysts, and others were puzzled by the housing market. House prices kept going up, confounding everyone’s forecasts. Ten years later, we’re on the other side of that hill: Prices are going down, but nobody seems to know how far they will descend. Since home prices are a moving target at the moment, up-to-date price data is hard to come by. But I have been hearing routinely that appraisers now use 2004 prices as their benchmarks; just a few months ago, they were using 2005 prices. A 2004 price would mean that after 13 years of increases, we’ve slipped back about three years. That means if you bought your home before 2004, you are still ahead of the game. But that’s only if the market doesn’t fall any farther—and most forecasts say... Posted at 08:57 AM in Housing Bulletin | Permalink | Comments (10) |
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01/07/08Sale of the Week—A Lincoln Park Queen Anne
List Price: $1,879,000 Inside, the seduction continues. Built in 1895, the house has ten rooms on three floors, plus a... Posted at 06:40 AM in Sale of the Week | Permalink | Comments (1) |
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01/03/08On the Market—Georgian on my Mind
List Price: $3,625,000 The Property: This Georgian townhouse on Chicago’s Astor Street feels as if it were made for ambassadorial entertaining. The glass-fronted entry door opens onto an entry hall with a marble and ebony floor; from there, a broad staircase leads to a pillared gallery hall that sets the stage for a handsome living room with a trio of Palladian windows and Juliet balconies. Built in the 1890s—possibly as a Victorian, its selling agent says, and reworked sometime later—the house has 11 rooms and four-plus baths on four stories, as well as a rooftop deck. Two of the four bedrooms... Posted at 10:53 AM in On the Market | Permalink | Comments (1) |
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