Thursday, September 29, 2016

A look at the Charlotte area's priciest home sales in August (PHOTOS)

A Cornelius property along the shores of Lake Norman registered as the Charlotte area's top home sale in August. The Mediterranean-style home carried a price tag of $3.73 million when it sold late last month. The waterfront, 10,320-square-foot house sits on a 1.35-acre lot on Nantz Road in the Legacy Pointe neighborhood, according to its listing on Realtor.com. The property includes six bedrooms, six full bathrooms and three half-bathrooms as well as media and exercise rooms, two outdoor pools,…

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For U.S. Ambassadors, It Takes a Villa

U.S. EMBASSY ROME

U.S. EMBASSY ROME

Built in the 15th century for a cardinal, Villa Taverna sits on 7 acres in one of Rome’s most central and exclusive neighborhoods. The property includes a Roman sarcophagus dating to the 3rd century, ancient Egyptian granite columns, a swimming pool and a tennis court.

Who owns this spread? U.S. taxpayers, as Villa Taverna is the U.S. ambassador’s residence. What is it worth? Hard to say: a 2010 Office of the Inspector General’s report estimated the combined value of the residence and the embassy compound in Rome at anywhere from “$500 million to $1 billion.”

The State Department has a portfolio of 174 residences to provide U.S. ambassadors with accommodations around the world, some of which are extremely valuable.

One of the most valuable properties in the portfolio was a gift. In London, a red brick neo-Georgian mansion named Winfield House was offered to the U.S. government by Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton for just $1 as a gesture of gratitude following the effort in World War II, according to State Department records.

The plot is adjacent to Regent’s Park in central London: 12-acres of highly valuable land held on a 99-year lease from the Crown Estate (the British Sovereign public estate).

In Havana, a stately neoclassical residence of Cuban limestone in the upscale Miramar neighborhood was built in the 1940s for $5.1 million in today’s dollars. For the 16 years in which diplomatic relations were interrupted between the two countries, the property was cared for primarily by Swiss diplomats; it was returned in 1977.

Measuring 31,750 square feet, the home, with seven bedrooms each with a private loggia, was fit to accommodate President Barack Obama and his security detail during an official visit in March.

Many residences are historically significant in large part because of the role the buildings have played in diplomacy. In Casablanca, Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill plotted the end of World War II in the U.S.-owned Villa Mirador. The Marshall Plan was largely devised in Paris’s Hôtel Rothschild. In the residence in Tokyo, the meeting between Douglas MacArthur and Emperor Hirohito resulted in the emperor’s admission that he wasn’t a divine being in 1946. Today, it is the residence of Caroline Kennedy,daughter of the late President John F. Kennedy, Jr. and current U.S. ambassador to Japan.

Ambassadors find ways to leave their mark on their residences. In Hanoi, the ambassador’s residence is a beaux-arts villa in the city’s historic French quarter. In its second-floor representational space, the current ambassador, Ted Osius, and his husband recently renewed their wedding vows in a ceremony presided over by Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg during an official visit. “We thought it might be meaningful not only to us, but it was also important to the LGBT community in Vietnam,” Mr. Osius said.

In 2005, when Ronald Spogli first arrived as ambassador at Villa Taverna, he was dismayed to find it lacked a wine cellar. Mr. Spogli made an appeal for donations to Italian and American winemakers vetted by the State Department. He also personally contributed to the total $1.1 million raised for the project. Centuries-old catacombs protected by Italian heritage laws were directly beneath the house, making any excavation work complicated. An architect designed a three-level 5,000-bottle wine storage and tasting area underground, next door to the tombs.

The wine cellar wasn’t completed until 2009, after Mr. Spogli’s tenure had already ended. Since leaving Rome, Mr. Spogli, 68, has returned to Los Angeles to work at the private-equity firm he co-founded, Freeman Spogli & Co.

The value of all these properties isn’t easily determined. Christy Foushee, spokesperson for the Overseas Buildings Operations bureau (OBO), which functions as the State Department’s property manager, said there is no program to track the current property values, and residences are rarely sold.

“The task of performing regular appraisals for such a diverse mix of historic properties in capital cities across the globe, many in opaque markets, would be an expensive and time-consuming effort that hasn’t been considered a good use of taxpayer dollars without a compelling reason such as an imminent sale,” Ms. Foushee said.

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Leonardo DiCaprio Ready to Break Up With Second Home This Month

Leo DiCaprio selling Studio City home

Neilson Barnard/Getty Images

A-list actor Leonardo DiCaprio is jettisoning his second California property in a month. The Oscar winner just listed a modest home in Studio City for $2.5 million, according to Variety. The new listing comes just a week after he listed his Malibu beachfront house for almost $11 million.

The 3,407-square-foot house on a little more than one-third of an acre was built in 1937 and has four bedrooms and three bathrooms. The adjoining living and dining rooms sport bamboo floors and glass doors that lead to the front porch. The white kitchen has a vaulted ceiling and gray granite counters. A pergola and swimming pool grace the backyard.

DiCaprio reportedly bought the house, in the Colfax Meadows neighborhood, for $2 million in 2014 from Robert Hrtica, his cousin and business associate, who had purchased the home in late 2004 for $1.6 million.

Studio City, CAStudio City, CA

realtor.com

The actor, who picked up a 2016 Oscar for his leading role in “The Revenant,” still reportedly owns property in L.A.’s Silver Lake neighborhood, above Sunset Strip, and in Palm Springs.

His real estate shuffle coincides with the impending release of his next big-screen project, a documentary on climate change titled “Before the Flood.”

Living roomLiving room

realtor.com

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Economic Report: Pending home sales slide to lowest in seven months

Home purchase contract signings declined for the third time in four months, the Realtor association said.

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Ponte Vedra Beach home for sale for $1.8 million

A Ponte Vedra Beach property is for sale for $1.8 million. The property, 225 Plantation Circle S., has a 6,222-square-foot, five bedroom, six bath house on 1.26 acres. It is the largest lot in The Plantation at Ponte Vedra Beach and is located on a lake across from the sixth fairway of a golf course. The listing agent is Carolyn McLean, a realtor with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Florida Network Realty. She can be reached at 904-610-9939.

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Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Family Told They Can’t Live on Their Own Land (and You Won’t Believe Why)

Marilyn Minor

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One of the best perks of owning property—in fact, the main perk—is that you get to live on it. Or so we thought until we learned of a homeowner in Colorado who was told flat-out that her family can’t live on their own land. What’s going on?

Here’s the backstory: In June, an electrical fire left the Lafayette house of 70-year-old Marilyn Minor uninhabitable. Minor began repairs to her home so it would pass city inspections. But lacking the cash for a hotel or other accommodations, she and her home’s other residents—her son Wayne, daughter Charity, and Charity’s two kids—had nowhere to live. So they moved into their van, parked on their own land. It sounds reasonable enough, right?

Wrong.

Their living situation didn’t sit well with some neighbors, who alerted Lafayette city officials, who came back to Minor and told her that vacating her home wasn’t enough. Nope, until her place passed all inspections, the Minor family weren’t allowed to live anywhere on her property at all.

Why? That’s a question Minor is dying to get answered.

“Why can’t I live on the property that I pay taxes for and where I pay the mortgage?” she asked during an interview with Denver7. “I’ll go down fighting. This is my home.”

Although Minor anticipates her house will be fixed up in a few weeks, she’ll be dragged back into housing court next week and could face substantial fines if she remains on her property. And while some of her neighbors clearly disapprove, others are sympathetic.

“They shouldn’t have to be anywhere else,” one neighbor told Denver7. “This is their house.”

True, it’s their house, their land, their home. But according to experts we spoke to, that doesn’t mean they can live there however they please.

“Until the modern era, the common law was based on the understanding that, in many ways, every man’s home was his castle,” says David Reiss, a professor of law at Brooklyn Law School and academic program director at the Center for Urban Business Entrepreneurship.

“But for well over 100 years now, courts have acknowledged that governments have many legitimate reasons to restrict how property owners use their property. For instance, local governments regulate fire safety and sanitation issues, among other things, for the benefit of property owners themselves as well as their neighbors and the broader community.”

In other words, you can’t live in a house that’s a fire trap, a meth lab, or a trash dump. And that’s for everyone’s sake.

So in the community spirit, perhaps some kind-hearted neighbors and friends will open their doors to this poor family. They already have a GoFundMe page, with $666 raised for their cause so far. Because after all, as they always say, no man is an island unto himself—even if he owns the land under his feet.

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6 Cities Where You Can Own a Home for Under $1,000 a Month

6 cities where you can own a home for less than $1000 a month

Ty Wright/Bloomberg

You don’t have to make a ton of money to afford a decent home in some cities.

Pittsburgh is the most affordable metro area in America for those hoping to buy a home, according to data released Tuesday by the mortgage-data company HSH.com, which analyzed housing affordability in 27 cities across the nation. The HSH analysis looked at the cost—including principal, interest, taxes and insurance payments—of buying a median-priced home using a 30-year fixed-rate loan; the loan rates were based on people with credit scores of 740 or higher in each area and who put down 20%.

Using these measurements, a person hoping to buy the median home in Pittsburgh would spend about $756 per month on the home. That means they’d need a salary of $32,390 or more to afford the home (assuming they spend 28% or less of their pay on housing).

City Monthly cost of homeownership Minimum salary needed to afford a home
Pittsburgh $756 $32,390
Cleveland $803 $34,434
Cincinnati $868 $37,179
St. Louis $890 $38,131
Detroit $899 $38,542
Atlanta $935 $40,092
Source: HSH.com; assumes a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage

This data show that some markets are within reach of “first-time buyers and those with moderate incomes” (median home prices in each of these cities are well under $200,000), but “you may have to move away from the coasts” to find such affordable housing, says Keith Gumbinger, vice president of HSH.com.

Indeed, the median home in the San Francisco area would cost you more than $3,700 per month and in the San Diego area more than $2,500 a month.

It’s important to point out that these monthly costs are for those with high credit scores (borrowers with lower scores may pay substantially more for a mortgage) who put down 20% when buying the home, which may be difficult to manage on a limited salary. And putting down less will increase the cost of housing: In Pittsburgh, for example, putting down 10% instead of 20% would increase the housing payment by more than $100 per month. Plus, the job market in many of these cities isn’t as robust as it is in the rest of the country, which may make actually living in these cities more difficult.

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