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Showing posts with label Starter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Starter. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

On the Market: From Luxe to Money Pit, Five of America's Best Starter Homes

× Like us and you'll find top breaking news in your Facebook newsfeed. Sign up for our daily email newsletter and get top stories and breaking news delivered to your inbox. Tuesday, March 27, 2012, by Rob Bear

Here now, a look at some of the best starter homes around the country, taking into consideration relatively affordable properties in neighborhoods appropriate for young families. These picks come from some of the country's most populous urban areas—so don't expect much space to spread out—but all benefit from the cultural bounties at their doorstep. In some cases the perennial love for luxury won out; in others, get ready for a renovation!

South Boston used to be famous as the headquarters for Whitey Bulger and the rest of the Irish mob. Today, it's a thriving and thoroughly gentrified district where first time buyers just might find a deal in the otherwise pricey Boston real estate market. This third-floor penthouse, with two bedrooms and one bath, is one of the most luxurious units on the market in "Southie" and it still comes in at $580K. Panoramic views of Dorchester Bay and the islands can be enjoyed from the private roof deck, a covered porch, and the unit's numerous windows. Additional luxuries include built-in speakers, central air conditioning, a jacuzzi tub, and an updated kitchen with stainless appliances. Short on space at 1,165 square feet, this well-kept condo makes up for it with the finishes and the view.

? Shopping for a home in famously expensive NYC on a first time buyer's budget is no mean feat, but it's certainly possible to find something other than a shoebox if buyers look outside of Manhattan. The Brooklyn neighborhoods of Park Slope, Cobble Hill, and Carroll Gardens have all emerged as cheaper alternatives. That's not to say cheap, as a roster of excellent restaurants, bars, and retail keep these neighborhoods pricey. In the southern section of Carroll Gardens, close to Red Hook and, unfortunately, the elevated expressway, this two-bedroom loft penthouse offers the feel of Tribeca for $775K. Highlights include the high ceilings, expansive private roof deck, open kitchen with marble counters, and a coveted in-unit washer/dryer.

? Compared to the expensive Northeast, there are considerable deals to be found in some of Chicago's lesser-known neighborhoods. Considered an isolated pocket of prosperity on the city's otherwise depressed South Side, Hyde Park is sandwiched between the lake, Washington Park, and the campus of the University of Chicago. The students give the area a youthy vibe and provide a source of potential rental income should the buyers' circumstances change. This six-bedroom townhouse, built in 1895, is rife with historical detail, but gravely in need of some TLC. A buyer willing to rehab the place could get quite the deal considering the interior houses six bedrooms and the place is asking just $229K. Perhaps first time buyers would do well to steer clear of such a daunting challenge, but, then again, they just don't make inlaid floors like that anymore.

? Make it to San Francisco and you'll find real estate prices that rival New York for big price and small space. Still, the City by the Bay has some deals, even in the traditionally upper class neighborhood of Nob Hill—sometimes derisively referred to as "Snob Hill." While this two-bedroom, 1,100-square-foot condo can't rival the billionaires' abodes up on Broadway, the unit is well finished and sits in a charming, nine-unit Spanish-style building that was completed in 1913. Built-ins and bay windows abound, and while the listing photo of a wood paneled room illuminated by a bare bulb gives us pause, the rest of the place is immaculately presented considering the $599K price tag.

? Down in sunny Los Angeles, home to famously expensive areas like Beverly Hills, finding an affordable first home requires venturing off the beaten (or televised) path. The gentrifying neighborhood of Highland Park, in the northeastern section of the city, has experienced a wave of renovations lately, most in an accessible price range. Listed for $380K, this revamped bungalow might be small, with just two beds and a single bathroom in 843 square feet, but it certainly beckons with outdoor space ripe for entertaining and a garage that could be converted into extra interior space. For those that find this too small, a third bedroom in this neighborhood runs roughly $75K more.

· 1774 Columbia Road UNIT 3 [Zillow]
· 529 Court Street #PH4 [Streeteasy]
· 1314 E 52nd St [Zillow]
· 1236 Washington St [Zillow]
· 5611 Meridian [Zillow]


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House of the Day: A Starter Home in the Hudson Valley Enclave of Tuxedo Park

× Like us and you'll find top breaking news in your Facebook newsfeed. Sign up for our daily email newsletter and get top stories and breaking news delivered to your inbox. Monday, March 26, 2012, by Rob Bear

Have a nomination for a jaw-dropping listing that would make a mighty fine House of the Day? Get thee to the tipline and send us your suggestions. We'd love to see what you've got.

Location: Tuxedo Park, N.Y.
Price: $595,000
The Skinny: The Hudson Valley community of Tuxedo Park, with its storied provenance (it gave name to the tuxedo) and imposing stone gates, seems like an unlikely place to search for a first home. Lakefront mansions go for over $4M and the childhood castle of legendary decorator Dorothy Draper is currently listed for $3M. Still, although it's within commuting distance of NYC, has its own private school, a golf club, and a host of blue-blood racquet sports, there are still affordable options for young Manhattanites fleeing the city for the first time. This $595K white-shingled cottage lists four bedrooms and three baths spread over 2,400 square feet. Within walking distance of the Tuxedo Club, the 1924 house has been tastefully renovated, with hardwood floors and a modernized kitchen.
· 222 Continental Road [Zillow]
· A Lakefront Mansion in the Storied Old-World Outpost of Tuxedo [Curbed National]
· Dorothy Draper's Parents' French Norman-style Stone Manor [Curbed National]


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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Rookie Roosts 2012: Decoding the Word "Starter" Around the Curbed Universe

× Like us and you'll find top breaking news in your Facebook newsfeed. Sign up for our daily email newsletter and get top stories and breaking news delivered to your inbox. Tuesday, March 27, 2012, by Sarah Firshein

shutterstock_54012055.jpgPhoto: James Steidl/Shutterstock

Friends and readers of Curbed often marvel at the verbiage of listings: what "charming," "quaint," and "architectural" truly imply. Here now, a Brokerbabble Glossary decoding what the expression "starter," or "starter home," actually means within the following Curbed markets. Take NYC, for instance, where brokers "love to apply the 'starter home' tag to studio apartments in South Queens, because nothing says you're on your way like 300 square feet and a two-hour subway ride to anywhere." Here, look:

New York · Boston · Hamptons · Philly · DC · Atlanta · Chicago · Seattle · San Francisco · Los Angeles


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Sunday, April 24, 2011

Globe Trotting: Prince William and Kate's "Starter Home" Valued at Over $76M

× Like us and you'll find top breaking news in your Facebook newsfeed. Sign up for our daily email newsletter and get top stories and breaking news delivered to your inbox. Tuesday, April 19, 2011, by Sarah Firshein

article-0-0224AE4E00000578-804_468x331.jpgKate Middleton has lived in decent houses from childhood, but marrying a royal takes that whole quality-of-life thing to astronomical heights. Our friends at British real estate site Zoopla write in with a new set of stats that promise to make all 29-year-olds reading this feel even worse about their crappy one-bedroom apartments: Clarence House, where Middleton and Prince William will live once married, is valued at more than $76.68M and worth 343 times the average newlywed starter home ($223,282) in England. Sticking it further are the following stats about Windsor Castle, the royal country retreat (and the largest occupied castle in the world): it's valued at $279M and boasts more than 1,000 rooms over 484,000 square feet. Eventually King William and his queen will move into Buckingham Palace, which, as the world's most valuable private residence, is currently valued at $1.6B. Kids these days!
· Kate Middleton's Childhood Home on the Market for $742K [Curbed National]
· Zoopla [official site]


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