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The choice between single family homes and condos in Chicago is usually not a very easy one. While there would be a vast number of individuals on either side of the fence, i.e. either vehemently for or against opting for Chicago condos, the truth actually lies somewhere in between. Agreed, that there are a number of benefits that condos offer, but there are also various limiting factors that accompany them; we look at some of them in this article, starting with the benefits.

Numerous Shared Resources
A major advantage with condos is the instant access that you gain, to a vast number of shared resources that are already a part of the entire condominium. There is relatively little additional effort involved in gaining access to those resources, unlike in single family homes, where you won’t even have such existing resources, in the very first place. Examples include lounges, pools, exercise rooms, and more. Additionally, costs of electricity, Internet access, Television Cable, etc. are also shared and distributed, dramatically bringing down the cost per household.
Instant Access to a Social Network
Life in independent bungalows can be lonely at times; with condominiums, you have immediate access to people in the vicinity who eventually become a part of your social network. Security too is largely taken care of, in condominiums, as entry of external entities is restricted, and neighbors in the vicinity act as additional security and support in case anything untoward happens.
While the above are some of the advantages of staying in condos, there are a few disadvantages as well, including:
Lesser Privacy
With the additional security and safety that your neighbors give you, they also take away the privacy you experience in your own private bungalow. The experience is all the more stark, if you have always stayed in a family home, and are making the transition to a Chicago condo for the first time.
Limitations of Size and Layout
While an independent house can be structured, laid out and designed as per personal tastes and preferences, condos do not allow that luxury. Invariably, the overall size, shape, layout of the rooms, and the colors used are standard. Even the fittings and fixtures tend to be uniform – often, not to your taste. This can be a severely limiting factor for those with varied tastes and a dash of creativity in their personalities!
Summing up, the choice of opting for an independent family home, or going for a condominium is not an easy one; there are various factors that come into play, both in favor and against each. So, it is up to you which factor affects you the most, and accordingly, you should go about making your choice.

Christine Hancock

Feb
19

Do you believe in Ghosts?

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Regal Lofts

Regal Lofts home of the former The A.L. Sausage and Packing Co.

Have you seen Louisa Luetgert? Many of the downtown Chicago Loft buildings have some very interesting history’s. Everything from Clothing Factories, Shoe factories, Vacuum Cleaner Manufacturer’s, Bakeries and Textile companies. But none has such a “Spooky” History as the Regal Lofts in Lakeview at 1735 W. Diversey Parkway. Home of the former The A.L. Sausage and Packing Co. and the “THE SAUSAGE VAT MURDER” Read the rest of the story and judge for yourself…AT MURDER
Ghosts and Ghoulishness Surrounding a Horribleo
http://www.prairieghosts.com/sausage.html






Feb
01

Rates Going Up?

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 There are only 2 months left to go (i.e., February and March) in the Fed’s program to purchase $1.25 trillion of the mortgage backed securities. The program originally started with Fed purchases in March 2009 will stop by the end of next month.  Eric Rosengren, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, predicted last month that mortgage interest rates will rise by as much as 0.75% when the purchase program ends.  (source: Federal Reserve)

·Fannie Mae Mortgage backed securities are down 28 basis points on the day, leading towards higher interest rates for today and tomorrow

·15 year fixed interest rates are now as low as 4.500% with -0- points, while 20 and 30 year fixed interest rates are as low as 5.000% and 5.125% respectively.

·5/1 and 7/1 ARM rates are still very attractive and are now as low as 4.000% with -0- points and 4.375% with -0- points respectively.

·Interest rates for jumbo loan programs remain very attractive at 4.000% for a 5/1 ARM, 4.375% for a 7/1 ARM, and 5.250% for a 10/1
 ARM, all with -0- points.

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To view all properties fro sale at this location click here

Jan
18

Premier Market Watch Report

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The median condominium price in CHICAGO this week is $275,000. The 12479 condos have been on the for an average of 285 days. 315 properties have been absorbed This Week.

THIS WEEK

Most Expensive Listing   $ 14,000,000

Median List Price    $ 384,435

Least Expensive Listing   $10,900

Asking Price per Square Foot $ 248

Total Inventory   12479

Average Days on Market 285

Asking Price per Square Foot $ 248

Percent of Properties with Price Reductions 36 %

Percent Relisted (reset DOM) 11 %

Percent Flip (price increased) 2 %

Median Size (sq ft)  1,187

Median Number of Bedrooms  2

Median Number of Bathrooms   2

How’s The Market?  COLD – BUYER’s Market!

* “Absorbed” covers properties sold and those taken off the market for other reasons. Since sales sometimes take months to close, it is impossible to discern in real-time exactly which properties sold.

 

 

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By Mary Umberger

January 10, 2010

The busiest season for home sales traditionally begins the day after the Super Bowl. But putting off getting the word out about your property would probably be a mistake, some experts say.

Reporting from Chicago – It’s nearly spring — at least that’s the case in the parallel, slightly weird universe of real estate.

Traditionally, the “spring” home buying season, theoretically the busiest time in the marketplace, begins the day after the Super Bowl. Why this is so has never been clear, but it probably has something to do with finally being able to pry spouses off the couch to tour houses.

This year, “spring” arrives later than usual: The big game is Feb. 7.

But if you’re thinking of selling, waiting to list until the bowl festivities have passed probably is a mistake in the current market, according to some experts.

If you’re new to the selling game or haven’t sold a house in years, here are a few thoughts:

* Think about planting that “for sale” sign in the yard before your neighbor gets around to doing the same thing.

“We’re going to see a lot of property coming on the market,” said James Kinney, vice president of luxury home sales for Chicago-based Baird & Warner Real Estate. “We’re going to see everything that people took off the market in the fall, knowing they were going to be back in the spring.”

Plus there will be genuinely new listings in addition to the continuing cascade of foreclosures and short sales, he said.

* Don’t be surprised if, in determining an asking price, listing agents emphasize how much the competition is asking, rather than relying solely on data for recently sold homes.

Agents have always at least considered what else is on the market in setting an asking price, said Jim Merrion, regional director of Re/Max Northern Illinois.

“Now there’s more weight being placed on the current inventory, because in many cases it’s pushing prices to lower levels,” Merrion said. “I don’t know if it’s the effect of HGTV shows or what, but now we’re seeing agents taking sellers right into active listings” to get a true comparison of what they’re up against. “That never used to happen.”

Still, there’s a danger in relying too much on what the guy down the street is asking.

“An awful lot of listings are wrongly priced,” Kinney said. “If people use those as a guidepost, they could get into trouble. Do a combination of historical data and looking at who you’re competing against, once you’ve determined whether they’re valid prices.”

* And then there’s the thorniest issue: Most people have inflated notions of their home’s value in this boom-gone-bust market.

Experimenting with trying to net a price that’s rooted in the past can taint a house as an “old” listing, Kinney said.

“If you’re asking a price commensurate with or higher than prices achieved in 2006 and 2007, you’re incorrectly priced,” he said.

Umberger writes for the Chicago Tribune.

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Jan
07

Staging Your Home Before Selling

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A good first impression can attract potential buyers even better than a low price. When you are selling your own home, make sure your house is in top selling condition. Clear away clutter, depersonalize , rearrange furniture, and make your home welcoming. However, if it’s obviously a family home, don’t be afraid to show a few photos, or have kids furniture. When selling, show off the best features of your home. Watch this Expert Real Estate Tips video for more home staging help.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RIua8TcvVWM]

Categories : Staging your Home
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Dec
27

The Mansions of Historic Prairie Ave.

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This amazing 3 Bedrooms/4.2 bath single family home is model quality and better than new! Home features the finest finishes with dream kitchen, oak floors with custom inlay, marble & granite thru-out, high ceilings and 2 terraces. 1000 sq. ft. full floor master suite, master bath with rain shower & steam room. Huge top floor media room, could be 4th bedroom, a private elevator and lower level exercise room. Entire house wired for Smart Home Attached 2 Car Garage. $1,790,000

Washington, October 01, 2009

Pending home sales have increased for seven straight months, the longest in the series of the index which began in 2001, according to the National Association of Realtors®.

The Pending Home Sales Index,* a forward-looking indicator based on contracts signed in August, rose 6.4 percent to 103.8 from a reading of 97.6 in July, and is 12.4 percent above August 2008 when it was 92.4. The index is at the highest level since March 2007 when it was 104.5.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said not all contracts are turning into closed sales within an expected timeframe. “The rise in pending home sales shows buyers are returning to the market and signing contracts, but deals are not necessarily closing because of long delays related to short sales, and issues regarding complex new appraisal rules,” he said. “No doubt many first-time buyers are rushing to beat the deadline for the $8,000 tax credit, which expires at the end of next month.”

The Pending Home Sales Index in the Northeast jumped 8.2 percent to 85.3 in August and is 12.0 percent higher than August 2008. In the Midwest the index rose 3.1 percent to 90.8 in August and is 7.6 percent above a year ago. In the South, pending home sales increased 0.8 percent to an index of 104.6 and is 8.2 percent above August 2008. In the West the index surged 16.0 percent to 130.5 and is 22.3 percent above a year ago.

“There is likely to be some double counting over a span of several months because some buyers whose contracts were cancelled have found another home and signed a new contract to buy,” Yun explained. “Perhaps the real question is how many transactions are being delayed in the pipeline, and how many are being cancelled? Without historic precedents, it’s challenging to assess.”

Yun also noted that the data sample coverage for pending sales is smaller than the measurement for closed existing-home sales, so the two series will never match one for one.

NAR President Charles McMillan, a broker with Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Dallas-Fort Worth, said first-time buyers need to act now. “Potential first-time buyers must make a contract offer very soon to have a reasonable chance of qualifying for the tax credit,” he said. “Congress needs to extend and expand this program because it’s stimulating the economy and reducing inventory close to price stabilization points.”

McMillan said a sizable number of homebuyers already in the pipeline could be let down because of the tight deadline. “We know there is a pent-up demand because sales are below normal levels for the size of our population. The faster we absorb excess inventory, the sooner we’ll turn the corner on home prices, prevent additional families from becoming upside-down in their mortgages, and give Wall Street the confidence to extend credit to other sectors,” he said. “Each home sale pumps an additional $63,000 into the economy through related goods and services, so the benefits of extending and expanding the tax credit far outweigh the costs.”

Yun said the forecast for home sales and prices depends very much on whether a tax credit is extended. “All we can say for certain is sales will decline when the tax credit expires because we are not yet on a self-sustaining recovery path. It also raises a risk of a double-dip recession,” he said. “Extending and expanding the tax credit is the best tool in our arsenal to encourage financially qualified buyers to stimulate the economy and help reduce the budget deficit.”

The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.2 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

# # #

*The Pending Home Sales Index is a leading indicator for the housing sector, based on pending sales of existing homes. A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed, though the sale usually is finalized within one or two months of signing.

The index is based on a large national sample, typically representing about 20 percent of transactions for existing-home sales. In developing the model for the index, it was demonstrated that the level of monthly sales-contract activity from 2001 through 2004 parallels the level of closed existing-home sales in the following two months. There is a closer relationship between annual index changes (from the same month a year earlier) and year-ago changes in sales performance than with month-to-month comparisons.

An index of 100 is equal to the average level of contract activity during 2001, which was the first year to be examined as well as the first of five consecutive record years for existing-home sales.

Existing-home sales for September will be released October 23; the next Pending Home Sales Index will be on November 2.

Information about NAR is available at www.realtor.org. This and other news releases are posted in the News Media section. Statistical data, tables and surveys also may be found by clicking on Research.

For more information, contact:
Walter Molony 202/383-1177 wmolony@realtors.org

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Be sure to watch NBC’s Open Hpuse at 10:30 am on Sunday Oct. 11th. 180 E. Pearson will be showcased in a segment called “Square Footage”