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Welcome To The New World…No Smoking In Your Own Home – Developer Says No Smoking!

Welcome To The New World…No Smoking In Your Own Home – Developer Says No Smoking!

February 17, 2014

At the end of last year, Fort Lauderdale developer Dennis Eisinger banned smoking inside the units of his luxury condo project called AquaVita, the only development in Broward and Palm Beach counties to do so.Now Eisinger has announced plans to build more homes for nonsmokers with partner developer Jean Francois Roy, the Sun-Sentinel reported.Sixteen smoke-free units are to be built at a new tower called Aqualuna on Isle of Venice Drive. The units are priced between $1.25 million and $2 million.

Another new Eisinger tower in the works, 1800 Las Olas at 60-80 Hendricks Isle, would have eight nonsmoking units priced between $1.2 million and $2.4 million.

Residents can only smoke on their balconies, and violators would be fined up to $100 by the community association. State law already bans condo residents from lighting up in common areas, but the law doesn’t extend to individual units.

Sales are scheduled to begin within the next six weeks, and the condos are slated to open at the end of 2015.

(via The Real Deal)

Flipping of expensive homes way up in 2013

Flipping of expensive homes way up in 2013

February 04, 2014

Home flipping ‘” defined as when a home is purchased and subsequently sold again within six months ‘“ was serious business in 2013, according to new data from RealtyTrac. Last year, 156,862 single-family homes were flipped across the country, a year-over-year increase of 16 percent from 2012 and a whopping 114 percent increase from 2011.Home flips made up 4.6 percent of all U.S. home sales in last year, up from 4.2 percent in 2012 and 2.6 percent in 2011. Profits on a flip also jumped to an average of $58,051 in gross profit, up from $45,759 in 2012, RealtyTrac data show.
Although home flipping activity was up across all price ranges, home flips on properties worth $400,000 or more saw the greatest increase in activity ‘“ 36 percent year-over-year ‘“ according to blog Zero Hedge.‘œStrong home price appreciation in many markets boosted profits for flippers in 2013 despite a shrinking inventory of lower-priced foreclosure homes to purchase,’ Daren Blomquist, vice-president of RealtyTrac, said in a statement seen by the website. [Zero Hedge]  ‘“ Hiten Samtani

(via The Real Deal)

Fine Art Helps Sell Real Estate In South Florida

Fine Art Helps Sell Real Estate In South Florida

January 07, 2014

Across South Florida, real estate developers are increasingly attaching extraordinary ‘” and valuable ‘” art to their designs, creating liveable, virtual museums as a way to market high-end condos to wealthy buyers. Brokers are catching on, too.Aligning with star architects, choosing uniquely designed furniture, inviting curators in for talks, have all become part of the gentrification ‘” or art-ification ‘” of South Florida, propelled by the success of Art Basel Miami Beach.

‘œGreat cities have great art,’ said Carlos Rosso, president of the condo division of the Related Group, which has eight condo projects underway in Miami-Dade and Broward counties, all adorned with art, murals, videoinstallations and sculptures. ‘œWe think art gives another dimension to life.’

While developers for years have paired exceptional art with luxury real estate in South Florida, the combination lately has been elevated to a whole new level. And customers are demanding it.

Ultra-wealthy condo buyers want to be ensconced amid art from the moment they drive up, all the way to their front doors, said Mark Zilbert, president and chief executive of Zilbert International Realty, a Miami Beach-based firm that specializes in high-end properties.

‘œThe idea is that the second you arrive at your building, this is the theme: that art is important,’ Zilbert said.
Brazilians, Italians and Russians, in particular ‘” who are buying up South Florida condos briskly ‘” find art especially important, he said.

‘œSome appreciate art,’ Zilbert said, ‘œand, those who are new to wealth, as long as they know it’s expensive ‘” they love it.’
What’s more, for developers, art adds to the value of real estate.

‘œEvery building I can think of that has invested in extraordinary art in their public areas has never had a problem selling and never had a problem reselling.’ And, said Zilbert, such buildings ‘œtend to have the highest market value.’ Indeed, the intertwining of art and real estate is furthering the allure of South Florida, which is rising in international appeal among the glitterati, spurred by artsy, modern skyscrapers, and fueled by wealthy foreign buyers’ desire to invest in the United States.

‘œPeople of high net worth who collect homes throughout the world also collect art and watches and wine,’ said Mayi de la Vega, founder and chief executive of ONE Sotheby’s International Realty, who has collaborated with Sotheby’s auction house to land real estate clients, including attending a dinner held in London at Zaha Hadid’s showroom. She has found other ways to connect to clients through art, including arranging for a curator to give art tours during Art Basel Miami Beach. De la Vega has even turned her Miami Beach office into a gallery, showcasing emerging and mid-career Latin American artists, with proceeds going to the Cisneros Foundation as well as to the artist. She has also brought in art advisors Sarah Jane Bruce and Flavia Masetto to educate her 320 agents on the latest trends in art, give talks to clients and write feature stories on art for a new magazine she has launched. And she includes updates on art fairs in her newsletters for clients.

‘œYou become a source for them, not only for real estate, but they think of you more often because they are receiving something valuable,’ said de la Vega, a collector herself, who has traveled to art fairs in Moscow, London and New York to connect with collectors and global clients through art. ‘œArt really is very much a part of what we do each day,’ she said.

Indeed, as the high-end real estate market rebounds, it benefits from sophisticated art collectors’ appreciation for the beautiful things in life.

‘œBuyers are way more savvy and demanding in this go-around, especially because the deposit structure has changed and they are being asked to shell out 50 percent,’ said Diego Ojeda, vice president of the Rilea Group, which is developing The Bond on Brickell. ‘œIt’s not your typical flipper. They are more educated, and know what they want.’

At The Bond, a 44-story condo touted to be the first building under construction on Brickell Avenue since the recession, O’Neill’s limited-edition, six-foot tall, black-and-white photographs from the 1960s and ’70s bolster the project’s identity, which is based on the glamour of London’s legendary Bond Street.

‘œWe felt we were missing a little bit of soul for the British theme’‰.’‰.’‰.’ said Ojeda, 31, seated at the sales center, which is filled with art books. ‘œTerry O’Neill solved that for us.’

Buyers have responded, with 60 percent of the building sold.

Carlos Paolini, seated in the sales office with his Caracas-based stepfather, Antonio Menafra, found the art appealing.
‘œThe photos were the first thing I saw,’ Paolini said. ‘œIf this is how the building is going to be, it’s gorgeous.’ Six sculptures by artist Tatiana Blanco will be placed at the entrance, in the lobby, and by the pool deck of The Bond, Ojeda said.

Huge sculptures are also planned for Downtown Doral, a 120-acre multi-use development from Codina Partners, which will include condo towers, apartments, townhouses, offices, retail space, a government center, a school and a park.
The tab for the art alone is $1 million. It includes a massive structure by Michele Oka Doner that will be used as a pavilion in the park and will be ‘œthe signature for Doral,’ said Armando Codina, chairman and chief executive of Codina Partners.
The developers are also negotiating with another, as-yet-unnamed artist to create two 30-foot-tall, custom-made sculptures that will be placed at the entrance to Downtown Doral’s Main Street.

‘œThis is a city,’ Codina said. ‘œHow can you not have art in front of city hall? It wouldn’t be the same.’

Beyond art installations, developers are increasingly turning to star architects to give a new project its artsy personality.
‘œOur building is our art,’ said Louis Birdman, who is developing the Hadid-designed, futuristic One Thousand Museum on Biscayne Boulevard. The 62-story tower will have 83 units, starting at $5 million.

One Thousand Museum has expanded on the ‘œstarchitect’ theme, having Hadid design the sales center. Hadid-designed wallpaper encloses the center, which is topped by an artistic ceiling and sloping furniture, all of Hadid’s design. Even the door handles are hers.

‘œWe see a lot of very sophisticated buyers, cultured buyers ‘” a lot of art collectors,’ said Birdman, an architect. ‘œPeople in the art world know Zaha.’

Art collectors J. Steven Manolis and his wife, Michelle, of Palm Beach, bought a half-floor unit on the 49th floor.
Hadid’s involvement ‘œplayed a big role in deciding to buy,’ Manolis said during a recent soiree celebrating the sales center’s opening.

Jade Signature, a 57-story tower rising in Sunny Isles Beach, is also considered ‘œlike a work of art, because the architects Herzog & de Meuron are behind the project,’ said Edgardo Defortuna, president and chief executive of Fortune International, the Miami-based development, brokerage, sales and marketing company that is developing the property.
‘œIt is really a lot of detail and architectural features that are related to art,’ Defortuna said. Sophisticated buyers and art lovers are drawn to such features, like a sculptural ribbon that wraps around the building, starting at the entrance, then running into the lobby, the restaurant and the pool deck, he said.

Jade Signature is already half sold, mostly to international buyers, said Defortuna, who recently traveled to Buenos Aires to give a presentation to 250 people, and said the next day his reception area was so full that it looked like a busy doctor’s office.

Art is also a vital part of Argentine Alan Faena’s plans for his Faena District in Miami Beach, which will include an art exhibition center, Faena Arts Center, designed by Rem Koolhaas, along with a condo tower, hotel, bazaar and artists-in-residence center, park, marina and gardens.

Years ago, developers first began pairing art with luxury condo projects. Craig Robins, for example, commissioned artist Richard Tuttle to create a large-scale mural on the façade of an eight-story building at his Miami Beach residential project Aqua. And Argentine artist Guillermo Kuitca created a sculptural element for the complex’s central plaza.

Related has also been adding art to its projects for many years, and Russo figures the company has invested $50 million in art. Related’s chairman, Jorge Perez, an art collector, also donated $40 million in cash and art for the new Perez Art Museum Miami, or PAMM, which will open to the public Dec. 4.

‘œThe buyer in Miami has become a lot more interested in art and more concerned about what we are doing about art, and more educated about it,’ said Defortuna, whose firm also markets some Related properties. ‘œIt is getting a different crowd, with Art Basel and the museum. We feel that Miami has gotten a lot more culturally inspired.’

(via The Miami Herald)

‘Tropical and Euphoric’ Estate in the Florida Keys Asks $16M

‘Tropical and Euphoric’ Estate in the Florida Keys Asks $16M

December 28, 2013

Location: Islamorada, Fla.Price: $16,000,000The Skinny: Located on a prime waterfront lot in Islamorada in the Florida Keys, this luxury tropical estate offers up everything from a private yacht basin to a greenhouse set up for orchid-growing. The estate, which is known as Palm Harbor, consists of an expansive 11,989-square-foot beach house and 6.4 acres of land containing (per the extremely enthusiastic listing) “some of the most lush, tropical and euphoric natural plant life you will see.” The house itself is a nice open-plan, post-and-beam number with an observation tower and rooftop deck reachable by a set of spiral stairs. From there the views include the ocean, the yacht basin, and the four separate chickee huts spread out across the grounds. There’s also a guest house, outdoor barbecue area and, for the avid angler, access to “some of the best back country bone fishing in the world.” Palm Harbor is owned by Miami real estate developer Michael Swerdlow, who’s asking $16M for the six-bedroom, seven-bathroom spread.

(via Curbed)

Most Expensive South Florida Sales of 2013

Most Expensive South Florida Sales of 2013

December 20, 2013

From Miami Beach to Palm Beach, high-end homes changed hands at a brisk pace throughout 2013.
A coal mining executive kicked off the year by selling a pair of ICON South Beach condos for $21 million. Embattled New York Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez kept the luxury residential market’s momentum going by netting a hefty profit with the $30 million sale of his Miami Beach mansion.On the buying side, celebrities like shock jock Howard Stern, Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie and motivational speaker Tony Robbins made splashes with expensive Palm Beach home purchases.Below is The Real Deal’˜s list of the 10 most expensive residential sales of the year. The list is based on closedtransactions recorded by Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties. That means pending deals that have not closed, like the reported $34 million sale of a penthouse at the Residences at the Miami Beach EDITION, were not eligible. The EDITION transaction is scheduled to officially close next year, when construction is finished and occupancy permits are obtained.1. Howard Stern buys Palm Beach compound for $52M

South Florida’s most expensive residential purchase was made by one of the world’s most recognizable media celebrities: shock jock Howard Stern.

At first, the $52 million sale of an oceanfront compound at 601 North County Road in Palm Beach stood out only for its high price. Textile and apparel executive Martin Trust and his wife Diane sold the compound to the non-descript 601 North County Road Revocable Trust in May.

Luxury residential buyers often form trusts or limited liability companies when making expensive purchases in an effort to protect their privacy or for tax purposes. It seemed the true buyer of 601 North County Road would remain a mystery.

Then, numerous media outlets reported Stern as the buyer. The America’s Got Talent judge and his wife, Beth Ostrosky Stern, spent weeks house hunting in South Florida before choosing the home in the section of Palm Beach known as ‘œRaiders Row.’ Stern now resides near another media celebrity on the opposite end of the political spectrum: conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh.

2. Palm Beach mansion sold for $42M to resolve bankruptcy

A mansion on ‘œBillionaires Row’ in Palm Beach sold for $42 million in June. The sale resolved a bankruptcy case tied to luxury residential developer Dan Swanson. A Swanson-managed company had filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition in September 2012, citing $41.5 million in debt.

The buyer was the appropriately named 1220 South Ocean Boulevard Trust.

Swanson, of Addison Construction, originally put the property on the market for $74 million in September 2011. A mansion and guest house totaling 27,000 square feet of living space were built on the 2.5-acre property earlier that year. Both the main house and guest house front the Intracoastal Waterway.

3. A-Rod sells Miami Beach mansion for $30M

While fighting to salvage his baseball career, New York Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez showed his real estate juice with the $30 million sale of his Miami Beach mansion in May.

A-Rod netted a $15 million profit in the sale of the 4358 North Bay Road home. He had acquired the property for $7.4 million in May 2010 and spent another $8 million to renovate the home. Rodriguez originally listed the mansion with a $38 million asking price in August 2012.

The two-story, nearly 20,000-square-foot mansion has nine bedrooms, 11 full bathrooms and an indoor batting cage. Other features include a four-car garage, 16-camera security system and a Zen garden.

Rodriguez is currently battling with Major League Baseball to reduce a 211-game suspension for alleged performance-enhancing drug use.

4. La Gorce Island home sets record in $30M sale

An 11-bedroom mansion known as Castello del Sol sold for $30 million in June. The transaction set a record as the most expensive transaction on La Gorce Island in Miami Beach.

The buyer was an undisclosed European corporation that purchased the mansion from another corporation, 1418518 Ontario. The selling company paid $12.45 million for the home in 2011.

Located on a nearly 71,000-square-foot property, the 42 La Gorce Circle mansion has 14 bathrooms and three half-baths. It fronts Biscayne Bay.

5. Eagles owner pays $28.5M for Palm Beach mansion

Earlier this month, retired financial services executive Bruce Hammonds and wife Sandra sold their 1275 South Ocean Boulevard mansion for $28.5 million. Within days after the sale of the six-bedroom home closed, reports surfaced that Philadelphia Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie was the buyer.

Lurie spent several months looking for a home in Palm Beach, which is where his mother resides. He got a nice discount from the original asking price of $35 million when the Hammonds put the mansion on the market two years ago.

The 17,000-square-foot mansion includes an elevator, swimming pool and boat dockage.

6. Setai condo fetches $27M in record sale

The Miami Beach condo market got off to a rousing start in 2013 with January’s $27 million sale of a Setai penthouse.

At the time, the sale of the 40th floor unit at the 101 20th Street tower set a pricing record for the South Florida condo market. The condo has four bedrooms, four-and-a-half bathrooms and 7,100 square feet of living space.

The seller paid $15 million for the penthouse in 2010 and rented it out to celebrities like Madonna, Jim Carrey and Simon Cowell at exorbitant rates, the Wall Street Journal reported. The identity of the buyer, a Delaware corporation, is not known.

7. Tony Robbins gets Manalapan home for nearly $25M

Motivational speaker and life coach Tony Robbins bought an oceanfront mansion in Manalapan for $24.8 million in April.

Robbins purchased the 750 South Ocean Boulevard property directly from the Palm Beach-based developer who constructed the home. The Georgian-style home has more than 11,000 square feet of living space on two acres that stretch from the Atlantic Ocean to the Intracoastal Waterway.

The sale price was the second-highest for a Palm Beach County home located outside the town of Palm Beach at the time of closing.

8. ICON South Beach condos sell for $21M

Ohio coal mining executive Wayne Michael Boich kicked off 2013 by selling a penthouse and 36th floor unit at ICON South Beach for nearly $21 million.

The four-bedroom, six-and-a-half bathroom unit was originally listed for $19 million. It has a private rooftop deck and pool.

Boich paid $7 million for the condo in 2007.

9. Palm Beach spec house sells for $20M

An oceanfront spec home in the Estate Section of Palm Beach sold for more than $20 million in March.

The 102 Banyan Road mansion had been on the market for two years before Banyan Road Trust acquired the property. Palm Beach Gardens-based real estate investor Peter Callahan developed the house with plans to sell it once builder Paul Wittmann completed construction.

A two-story home, 102 Banyan Road has 11,000 square feet of living space and seven bedrooms.

10. Golden Beach home sells for $17.3M

The gated northeast Miami-Dade County community of Golden Beach rounds out our list, thanks to the $17.3 million sale of a residence at 605 Ocean Boulevard in July.

Bruce and Deborah Kaye sold the three-story, 14,075-square-foot home to a company called Villa Deniz. The five-bedroom, nine-bathroom residence was completed in 2007.

Golden Beach is coveted by high-end home buyers who seek privacy. Last month, former baseball star Sammy Sosa paid $7.6 million for a home there.

(via The Real Deal)

Pinterest Is Changing The Way People Buy Homes

Pinterest Is Changing The Way People Buy Homes

December 18, 2013

If you’re in the market for a home, you typically run a search on a real estate website with all your required parameters, from price, to location, to size.  The result?  A list of homes that typically don’t reflect your taste or needs.  But what if you could send your agent a collage of pictures giving them a better idea of what you wanted?  For example: open floor plans, granite countertops and a large master bath (yes, this is my wish list).  Realtors could not only steer you in a better direction, but also make the process less time consuming, more social and much more interactive.  This is precisely why real estate companies are starting to discover that Pinterest is an ideal social media platform to sell a home.Real estate websites are already highly visual, but the pictures typically just stay on the website and can only be shared via email.   By integrating Pinterest into listings, photos can be shared between the buyer and agent and also across the web.   This re-pinning of listings not only provides collaboration among the broker and the buyer, but also provides a powerful opportunity for real estate companies and brokers to gain traffic to their site.  Although many agents haven’t started utilizing Pinterest yet into their business, some real estate companies have and are finding some very positive results.

Corcoran, the largest residential real estate firm in New York, has been using Pinterest for almost two years and currently has about 75 different Pinterest boards.  Currently MLS listings aren’t pinnable but Corcoran, which has successfully been using social network Tumblr to post a hugely followed ‘œ10am Special’ or ‘œhouse of the day,’ made Pinterest an extension of its Tumblr product, creating Pinterest boards organized by room, i.e., kitchen boards, bathroom boards, and living room boards (even foodspotting and neighborhood boards).  In addition to giving users richer visual content of homes and neighborhoods, Corcoran has found that Pinterest is driving traffic back to their native website at a huge rate.Corcoran Pinterest

‘œBecause of the momentum that Pinterest currently has for us, between Q2 to Q3 this year, there’s actually been a 95 percent increase in traffic from Pinterest to Corcoran.com,’ said Matthew Shadbolt, Corcoran’s Director of Interactive Product and Marketing.  ‘Once they get to Corcoran.com, they’re very highly engaged, they stay longer, they look at more things.’

While Corcoran may be advanced as far as its social media utilization goes, many real estate firms are behind the eight-ball on technology adoption.  But Apu Gupta, CEO of  visual analytics provider Curalate, said that while technology adoption for real estate companies is notoriously slow, integrating Pinterest into listings could be done with Pinterest’s newly rolled out ‘œRich Pins’ feature.  Rich pins allows images that are pinned to carry over key information about the image including pricing, availability and brand.

‘œFirst and foremost, make the real estate listings pinnable; integrate a pin button into the listing, next to the image.  And when you pin it, bring the MLS list data with it,’ Gupta said.  ‘So when you pin it, you can share something really quickly with your broker’“ instead of creating these crazy long emails with 100 MLS listings.’

Aside from helping real estate companies build their brand, making real estate photos and listings pinnable could open up the door to collaboration between the realtor and buyer in a way that never existed before.

‘œWhat you should be able to do is create collaborative boards, invite your broker in, be able to pin things to it and take that data with it, so you can just share it, Gupta said.  ‘And what would be great about that is then your broker can now get a really good sense of the types of things you like.’

A real estate broker that actually get’s a sense of what you want and who you are?  I guess anything is possible.

(via Best Techie)

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Luxury Developers Bet Big on Ultramodern

Luxury Developers Bet Big on Ultramodern

December 16, 2013

Building multimillion-dollar homes on spec’”with no buyer on the horizon’”has always been a gamble. Now the stakes are even higher, as developers break from traditional home design and erect contemporary glass-and-steel houses with bold flourishes.In a Miami neighborhood full of Mediterranean mansions, a crew of workers is putting the finishing touches on a seven bedroom, 7½-bath concrete home, which is listed for $9.8 million. Part of the home’s living area rises 24 feet to the ceiling. The few doors in the voluminous space are 12-feet tall. A 20-by-20-foot concrete wall is embedded with an 8-inch-deep relief of a massive oak tree. The project is the brainchild of Dennis Day, an accountant from the Netherlands who has never before built in the U.S. He bought the property for $1.5 million in 2010, but wouldn’t disclose the construction cost.

In Los Angeles, a nearly finished 15,250-square-foot Richard Neutra-inspired home in Holmby Hills is listed for $50 million, and the developer has similar projects expected to range in price from $35 million to $60 million. In Aspen, Colo., an 8,126-square-foot “mountain modern” home is listed for $13.9 million, while a 14,000-square-foot spec house that recently broke ground will list for $36 million, the developer says. Even in New York’s Hamptons, an area known for traditional design, “transitional” modern homes with open floor plans and expanses of glass are listing with $20 million price tags.

“After five years of being in the doldrums, all of a sudden luxury spec is starting to catch fire,” says Peter Zalewski, a housing analyst in Miami and principal at Condo Vultures.

This time around, however, the currently accepted formula for high-end residential developments includes open floor plans, multipurpose rooms and high-tech gadgets like remote home automation’”all of which are amenable to modern layouts. Some traditional styles have taken a hit among high-end buyers, who regard them as shopworn and common, veterans say. Add to that an infusion of foreign buyers with more adventurous tastes and the fact that modern homes are typically faster to build, and suddenly the high-concept house looks like the safer bet.

Because they are often unusual in relation to their neighbors, contemporary homes are also more difficult to appraise in relation to other homes, giving sellers more latitude in setting the price, says Michael Lea, a professor at the Corky McMillin Center for Real Estate at San Diego State University. People “buying those multimillion-dollar homes probably aren’t buying them for appreciation reasons’”they’re buying them to make a statement.”

In Los Angeles, developer Alessandro Cajrati Crivelli is finishing the 15,250-square-foot “contemporary villa” in Holmby Hills with 20-foot ceilings at its peak. Mr. Crivelli, who has worked with Giorgio Armani and Tom Ford on large commercial projects, said the home was built with a modern art collector in mind, so it offers ample display space and museum-like volume. The list price’”$50 million’”is reasonable, he says, considering the clientele. “When you pay $44 million for a Barnett Newman, $50 million is frankly irrelevant,” Mr. Crivelli says, referring to the contemporary artist.

Some developers, particularly those in markets heavily tilted toward traditional design, are fusing the two styles together. In Aspen, the incumbent style is “Aspen overdone,” a mix of heavy timber and stone, says architect Rich Carr. “It became almost commoditized.” Instead, a spec project Mr. Carr is working on merged an 1800s Victorian-style house with a modern addition that has a flat roof and an accordion glass wall to create a three-level, 5,500-square-foot home. It will be completed in early 2014, but has already sold to a U.S.-based buyer. Mr. Carr wouldn’t disclose the sale price, but he says it listed for between $10 million and $15 million.

Aspen-based developer Bob Bowden says mostly traditional homes are taking cues from modern architecture. He describes his 8,126-square-foot, $13.9 million project as “Brazilian modern in the mountains,” with lighter tones, minimal lines and expansive glass panels. Another home, which won’t be completed until spring of 2015, will measure 14,000 square feet and include eight bedrooms and 11 baths, an outdoor kitchen and cabana spaces.

Modern or no, developing luxury homes is a high-risk activity. Builders are looking for a 20% to 50% return on their investment, says Mr. Zalewski, the housing analyst, and those margins can quickly shrink if the property isn’t built in the most desirable locations, where buyers compete for limited land. Some developers use short-term construction loans with adjustable interest rates that make timing the sale even more important. In some cases, developers of luxury homes can face carrying costs exceeding $50,000 a month for a single project.

And sometimes a modern design can be too ahead of the curve. Built in 2011, one 18,750-square-foot “mountain modern” home in Aspen with a 30-foot-tall waterfall, two elevators and a bowling alley is still looking for a buyer. Listing agent Joshua Saslove notes that the home has been rented a number of times and now that he is seeing a bigger appetite for modern design, he plans to raise the home’s asking price to $45 million, up from its last price of $39.75 million.

Another critical factor spurring developers is the current shortage of available ultraluxury homes’”a shortage that can vanish as these spec homes are completed and go on the market. Credit is still tight for developers, which raises the barrier of entry for new builders, and, for the time being, is staving off fears of another bubble.

So the building continues. Cody Vichinsky, an agent with Douglas Elliman Real Estate Real Estate in Bridgehampton, N.Y., says the gambrel rooflines and traditional facades are still popular in the Hamptons, “but you walk inside and you feel like you’re in a W Hotel.”

An 8,000-square-foot spec home in Sagaponack, N.Y., listed for just under $23 million, remixes the classic Hamptons style with a central staircase with oak treads and polished chrome balustrades enclosed in a glass tower visible from the exterior. There is a 24-foot-tall great room and a Zen rock garden off the walkout basement. “The buyers I sell to, they want things that other people don’t have,” says the developer, Jay Bialsky, and incorporating modernist design elements is one way he’s providing it.

As for why a buyer would spend this kind of money (sales are typically all-cash) on a spec home, developers say it comes down to time and convenience. Permitting and planning can be a long and arduous task, and in many cases, these are the buyers’ second, third or even fourth homes. These projects offer a happy medium, builders say. “It’s a custom home that happens to be a spec,” Mr. Bowden says, insisting that there is an end user in mind throughout the process’”he just hasn’t met the person yet.

(via The Wall Street Journal)

901 South Ocean Boulevard – Today’s Priciest Listing

901 South Ocean Boulevard – Today’s Priciest Listing

December 02, 2013

Today’s priciest new listing is a six-bedroom, seven-bathroom single-family home with a pool asking $19.95 million. The 12,153-square-feet home is located at 901 South Ocean Boulevard in the estate section of Delray Beach. It is under construction and is expected to be ready by late next year. Randolph T. Ely of the Douglas Elliman Real Estate has the listing. (Condo Vultures data include condos and single-family listings in the main metropolitan areas of Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach, as well as Monroe County that are newly listed.

Randy Ely Interviewed By the Real Estate Weekly

Randy Ely Interviewed By the Real Estate Weekly

October 30, 2013

Randy and Nick, the leading real estate team for fine Delray Beach luxury homes along the beautiful coastline in Palm Beach County, are pleased to announce that Randy Ely was interviewed by the local Real Estate Weekly. The subject of the article was on the strong comeback in Florida real estate.As for Randy in the interview, he described how Connecticut and New York buyers were coming down to the Palm Beach County area to purchase a second home. He and the other brokers agreed that the demographics were shifting as well, from a strictly 55 and over crowd to a young and hip crowd who also like the idea of getting away from cold winter weather. At the same time, sellers are starting to see prices come back enough that they are willing to sell. The combination of these factors has led to a boom in oceanfront property in Delray Beach.Of course, Randy and Nick have thrived as a business regardless of market conditions. According to the team, “We set out to represent the standard in luxury home sales and purchasing by combining our decades of experience and knowledge.” Randy and Nick’s recent success solidifies their place as one of the best waterfront property real estate teams in the area.As for Randy in the interview, he described how Connecticut and New York buyers were coming down to the Palm Beach County area to purchase a second home. He and the other brokers agreed that the demographics were shifting as well, from a strictly 55 and over crowd to a young and hip crowd who also like the idea of getting away from cold winter weather. At the same time, sellers are starting to see prices come back enough that they are willing to sell. The combination of these factors has led to a boom in oceanfront property in Delray Beach.

Of course, Randy and Nick have thrived as a business regardless of market conditions. According to the team, “We set out to represent the standard in luxury home sales and purchasing by combining our decades of experience and knowledge.” Randy and Nick’s recent success solidifies their place as one of the best waterfront property real estate teams in the area.