Archive for September 19th, 2007

Yahoo Finance – A big payoff in the tiniest room

Friday September 7, 10:25 am ET
By Josh Garskof, Money Magazine contributing writer

Adding a new bathroom will enhance your quality of life – and the value of your property – like few other home improvement projects will. Put in a master bath, and you won’t have to take turns with the kids every morning. Install a powder room, and dinner guests won’t have to traipse through your private terrain.

While you can’t count on recouping the cost of any upgrade right away in today’s weak housing market, over the long term adding a bathroom can boost your home’s value by some 20 percent, says Paul Emrath, an economist at the National Association of Home Builders

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Of course, there’s also almost no limit to what you can spend on a bathroom. “It’s easy to get to $50,000, $100,000 or beyond for a new master bathroom,” says Todd Polifka, CEO of Vision Remodeling, a contractor in the Twin Cities area. The more you get carried away, the more remote your chance of a big return. So keep these principles in mind.
Make up for your biggest shortfalls
Simply put, you’ll get the biggest bump from adding a new bathroom if you have too few to start with, according to Emrath’s analysis of 2005 Census statistics for 60,000 homes across the country. Another time it pays off is when you have far fewer bathrooms than bedrooms.
A bonus bathroom can also reward you handsomely in a two-story home. Buyers look for a minimum of one bathroom on each floor of a house, says realtor Debra Kandrak of William Raveis Real Estate in Fairfield, Connecticut. “People want at least a powder room on the first floor, no matter how many bathrooms are upstairs,” she says. That bathroom-on-every-floor bias also applies to finished attics and basements.
Don’t get ahead of the neighbors
If you want to recoup your investment, stick with what’s normal in your neighborhood. “On some blocks, master bathrooms are expected. On others, they are nonexistent,” says Omaha appraiser John Bredemeyer. “If you add a third bathroom in an area where homes have 1-1/2, you may not get your money back.”
You don’t have to knock on neighbors’ doors to ask how many bathrooms they have. Troll real estate listings, or try looking up those details in public tax-assessment records at town hall or the county tax office – and quite possibly via a government Web site.
Or you can plug in your address at the house-valuation Web site zillow.com, and then click around on the resulting map to get the public statistics about your neighbors. (Look at plenty, since the stats may not all be up-to-date.)
Use what you’ve got
One of the best ways to keep a lid on the price is to tap your house’s existing space. Building an addition to accommodate a new bathroom means pouring a foundation and constructing a roof, bringing the cost to a minimum of $200 a square foot, according to appraiser Bredemeyer.
But if you can add the bathroom without putting on an addition, you can cut that cost to as little as $100 a square foot. If you avoid building new walls by using a spare room, walk-in closet or under-the-staircase niche, you could save another $3,000 to $5,000. And try to stay close to existing plumbing lines. Otherwise, running four-inch drainpipe through floors and walls can easily increase your budget by $4,000 to $5,000.
Don’t go overboard
The biggest factor in your bathroom’s price tag, of course, will be the materials and fixtures you choose. You can get a perfectly good faucet for $100, or you can install a $3,000 showpiece; simple porcelain tile that’s $5 a square foot or translucent glass tile at $25; a tub-and-shower combo ($1,000 to $3,000) or a separate soaking tub and a walk-in shower ($2,000 to $5,000).
Suit your own tastes, but also remember that when you sell not every buyer will be enamored of an effervescent air-jet tub.
And, once again, let neighborhood standards be your guide, so you don’t overshoot what buyers will be willing to pay someday. “Then again, if you’re going to be enjoying the bathroom for many years before you sell, don’t hold back,” says Bredemeyer. “Do what will make you happy.”

If you are looking for a home in Arizona click here:
www.theholmgroupaz.com

AZ Central – A view from Scottsdale

Folks, You’re in Arizona   

by Jim McAllister (AZ Republic)

I love living in north Scottsdale. I’m surrounded by gorgeous desert and when the sun goes down in the west each day, it looks like one of those chamber of commerce photos trying to lure more people to Arizona. My back yard is adjacent to about 25 yards of desert before it touches the fairway of a golf course so I have a lot of wildlife passing by including a bobcat who has taken a nap on my patio a few times. It’s a nice setup and as I read the stories in the paper about people wanting to shoot the coyotes because they don’t fit into their urban mentality lifestyle, my first thought is “What did you expect when you moved to Arizona? Times Square?”

The other day I read in the paper where Scottsdale wants to build a fire station on the corner of 96th Street and Cactus. The first thought that entered my mind was “Who will be the first to complain about the firehouse being too close to their home?” Sure enough, here they come with the complaints about the gigantic loss of property value they will have to endure and how they don’t want to have to put up with the accompanying noise a fire station would bring. Never mind that a station in that area would drastically reduce the response time to a home should a fire occur in one of their gated communities. One naive homeowner actually said that when he bought his home in the area four years ago, he was assured that the neighborhood would remain quiet and residential. Welcome to Scottsdale, where nothing remains the same. The site for the fire station used to be a horse farm.

People should welcome a fire station. It gives them more safety and might reduce their homeowners insurance. I appreciate Chief McDonald taking time to meet with neighbors over complaints but the station should be built without interference. The city gave in to residents over building a station at Miller and Jomax and it cost the taxpayers when the city lost their earnest money on the land. I hate to see that happen again.

Folks, you’re in Arizona now. Deal with it.

AZ Republic – WestWorld tent flags come down

Lesley Wright
The Arizona Republic
Sept. 19, 2007 05:58 AM

 The flag-draped WestWorld tent that has irked north Scottsdale residents for the last two years is being re-skinned with Italian fabric.While some residents gloried in the massive flags that covered the 120,000-square-foot structure, others winced at its tackiness.

The new Italian fabric should draw no such complaints.  Corey Lew, the city’s project manager, said the skin is of superior quality, will have a longer life, and will sport a blackout interior suitable for media broadcasts.The tent was built in 2005 primarily to house the Barrett-Jackson Collector Car Auction. Auction owner Craig Jackson has complained about it ever since.

“They are one of the premier fabric manufacturers,” Lew said of Naizil Incorporated, which is based in Toronto but has plants in Italy.

Deconstruction of the old skin began last week and installation will not be complete until mid-October.

“It’s not as simple as it sounds,” Lew said of the process. “It’s a huge structure. It has to be anchored. It’s pretty complicated.”

The fabric itself had to be shipped from Italy to Canada for quality control, and then sent to a contractor in California before landing in Scottsdale.

The $1.4 million project will result in a sandstone tent that should last for 10 years, Lew said    

If you are looking for a home in Scottsdale, check out some of these communities: 

Windgate Ranch

 McDowell Mountain Ranch 

DC Ranch


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