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architecture style

Provincetown Featured Properties

 

BEACHFRONT REALTY FEATURED PROPERTIES – PROVINCETOWN

67 BRADFORD STREET EXTENSION – $1,449,000

 

67 BSE 11

This classic Cape was totally renovated last year and the spacious interiors were transformed into luxurious living spaces. Ceilings were raised, hallways were replaced and bathrooms were gutted. The kitchen was renovated and the surrounding yard was enlarged and re-landscaped. This is a three-bedroom and three-and-a-half bath home with 2,304 square feet. The main level features a wide-open living/entertaining space that is perfect for large gatherings. A custom dining room table comfortably seats eight to 10. There are three bedrooms upstairs with two baths. The lower level has been transformed into an extensive guest suite/media room with a full bath. There is a separate garage and parking for multiple cars.

 

 

 

 

12 HOLWAY STREET #4 – $629,000

 

loft 2This is an extraordinary, architect-designed loft filled with cottage charm. With 1,025 square foot, this condominium has one bedroom and two-baths with a convertible den/guest room. There is a dramatic, suspended contemporary loft office that soars above the double-height ceilinged kitchen and dining room. The kitchen is stainless and granite with a quartzite floor. The living room has a wall of floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the extensive private gardens and patio. There is a gas fireplace and built-in bar with bar sink. The gardens are fully irrigated. There is parking for two cars.

 

 

3 BROWN STREET #A – $475,000

 

3 Brown Street #A, 1 bed/1 bath, 700 sf, $475K.
3 Brown Street #A, 1 bed/1 bath, 700 sf, $475K.

This freestanding condominium cottage in a small two-unit association has a reverse floor plan and a charming Cape Cod feel. There are vaulted ceilings and oversize windows that flood the condominium with light. The kitchen has stainless steel appliances, granite counter tops and gas cooking. There is a gas fireplace in the living room. And there is a full bath and laundry on this level. The bedroom and master bath are on the first floor. There is a delightful covered brick dining/lounging patio with planting beds and custom lighting. The unit has A/C, low condo fees and good rental income. There is parking for two cars.

 

 

 

View all properties for sale at Beachfront-Realty.com

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general info style

Provincetown Listing Of The Week – 7 Meadow Road #2

West End one bedroom townhouse condo with den and separate work studio/office.

7 Meadow Road #2 is a one bedroom one and a half bath 3 level condo in the Meadows complex.  It has 1,188 square feet and an asking price of $499K.

 

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MLS COPY: West End Townhouse in The Meadows condominiums, a thoughtfully designed community surrounded by Conservation land located on the way to Herring Cove Beach, yet a short stroll into town center. The residence is an end unit on 3 levels providing lots of natural light and sunset views. The main floor has an open living/dining/kitchen layout with bamboo floors, lots of windows and direct access to the parking and exclusive oversized garden. The kitchen has granite counters, stainless appliances and natural wood cabinets. The second floor master bedroom has windows with plantation shutters and a full bath with washer/dryer. The top floor den has sliding full glass doors opening onto a sunny roof top deck. There is also a finished studio/home office with a half bath on the lower level with a private outside entrance.

 

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7 meadows 1

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7 Meadow 2

 

 

 

 

 

 

View all properties for sale at Beachfront-Realty.com

Categories
general info style

Provincetown Listing Of The Week – 153 Commercial Street

Waterfront condo – 153 Commercial Street #6 , has three bedrooms, 3.5 baths and 1,142 square feet with an asking price of $1.749M.

 

153 Com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MLS COPY: It doesn’t get any better than this! Located beachfront in the heart of the West End, this 3BR/2.5BA free standing condo lives like a single family, and is the one you’ve been waiting for. This immaculate unit received a gut renovation in 2008 and was refinished in a contemporary style, using the highest quality materials. You’ll enjoy views from every room of this house, and from any of the 3 decks. The open floor plan living space includes a lovely kitchen, dining area, and living room with panoramic views. In unit laundry, gleaming blond pine plank floors, and air conditioning throughout. Direct beach access, weekly rentals permitted, pets for owners, and parking for one small to medium sized car. Very strong rental history. 6 unit association, professionally managed.

 

View all properties for sale at Beachfront-Realty.com.

Categories
architecture style

Micro Units

Love these micro units in Boston. Small spaces can be efficient and comfortable…we dont call them micro units here in Provincetown – we call them charming and authentic Cape Cod cottages.

Five Newer Greater Boston Buildings with Micro-Apartments

Micro-apartments have been popping up by the dozens in Greater Boston in the last few years, going by such aliases as innovation units and micro-lofts. However you dub these roses and where you plant them, they smell generally the same rent-wise: that is, they’re comparable, if not more expensive than, studios and even 1-BRs of similar age and size. Still, micro-apartments! From the Seaport District to East Cambridgethey’re the trend that won’t die. And we’ve got the five buildings in the region with sizable amounts of ’em. Let’s start with one opening in a matter of weeks.

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100 Pier 4
The 359-unit development, part of a much larger project in the Seaport District, includes 50 innovation units spread over two floors. Above is a 3D rendering of a 460-square-foot studio asking $2,574 a monthThe complex opens next month.

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[Rendering via Elkus Manfredi]

One Seaport Square
The 832-unit Seaport District behemoth, which includes both the Benjamin and VIA towers (and a ton of retail space), officially broke ground in November. Some of its 96 innovation units, which will be concentrated in the VIA spire, are due to be as small as 365 square feet. The rents for these are not yet clear.
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[Photo via Bargmann Hendrie + Archetype Inc.]

Factory 63
This 38-unit conversion of an old Fort Point shoe factory dropped in early 2013, and its apartments quickly leased up, including 23 innovation units. Some of these were asking well north of $2,000 a month.
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315 on A
Another Fort Point creation, 315 on A held its grand opening in January 2014. It included studios as small as 464 square feet renting for well over $2K a month. It also fostered the concept of 20-Minute Living,which you can’t put a price tag on.
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Avalon North Point Lofts
The 103-unit East Cambridge complex carved from an old hot-dog factory (yup) opened in late 2014, and includes what are called micro-lofts. The available 450-square-foot ones now ask at least $2,285 a month.

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style trends

Ten Hot Housing Trends For 2015

Below is a great post by Mike Wheatley of RealtyBiz. Emerging trends include specialized storage, charging stations, porcelain floors, quartzite counters and more – an interesting rundown on design trends we will see in 2015.

 Ten Hot Trends For 2015

This time of the year, we hear from just about every sector of the economy what’s expected to be popular in the coming year. Foodies with their fingers on the pulse of the restaurant industry and hot TV chefs will tell us to say goodbye to beet-and-goat cheese salad and hello roasted cauliflower, and there’s no end to the gadgets touted as the next big thing.

In real estate, however, trends typically come slowly, often well after they appear in commercial spaces and fashion. And though they may entice buyers and sellers, remind them that trends are just that—a change in direction that may captivate, go mainstream, then disappear (though some will gain momentum and remain as classics). Which way they’ll go is hard to predict, but here are a few trends that experts expect to draw great appeal this year

Coral shades

A blast of a new color is often the easiest change for sellers to make, offering the biggest bang for their buck. Sherwin-Williams says Coral Reef (#6606) is 2015’s color of the year because it reflects the country’s optimism about the future. “We have a brighter outlook now that we’re out of the recession. But this isn’t a bravado color; it’s more youthful, yet still sophisticated,” says Jackie Jordan, the company’s director of color marketing. She suggests using it outside or on an accent wall. Pair it with crisp white, gray, or similar saturations of lilac, green, and violet.

Open spaces go mainstream

An open floor plan may feel like old hat, but it’s becoming a wish beyond the young hipster demographic, so you’ll increasingly see this layout in traditional condo buildings and single-family suburban homes in 2015. The reason? After the kitchen became the home’s hub, the next step was to remove all walls for greater togetherness. Design experts at Nurzia Construction Corp. recommend going a step further and adding windows to better meld indoors and outdoors.

Off-the-shelf plans

Buyers who don’t want to spend time or money for a custom house have another option. House plan companies offer myriad blueprints to modify for site, code, budget, and climate conditions, says James Roche, whose Houseplans.com firm has 40,000 choices. There are lots of companies to consider, but the best bets are ones that are updating layouts for today’s wish lists—open-plan living, multiple master suites, greater energy efficiency, and smaller footprints for downsizers (in fact, Roche says, their plans’ average now is 2,300 square feet, versus 3,500 a few years ago). Many builders will accept these outsiders’ plans, though they may charge to adapt them

Freestanding tubs

Freestanding tubs may conjure images of Victorian-era opulence, but the newest iteration from companies like Kohler shows a cool sculptural hand. One caveat: Some may find it hard to climb in and out. These tubs complement other bathroom trends: open wall niches and single wash basins, since two people rarely use the room simultaneously.

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photo credit: Rev Stan via photopin cc

Quartzite

While granite still appeals, quartzite is becoming the new hot contender, thanks to its reputation as a natural stone that’s virtually indestructible. It also more closely resembles the most luxe classic—marble—without the drawbacks of staining easily. Quartzite is moving ahead of last year’s favorite, quartz, which is also tough but is manmade.

Porcelain floors

If you’re going to go with imitation wood, porcelain will be your 2015 go-to. It’s less expensive and wears as well as or better than the real thing, says architect Stephen Alton. Porcelain can be found in traditional small tiles or long, linear planks. It’s also available in numerous colors and textures, including popular one-color combos with slight variations for a hint of differentiation. Good places to use this material are high-traffic rooms, hallways, and areas exposed to moisture.

Almost Jetson-ready

Prices have come down for technologies such as web-controlled security cameras and motion sensors for pets. Newer models are also easier to install and operate since many are powered by batteries, rather than requiring an electrician to rewire an entire house, says Bob Cooper at Zonoff, which offers a software platform that allows multiple smart devices to communicate with each other. “You no longer have to worry about different standards,” Cooper says.

Charging stations

With the size of electronic devices shrinking and the proliferation of Wi-Fi, demand for large desks and separate home office is waning. However, home owners still need a dedicated space for charging devices, and the most popular locations are a corner of a kitchen, entrance from the garage, and the mud room. In some two-story Lexington Homes plans, a niche is set aside on a landing everyone passes by daily.

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photo credit: the tartanpodcast via photopin cc

Wellness systems

Builders are now addressing environmental and health concerns with holistic solutions, such as heat recovery ventilation systems that filter air continuously and use little energy, says real estate developer Gregory Malin of Troon Pacific. Other new ways to improve healthfulness include lighting systems that utilize sunshine, swimming pools that eschew chlorine and salt by featuring a second adjacent pool with plants and gravel that cleanse water, and edible gardens starring ingredients such as curly blue kale.

Special storage

The new buzzword is “specialized storage,” placed right where it’s needed. “Home owners want everything to have its place,” says designer Jennifer Adams. More home owners are increasingly willing to pare the dimensions of a second or third bedroom in order to gain a suitably sized walk-in closet in their master bedroom, Alton says. In a kitchen, it may mean a “super pantry”—a butler’s pantry on steroids with prep space, open storage, secondary appliances, and even a room for wrapping gifts. “It minimizes clutter in the main kitchen,” says architect Fred Wilson of Morgante-Wilson.

Categories
style

Boston’s Best New Building?

Great post from Curbed.com.  Don’t you just love John Keiths comments on The Troy?  Enjoy!

What Was Greater Boston’s Best New Building of 2014?

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[315 on A]
Paul McMorrowBoston Globe op-ed columnist and CommonWealth magazine associate editor: There are so many! The Burnham building on the Filene’s block is obviously the best thing to happen downtown in forever. Sasaki’s Ferdinand building looks incredible and it’s getting private developers to take a look at a neighborhood they’ve been ignoring for decades. ADD Inc.’s 315 A Street manages the neat trick of being on the waterfront without looking like a glass box that snuck in from Houston. The Lawn on D is not technically a building, but it has swings and ping-pong tables and Wi-Fi so it wins everything.
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Lara Gordona broker in Cambridge and Somerville: Could it be anything OTHER THAN Millennium Place? Speaking not from an architectural or design perspective, but purely for its contribution to the Downtown Crossing renaissance.

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[Troy Boston]
John A. Keitha Boston broker: I’d have to go with the Troy, ready for occupancy in early 2015, purely for the huge balls the developer must have, building a 400-unit apartment building across the street from New England’s largest homeless shelter (and a Mobil station) and, literally, in the shadow of an eight-lane interstate highway. I also like the new 100 Pier 4 apartment building in the SBW Seaport neighborhood, also to be delivered (late) 1st Quarter 2015. Perhaps a step up from the existing Waterside Place down the street, 100 Pier 4 is the first building to be completed in the Pier 4 mixed-use development. It has the best views of the new residential buildings in the neighborhood and is the closest (so far) to downtown Boston. Of course, neither of these were completed in 2014, so may not qualify as “Best of 2014”.
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Charles Cherneya broker in Cambridge and Somerville: If only there were new condo buildings in Cambridge and Somerville.
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Jonathan Berk, real estate attorney, founder of the BuildingBOS blog and member of Boston’s Onein3 Council: My wink goes to Ink; Ink Block by National Development: Ink Block will be opening in the coming few days and will serve not only as it’s own self contained live, play environment but will also spur growth and redevelopment of the Harrison Ave and Washington Street corridors. It will provide the South End the necessary connection between Downtown, South Boston and the South End. Game-changing retail activation (Including a 50,000SF Whole Foods) coupled with a pool, outdoor BBQ’s, grass courtyard will make Ink a catalyst for necessary neighborhood reinvestment and a destination unto itself.
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[Millennium Tower on the Boston skyline; Handel Architects]
Nick Warrenpresident and CEO of Warren Residential: Millennium Tower … by far. I don’t know if it officially qualifies for 2014 since it currently only has a few floors of concrete and rebar’ but it’s certainly the most exciting. There has never been a building in Boston that has received so much buzz and attention like Millennium Tower has. From their $37.5M PH to the amount of units they put under agreement right out of the gate, it truly stands out against its competition.
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David Batesa Boston broker and our Bates By the Numbers columnist: 315 on A – the building located in a cool area that is getting cooler. It’s green and sustainable construction. The developers put a lot of thought into the features and amenities, like the best bike storage room in the city, the indoor pet refuse area, the conference rooms, the on-site art. Plus, the rooftop common area is among the best amenities I have seen.

Categories
architecture style

Tiniest Cape Cod Microhomes – Curbed.com

Fun post by Jazmine at Curbed.com.

Meet the 10 Tiniest Cape Cod Microhomes of 2014

Time to make up a bunch of awards for the best, worst and most absurd things that happened in Cape & Islands real estate, architecture and neighborhoods. Here now, your 2014 Curbed Awards.
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It’s time to squeeze into Cape Cod’s tiniest listings of 2014. From a wicked wee 162-square-feet to a rather roomy 296-square-feet, here are 10 microhomes that will no doubt cause a shudder amongst claustrophobics, micro-living haters and/or McMansion lovers.

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Kicking off in Truro, this cute 296-square-foot cottage condo with expansion potential (boo!) was listed for $249,000.

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Currently a lovely little cottage, this Chatham “investment property”has “growth opportunity” to add a two-bedroom rental. The 288-square-footer hit the market asking $299,000 and is now hoping for $274,000.

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Water views, access to a private beach on Cape Cod Bay and 272-sq.-ft.were looking for $199,000 in Truro.

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Breakfast in bed is available in this wicked tiny, as in 252-sq-ft., West Yarmouth cottage condo for $79,900.

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Behold, beachy micro-living overlooking Cape Cod Bay. This adorable250-sq.-ft. cottage condo at Truro’s Sutton Place was asking $299,000

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Located next to Truro Vineyards (!!), this 234-sq.-ft. studio condo – with the smallest kitchen sink ever – hit the market in early May for $99,000 and by the end of the month, had sold for $92,000. Cheers!

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When we wrote about this Commercial Street condo back in March, the198-square-footer had been pricechopped down to $219,900. By June, a buyer had squeezed into the place for $196,000.

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Built in 1900, this “sweet attached cottage, known as Cormorant offers a piece of increasingly rare old Provincetown charm.” The asking price for the 186-square-footer is $245,000.

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This 182-sq.-ft. West Yarmouth cottage lacks a full bathroom, but at least there’s an outdoor shower with hot and cold. Asking price is now$89,000.

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Finally, to the tiniest cottage for sale on Cape Cod. The wee West Yarmouth abode, all 162-sq.-ft., is yours for $69,900.

Categories
architecture style

Newbury Street’s Chanel #6

 
Incredible new development at 6 Newbury Street – and  interesting thread of stories from CurbedBoston.com. 

New Twists for Two Raw Spaces at Back Bay’s Chanel No. 6

by Tom Acitelli, December 8, 2014

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The conversion of a garage at 4-6 Newbury Street in Back Bay is undoubtedly one of the most ballyhooed luxury redevelopments in Boston in eons. We’ve dubbed it Chanel No. 6 (there’s a two-story outlet for the iconic perfume peddler at the building’s base) and the handful of condos above (four or five, depending on whom you read at this point) have commanded some of the biggest Boston sales prices in recent memory. Yet, a lot about Chanel No. 6 remains mysterious.

A titanic part of the mystery stems from the condos being sold as shells. Take Units 301 and 302, the husks of which are pictured above. They traded together in mid-October for a cool $7,250,000 total. The purchaser, Boston Property Development, plans to turn the raw space into “two high-end residential condos for sale in 2015.” In other words, the luxury condos are going to be developed into luxury condos. May you live in interesting times. (H/t Buzz Buzz Home.)

· Chanel No. 6 Coming Into Its Shells Nicely [Curbed Boston]
· Our complete Chanel No. 6 coverage [Curbed Boston]

Categories
architecture style

Iconic Days Cottages In Truro On The Market

Below is a repost of a really well done story by Zeningor Enwemeka at WBUR in Boston….and congratulations to Gregg Russo for doing a great job launching the marketing campaign for the Cottages.

For Sale: Iconic Cape Cod ‘Flower’ Cottages Near Provincetown

By 

WBUR Staff – Zeninjor Enwemeka, Digital Reporter, WBUR

Days Cottages in Truro. (eatswords/Flickr)

Days Cottages in Truro. (eatswords/Flickr)

BOSTON — One of Cape Cod’s most iconic properties hit the market this week, and you can now own a piece of New England history.

Days cottages (or the flower cottages), the beachfront rentals located on the way to Provincetown along Route 6A in Truro, are up for sale with a price tag of $399,000 each. Listings for the cottages call it “a once in a lifetime opportunity to pick your very own flower.”

The row of 22 identical cottages has been owned by the Days family since 1931. Each is named after a flower. There’s Daisy, Zinnia, Violet, Rose and so on. Over the last eight decades, the cottages have served as a muse for artists and photographers who came to capture the essence of the Outer Cape. Plenty of tourists have been drawn to them too over the years.

Each cottage is 420 square feet with two bedrooms and 1 bathroom, plus a private beachfront. All are listed at the same price except for the two end units. Unit 1 (Daisy) is listed at $409,000 and unit 23 (Wistaria) is listed at $429,000. (Note: There is no unit No. 13.)

A view of the Lilac condo unit at Days Cottages in Truro. (Elyssa Cohen Photography)

A view of the Rose condo unit at Days Cottages in Truro. (Elyssa Cohen Photography)

Since 1991, Joe Days has operated the cottages with his wife, Cindy. His sister, Carol, is also a partner in the business. Joe Days said the work takes a toll after so many years, and he and his wife are ready to retire and have a less stressful life.

“We’re not getting any younger,” said Days, who is 66. “My wife and I would like to get on to the next phase of our life.”

Days said he’s been part of the business since he was a kid, working 42 years in all there. He and his wife plan to spend more time at their home in Florida, but will still make the Cape their home in the summers. Days said they also plan to continue running the convenience store (Days Market) across the street from the cottages — at least for a couple more years.

But the sale of the cottages means that part of the business will no longer be in the family. Days said he and Carol decided it was a good time to sell and move on. He said other family members are not in the business.

“They’ve all got their own jobs and careers,” Days said. “The fact that somebody would have to come down and do this, I don’t know was that appealing.”

The cottage were put up for sale before in 2006, but Days said the real estate market at that time wasn’t so great, so they were taken off the market.

For Days, selling is bittersweet. He’s had several employees who have worked alongside him for years. He said those relationships have been the best thing about the business.

“Some of them have been with me for 20 years and longer,” Days said. “It makes it fun to do it and I enjoy this work. It just makes it fun when you’re working with people that you like and that like you back.”

Over the years, Days has also grown close to several customers who return year after year, and generation after generation. He said many have left Facebook messages lamenting that the cottages are being sold.

“A lot of these people are like, ‘Oh, we just started bringing our grandchildren and we thought we were going to have many years to enjoy it with them’– talk about a guilt trip,” he said with a laugh. “Some other people say, ‘Well all good things come to an end sometimes.’ ”

But the cottages are not quite coming to an end. They will just be under new ownership. The “Days Cottages” name will remain the same, but they will have the word “condominium” added to the title, according to Days.

A view of Days Cottages from the beach along Cape Cod Bay in Truro. (Elyssa Cohen Photography)

A view of Days Cottages from the beach along Cape Cod Bay in Truro. (Elyssa Cohen Photography)

The iconic look and feel of the cottages will also stay the same since the town won’t allow them to be changed, according to Gregg Russo, the realtor for the properties.

“The zoning board of appeals, when the family went to get permission to condo — which is the process in Truro — actually put a restriction on the approval that they never can be changed or altered in any manner,” Russo said.

This means the color, the flower names and the overall structure of the cottages will continue to look as they always have. Days calls that a “good thing” and said he hopes the new owners will also keep his longtime customers and continue that tradition.

The cottages cannot be occupied in the winter due to a city bylaw that limits occupancy to three seasons, according to Russo. So far, the history of the place has drawn in many inquiries. Russo said people have even called asking for specific flowers.

“There are people who want specific cottages because they’ve been coming to them [and] their grandparents came to them,” Russo said. “The opportunity to actually own an iconic piece of Truro history is so overwhelming for some of these people.”

Two of the cottages are already spoken for, according to Russo. He said he expects half will be gone within a week and plans to close all sales at the beginning of next year.

Here are more images of the iconic cottages:

An archive image of Days Cottages from the National Seashore Arhives. (Courtesy Joe Days)

An archive image of Days Cottages from the National Seashore Arhives. (Courtesy Joe Days)

There were nine cottages when the rentals opened in 1931. (Courtesy Joe Days)

There were nine cottages when the rentals opened in 1931. (Courtesy Joe Days)

Summer at Days Cottages. (Courtesy Joe Days)

Summer at Days Cottages. (Courtesy Joe Days)

 

Categories
analytics style

Cost Of Waterfront Homes

 

A fun if not oversimplified post from Zillow.com.

 

What Would You Pay to Live on the Water?

 AUTHOR:, Zillow blog

Millions of Americans dream of one day owning a home on the water, and for good reason: The views are often to die for, the array of activities is seemingly endless and the peace of mind gained by knowing you’ll never have a neighbor on at least one side of your home is priceless. But the very things that make waterfront living so appealing can also make it incredibly expensive.

Nationwide, the typical oceanfront or lakefront single-family home is worth more than double the median value of all homes, and in some communities the median waterfront house could be worth more than 10 times the median value of non-waterfront houses, according to a new analysis by Zillow. The median single-family home in the U.S. is worth about $171,600, while the median waterfront house is valued at $370,900, a waterfront premium of 116.1 percent.

Zillow analyzed the 250 largest communities with at least 100 waterfront homes. The analysis only considered oceanfront homes or those on a lake larger than 10 square kilometers. Homes also had to be within 150 feet of the waterline to be considered waterfront. Riverfront and water-view homes were not considered.

Overall, the most expensive waterfront homes are found in communities in coastal California. Laguna Beach tops this list with median waterfront home values of almost $10.1 million. Malibu ($6.3 million) and Hermosa Beach ($4.8 million) round out the top three.

The most affordable waterfront homes in the country are found in Holiday, FL, with median waterfront home values of $103,000. In the top 10 least valuable waterfront communities, eight of the remaining nine cities with the cheapest waterfront homes are located in Florida. In other words, potential buyers looking for the lowest entry point into the waterfront market should consider the lesser-known cities of the Sunshine State.

Among the largest of the 250 cities analyzed (those with populations of 100,000 or greater), the biggest difference between median non-waterfront single-family home values and median waterfront house values are in Tampa (waterfront premium of 733 percent), Honolulu (waterfront premium of 334.5 percent) and Long Beach, CA (waterfront premium of 321.6 percent).

“The allure of ocean and lakefront living is powerful and undeniable, and millions of homeowners nationwide dream of one day owning a home on the water. But those dreams come at a price,” said Zillow Chief Economist Dr. Stan Humphries. “Waterfront properties are both relatively scarce and highly coveted, and that high demand and limited supply leads to higher home prices. Additionally, added insurance, floods, environmental mitigation and infrastructure costs are often part of the tab when buying a waterfront home. Still, as long as buyers understand the added costs and potential headaches, waterfront living is likely to remain one of life’s simple pleasures for many, many years to come.”

Information on all 250 cities analyzed can be found on Zillow Research here.

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