Tuesday, January 21, 2014

New Werthan Units Coming Soon!



I must say I am pretty excited about being a part of this sales team to help sell the remaining 98 units in Werthan. Here's the scoop and be sure to message/call/text me if you are interested in staying in the loop. We will finalize floor plans/pricing this week and should know more to announce soon. 
Nearly 100 rental residential units in the final phase of Werthan Lofts will hit the market very soon!
Plan is to start first with selling the 33 units on the fourth floor. The remaining units will be sold as owner-occupied condos over the next four years.
The 98 units going on the market should help to address a tight supply condos in the Nashville area. At downtown, for example, there’s only a three-month inventory of 64 resale condo units available to purchase, no developer-owned units and no new units planned or in the pipeline, according to a tracking by the Nashville Downtown Partnership that doesn’t include units in Germantown. (Getahn Ward from the Tennessean)
“When we started the 98 units, financing for condominiums was difficult to obtain, so we chose the short-term plan to lease those units,” Deutschmann explained. “Our intent had always been the entire project as condominiums and this will complete our vision for the project.”
Stay tuned for more details! 

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

New Cottage-Style Residential Project coming to Sylvan Park!


Core Development is planning a new cottage-style residential project on the far west side of Sylvan Park.
The Nashville-based urban infill developer has a contract to purchase a shuttered church property 332 54th Ave. N. for $1 million.
The 2.4-acre property sits close to Charlotte Avenue. The property was formerly home to Centerpoint Church of The Nazarene, which closed in 2011, and McClurkan Memorial Church before that.
Mark Deutschmann, a principal of Core Development, said the community is still in the early planning stages and will be similar to West End Station (in Sylvan Park), Gale Park (in 12South) and The Chesterfield (in Hillsboro/ West End). Details such as number of units and pricing will be fleshed out following discussions with neighbors and Metro Nashville planning officials, he said. The sale of the property is contingent on it being rezoned to allow for residential development.
Jeff Sexton, assistant district superintendent of the Church of the Nazarene's Tennessee District, said he expects the property to close in late spring. Sexton said two previous contracts for the property from other developers failed to close, including one from a group that eyed the site for a medical supply warehouse.

Article: Nashville Business Journal 

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

7 Ways to Improve Your Home's Sell-Ability


In this economy, houses aren't selling like they used to. However, there are some ways to improve the chances of selling your house. If you have a house on the market, or are considering it, read on for seven tips that will make it easier to sell your house and make a smooth transition from one owner to the next. (Learn more in Selling Your Home In A Down Market.)
  1. Maintain NeutralityThis policy has worked for Switzerland, and it can also work in real estate. Customizing your home is great if you plan to stay there, but extreme colors and themed rooms can scare off potential homebuyers. If you have customized every room with extremely bright or dark colored paint, wallpaper or wall fixtures, you may want to consider toning it down a bit. Using neutral colors on the walls can help prospective buyers create their own vision for the house, and will also leave them with less work to undo if they buy the house.
  2. Less Is MoreEven though you have not moved out yet, removing some of your furniture can help the house move off the market. If you take pictures for your listing, having less furniture can help the home appear more spacious. When potential homebuyers arrive, having less furniture can also provide clear walkways.
  3. That New House SmellHonestly, the new house smell isn't always the most pleasant, but at least it is new. In preparing to show your home, you should avoid strong smells. To avoid odors, make sure to take out the trash and clean the refrigerator regularly. It is also good to be mindful of what you cook in the days leading up to a showing since certain foods have strong scents. If you have pets, keep an eye on the litter box. Any smell that is too strong could send potential homebuyers running out the door.
  4. Pay Attention to the DetailsIt is not a good idea to make major renovations when you are ready to sell your home because you may not recoup your investment. If you never got around to starting or completing that total kitchen or bathroom makeover, then you can make some small, inexpensive changes to spruce things up. Replacing the hardware on cabinets is a quick way to improve the appearance of older looking fixtures. Upgrading small items such as light switch and outlet covers can also add a nice touch.
  5. Maximize Your "Curb Appeal"
    The front of your home is the first thing prospective home-buyers will see, so keeping it presentable is a must. If there is a yard, keep the grass to a reasonable height and if there are trees, be sure to keep the branches under control. The path to your front door should be a clear and welcoming one, not an obstacle course!
  6. Don't Get Too Personal
    Upon entering your house, everyone will know it is lived in, but they do not need to see all the evidence. Get rid of excess clutter such as newspapers, magazines, and mail. Be sure to put away your laundry and shoes. It may also be a good idea to put away some other personal belongings like pictures on the refrigerator or mantle. For you, the pictures may make a house a home or display your personal touch. For the new homeowner, it may appear too personal.
  7. Take Care of RepairsWaiting to make repairs until after you find a buyer can be tricky. Depending on the nature of the repairs, you may not be able to find a buyer. Depending on how fast the buyer wants to close on the house, you may not have enough time to make the repairs. Save yourself some time and potential trouble, by making repairs before you list your home. The repairs will have to be made anyway, so it is better to get them out of the way sooner rather than later.
First impressions can make the difference between a sale or no sale. Keeping things simple can give you a leg up on similar houses on the market. (For more, check out 12 Worst First-Time Homeseller Mistakes and Can't Sell Your Home? Rent It.)

Article written by: Tisa Silver

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Possible New Boutique Hotel Coming to the Gulch!

Retail space developer wants to transform lot next to Station Inn

Published December 6, 2012 by William Williams

Nashville-based retail developer Mark Banks is hoping to bring a boutique hotel to the Gulch. Banks, president of Retail Partners Development LLC, said he is finalizing plans for rehabbing the 12th Avenue cinderblock building located next to the structure home to The Station Inn.

If all goes as planned, the nondescript building will house a five-room boutique hotel. In addition, Banks plans to construct an approximately 700-square-foot building that would be positioned between the sidewalk and the existing cinderblock structure, the address for which is 404 12th Ave. S.

His plan is to have a restaurant occupy the new building. “We’ve secured the site through a long-term lease,” Banks said. “We’re still developing the concept.” Banks, who has yet to announce a start date or price tag for the development, has secured a permit to begin work. Metro Planning Department and Metro Development and Housing Agency guidelines have been met, subject to any modifications to the plan also being approved. 

The Bradley Development Group LLC will serve as general contractor. Relatedly, Chattanooga-based Vision Hospitality is preparing to demolish two Gulch structures at the Division Street site on which the company plans to develop a Fairfield Inn hotel.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

New Construction In East Nash!

When Woodland Street Partners realized that potential home buyers were being priced out of some of East Nashville’s most desirable neighborhoods, the home building company came up with its own solution. It built a new neighborhood. “It’s (for) the next wave of people who want to be in Lockeland Springs but can’t afford what they want,” said Brett Diaz, a partner in the company. The result is Nouvell, a 15-home subdivision in East Nashville’s rapidly redeveloping Rosebank neighborhood. Woodland Street recently completed the first two houses after years of planning that included consultations with city planners in Portland, Ore., on environmentally sustainable features. In addition to affordable prices, Nouvell offers green features including rain gardens that capture runoff from roofs and the street, permeable concrete driveways that allow water to soak into the ground instead of flowing into storm drains, upgraded insulation, conditioned crawl spaces that reduce heating and cooling energy use and cost, tankless water heaters and Energy Star 3.0 certification. Prices are more within reach than in neighborhoods such as Lockeland Springs, where Village Real Estate agent Matty Hodges said new homes are selling for about $170 per square foot. Prices in Nouvell are lower. Nouvell’s homes range from just over 1,900 square feet to more than 2,100. Homes have three or four bedrooms and two or three bathrooms. Prices range from $277,900 to $299,900, Diaz said. Demand for new houses is strong throughout the area around Nouvell, which is on Greenside Place north of Eastland Avenue and east of Riverside Drive. “We never had a recession in East Nashville as far as real estate is concerned,” said Hodges, who works with developers to find lots where new infill houses can be built in existing neighborhoods. Many are purchased before they are listed for sale on the multiple listing service (MLS). “Developers have 20 houses coming out of the ground in the next few weeks,” Hodges said at the close of 2012. “Most won’t make it to the MLS. They’ll be sold while being built or while we’re planning.” James and Sarah Darby are moving to Nouvell from 12South, where they own a smaller, older home. With a child on the way, they needed more space but found that prices in that neighborhood were high. The opportunity to own an affordable new home with environmentally sustainable features was appealing. “After living in a house built in the ’30s, we wanted something new, with a warranty and not all the quirks,” James said. He expects the area around Nouvell to continue to attract more shops and locally owned restaurants. “In the next five or 10 years, it’ll have the same feel as 12South,” James said. If they ever decide to sell, owning a house in a subdivision of 15 new homes should help them get a good price, he said. Unlike cottage court developments that are popular in Nashville’s urban core, which have common courtyards, each of Nouvell’s homes has an individual yard. “We’re a neighborhood. It’s a traditional subdivision in the heart of the city,” said Newell Anderson, a Realtor with Village Real Estate Services. Nouvell’s home buyers will enjoy lower prices while having access to nearby restaurants, bars, shopping and other amenities at Riverside Village, Five Points and the Eastland Avenue-Porter Road area. They also will be near Shelby Park and the new greenway addition at the former Cornelia Fort Airpark, he said. Being so close to parks and green spaces sets the neighborhood apart, Anderson said. “People come from out of town and ask, ‘where are the parks?’ If they come from a city where they had those things, that’s what they’re looking for. 12South doesn’t have that,” Anderson said. Nouvell’s environmentally sustainable features are the result of extensive research, said Michael Garrigan, a civil engineer with Dale & Associates, a Nashville planning firm. Officials in Metro’s Public Works Department put him in touch with their counterparts in Portland, Ore. “They’ve tried many different things out there,” Garrigan said. “Nouvell offers low-impact features that are new to Middle Tennessee. We’re being used as a test to see how this works out.” Article written by: Bill Lewis For The Tennessean

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

4 Predictions about 2012 Real Estate Market

With 2012 nearly upon us, many of us will be spending this week reviewing the events of 2011 and setting resolutions, goals or visions for what we'd like to accomplish next year.

It will come as no surprise that the most common New Year's resolutions fall into the categories of getting organized and getting fit -- physically and financially.

Financial fitness includes getting your real estate business in order. But you can't set up your real estate plans for the year in a vacuum. They must be done in context of what's going on in the market. Here are four predictions about what that market context will look like in the coming year:

1. Even more foreclosures

While I'd like to claim crystal-ball credit for this one, it doesn't take heightened powers of prediction to foresee an uptick in the rate of home repossessions in 2012. Last fall's robo-signing debacle and the ongoing legal fallout from it created a massive backlog in the foreclosure pipeline, meaning that banks are taking many months, even years, to actually foreclose on mortgages in default.

Earlier this year, the New York Times reported that the additional hurdles New York state courts are requiring banks to leap in the wake of the robo-signing revelations, like additional settlement meetings with the homeowner to see if a modification can be brokered, have created a backlog of foreclosures that it would take 62 years to clear, at the current rate of foreclosure.

It's pretty clear that in 2012 and beyond, the banks will work through those backlogs. The inevitable result will be an increase in foreclosures.

2. REOs and short sales will become the new normal

If you even know anyone who has house-hunted in the past couple of years, you've likely heard tales of the high-drama high jinks -- super-long escrows, first-time buyers being bested by investors' cash offers, banks resistant to negotiating for repairs -- that take place in the course of a distressed property sale.

In the coming year, distressed home sales will continue to represent an increasing share of homes on the market. So, buyers will shift from considering whether to buy a short sale to understanding that they must be educated and prepared to do a deal with a seller, a bank (to buy an REO) or a hybrid of the two (to buy a short sale) to access the full selection of homes on the market.

This, in turn, will empower buyers to make smart decisions about what to offer and what to expect on any listing they like, as well as to set smart priorities and make realistic comparisons between listings based on their own personal priorities around timing, certainty and seller flexibility.

3. So-called 'smart cities' will do well

This year, a number of housing markets saw double- or even triple-dips in home values. In others, pricing stayed relatively flat. However, in areas where technology powers the economy, home values prospered along with the industry. Silicon Valley real estate, for instance, saw fierce competition among buyers as the young employees of companies that went public like used their newly stocked bank accounts to buy their first homes.

I recently talked with Jed Kolko, chief economist for real estate search site Trulia, and his 2012 forecast was that so-called "smart cities" will continue to have hot real estate markets next year. But Kolko defined smart cities much more broadly than the California tech hubs. Other tech centers like Austin, Texas, and the Massachusetts suburbs of Cambridge, Newton and Framingham all made Kolko's list, as did Rochester, N.Y. (a town known for its highly educated, highly skilled work force).

4. Consumers will get 'hopeless'

I mean hopeless in the best of all possible ways. For years, buyers and sellers have been waiting for that singular event to occur that would cause a quick market recovery. But 2012 will mark the fifth or sixth year of the real estate recession, depending on who you talk to. I predict that those consumers who have not already done so will drop unrealistic hopes for a fast return to the heady real estate fortunes of the subprime era. Instead, people will make their real estate plans based on:

•today's low home prices, rather than the fantasy of what could happen if the market miraculously came back;
•assumptions of very low, or no, appreciation in home values for years to come; and
•very conservative estimates of their own finances and how they will grow.
As a result, buyers won't break their necks to hurry and buy before prices uptick; rather, they'll save and plan to buy when it makes the most sense for their finances. Homeowners will do the same; they will either refi, remodel and be content where they are for the long haul, or decide their homes no longer fit their lifestyles and their finances, divest of them and move on. But the good news is, people will make these decisions based on what is or is not sustainable for their lives and their finances, and not based on inflated hopes about what the market will or will not do.

Article written by:

Mood of the Market
By Tara-Nicholle Nelson, Tuesday, December 27, 2011.

Inman News®

Monday, November 28, 2011

Top Reasons to Sell Your Home in the Winter!

Aside from less competition, low borrowing costs give buyers incentive
By Dian Hymer
Inman News™


Share ThisWe're getting close to the end of the year, which begs the question of whether it's worthwhile trying to sell your home now. Is it a waste of time? Will it sit on the market and become shopworn? Should I take my house off the market for the holidays? Will the home-sale market be better for sellers in 2012?

The first question you need to ask yourself is: Are you emotionally prepared to sell? Selling is a challenge for most sellers, although some markets are better than others. Unless you bought more than eight to 10 years ago and preserved your equity, you may not be able to sell for enough to pay off the mortgages secured against the property and the other costs of selling.

For sellers who have no additional assets, a short sale or foreclosure may be the only option. If so, first look into government programs that might help you out financially. Also, talk to your attorney and tax adviser.

Sellers who have the resources to make up the difference between the sale price and the amount they owe need to ask themselves if they are willing to pay the additional cash in order to sell and move on.

There are two reasons why you might prefer bringing cash to closing. One is that your credit will not be negatively impacted, as would be the case with a short sale or foreclosure. The second is that many buyers shy away from short sales because of the lengthy and uncertain process involved.

The next thing to consider is the condition of your home. Is it ready for the market? The most salable homes are those that are in move-in condition.

Before racing to the hardware store, ask your REALTOR® about how much competition there would be for your home if you put it on the market before the holidays. Some areas are shy on inventory of good homes on the market. If so, now could be a good time to sell.

HOUSE HUNTING TIP: The supply/demand ratio plays a significant role in the health of a local real estate market. No matter what is said about the housing market nationally, it's the local picture that tells the tale in terms of the possibility of selling your home at any given time.

Most sellers don't put their homes on the market during the last or first couple of months of the year. The inventory of homes for sale tends to dwindle during the winter months. Interest rates are low. So, if there are buyers in your local market, you may be at an advantage selling when most sellers are waiting.

Some sellers feel that if they've waited this long to sell, they should put the process on hold until spring and get the house ready in the meantime. Certainly, it's not a good idea to put your house on the market until it looks great. But if you and your house are ready to sell, move ahead.

The market in general tends to slow down over the holidays. But rather than pull your house off the market and miss a likely prospect, change the showing procedure to require advance notice. And enjoy your holidays. A sale before year end could be a great holiday gift.

There is a lot of pent-up demand, on both the buyer and seller sides. Sellers have been waiting for a better time to sell. Buyers have been waiting for more quality inventory and a sense that prices have bottomed or are close to it.

THE CLOSING: Recent projections call for another five or so years of bouncing along close to the bottom of this market cycle. Many experts believe that the big price declines are behind us.