Monday, January 29, 2007

Want To Buy an Island? Read On


Did you know that you can purchase your own island for 20% less than you'd pay for comparable waterfront property on the mainland? Here's how to get your cays to paradise.

By Sean O'Neill, Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine
Slide show: 10 private islands for sale

Tom Brisson strides through the cathedral quiet of a spruce grove and emerges into a sunlit clearing. On an outcrop of granite, ocean waves spray a halo of mist. The elegant port town of Bar Harbor, Maine, appears across the water. "The only thing missing from this view is a hammock hanging between two trees," he says.

Brisson owns 13-acre Heron Island, a 20-minute boat ride from Winter Harbor, Maine. The 58-year-old financier had never seriously set his sights on buying an island until mid-2005.
But a few weeks after retiring from his job as a Sallie Mae financial analyst, Brisson saw Heron Island pictured in a magazine article. The Potomac, Md., resident quickly visited the island and sized up its value. On the plus side, it's close to Maine's top attractions, and he plans to boost the value of his wooded fiefdom by building a three-bedroom house and a storage building. He lowballed the $795,000 sale price with a successful offer of $715,000.

The own-your-own-island dream starts around $150,000. But you can also rent a private island for rates that start around $4,000 a week for two.
Consider the 1.75-mile-long chain of five islands in Maine's Brans Mill pond. You could build a cabin on the largest of the islands (4.8 acres), from which you could fish for brook trout and white perch. The archipelago was recently selling for $229,000, which included a lot on the mainland for parking your car and launching your watercraft. The pond is an hour's drive from Bangor. (See this island and others for sale in a slide show here.)

If you can afford waterfront property on the mainland, you can likely afford to purchase an island. As a rule, islands are about 20% cheaper per acre than waterfront mainland in the same locale. Yet islands offer more overall waterfront for your dollar -- with 360-degree views, of course.

What's more, the long-term investment value of an island often equals that of comparable mainland property. The main reason is the diminishing supply of islands that can be developed. State governments and environmental groups are restricting construction on many undeveloped private islands, especially in Florida and Maine. This trend is boosting demand for islands that don't have restrictions on renovating or replacing existing buildings.

Wednesday, January 24, 2007

San Diego Real Estate


With its gentle Mediterranean climate and sand covered beaches bathed by warm sunshine, San Diego County real estate is one of the most desired coastal communities in the world. We welcome you to San Diego County's Fine Homes and Estates and Luxury properties presented by Louie Ortiz.

When you select Louie Ortiz and The Ortiz Group to represent your property or property purchase, you receive the extensive business and professional experience of Louie Ortiz and the resources and unrivaled support of the entire Century 21 system. Louie Ortiz with Century 21 Award possess an intimate knowledge of San Diego County communities and a keen grasp of the overall real estate market and its ever-changing landscape.

Throughout the years, Louie Ortiz through his business experience as CEO of his own companies has amassed an impressive portfolio of skills and expertise that give him a unique perspective and sales skills in marketing luxury properties and fine homes and estates. To go to the Ortiz Group Website, click on San Diego Real Estate above...

Friday, January 12, 2007

For Real Estate Blog

 Future of Real Estate
 
My crystal ball is starting to vibrate and when it does you will hear a high pitch sound or at the very least, feel wave particles pass through you and leave you in a state of bewilderment or enlightenment. The future of realestate is a reflection of the future state of global humanity.
When this phase is over it just all starts again. 
 
I am very conscient of how this sounds, .........................and now, so are you.
 
Real estate is changing in a way that will not reflect the patterns and statistics of the past. A random event has taken place, a mutation if you will. This, in the form of the internet has shaken all parts of the globe not just because it has made it smaller, faster, homogenious but because it has taken a linear world of thinking, connections, measurment, analysis, business and process and instantly changed it to a quantum capable world and process. This is a process that approaches on multiple fronts at the same time allowing for elements that do not work or fit to fall or re-form into other directions.
 
Let me repeat a part of that.
 
"it has taken a linear world of thinking, connections, measurment, analysis, business and process and instantly changed it to a quantum capable world and process."
 
The internet has become a crude but effective modeling tool for how the universe deals with energy in a quantum fashoin. If you relate the way the internet spreads, absorbs and disperses information, it reflects and holds true to the law of thermodynamics. The collective consiousness ( people = energy ) and the data they input, pass on or delete (data = information) drives change.
 
If you want to argue for the parralell universe the internet shows us how this argument does not stand up. Just because the information does not reach you, does not mean that it is not out there affecting others and may in some other way touch your world. Regardless your world has changed. Look at the way the greening of the real estate market is a reflection of our overall sense of connectedness and exposure. Exposure to undiniable facts and information on the true condition of our depleted world resourse.
 
Back to my crystal ball. OK it is not so clear, but one thing is shining through, real estate along with most other industries are in what the old mind set says is chaos. But the new mindset sees it as pure potential. We are determining the real estate furture by our actions at xoompad, today! With each tool and decision we make we are not trying to guess the future of real estate, we are however stearing it a little at a time in the direction we belive is better for all.
 
Shane Katsoolis.