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Saturday, February 24, 2007

Shell Shocked--and Not by a Conch Shell



For those of you out of towners who read this and know a little about Key West's tradition of political alchemy, you may share my utmost surprise when I read today's Key West Citizen to learn that prominent Key West attorney Jimmy Hendrick was convicted on Friday on 4 criminal counts in federal court in Key West. The charges were conspiracy, witness tampering and obstruction of justice. Read the whole story in The Miami Herald.

I met with Jimmy Hendrick several years ago regarding a personal matter. He could not represent me because he had a potential ethical conflict with one of the people I wanted to sue. I also met with him on a couple of other occasions and was deeply impressed by his professionalism. I have been an in house attorney for two banks for many years and have engaged many attorneys to perform numerous legal duties over the years,and Jimmy Hendricks struck me as one of the smartest and sharpest attorneys that I had met.

I have said that Key West is a very big, small town. Everybody knows way to much about everybody else's' business. We know who is cheating on the spouse, partner or the I.R.S., who is drinking to excess or doing drugs, who is succeeding or failing in business, who got arrested for doing something stupid. We have people come here from all over the world. And we have people who live here who have never gone anywhere.
I do know his wife. She used to be my normal waitperson at the Cafe Marquesa. She quit that job a couple of years ago. But she was always very friendly and upbeat. I feel very sorry for her.

I was working at another real estate company when Hendrick was first arrested and indicted. Some of my fellow Realtors immediately said he was guilty. And I said "You can't say that. He hasn't even had a trial." I was furious. People were assuming that he must be guilty because he was smart (and I will admit conniving). But being sharp does not equate to guilt. I remember asking one of the Realtors would he prefer to go to an attorney that is smart and wins his cases or go to someone knows and is cheap. His response was to go to the attorney who wins cases. I said that is Jimmy Hendrick.

The jurors were from all over Monroe County, and it stretches about one hundred miles northeast of Key West. Hendrick had been the county attorney, so I sense that most of the jurors were somewhat familiar with his name and reputation for being smart, but maybe not for the allegations charged. He won most of his legal battles, and for that I am sure he had some enemies. I trust that the jury panel did not have any member that harbored ill will for Hendrick.

He will appeal. It is a sad day in Key West.

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Outdoor Showers in Paradise




One of the real joys of living in Key West is the outdoor shower. Key West had its annual cold snap a couple of days ago, and I had to forgo my daily outdoor shower and suffered greatly. I had to use the inside plumbing!

When I show properties I eagerly point out the outside shower,and often the client looks at me with suspicion. "What could be so exciting about an outdoor shower?" the client ponders. It is akin to swimming in the nude. Try it once and you will understand.

Showers in the early morning rain are very interesting. I often question whether to shower in the rain or not, but always opt for the outdoors reasoning that I am going to get wet anyway. All I need to do is adjust the faucet for warmer water. And it works.

Many new houses have very fancy outdoor showers. And the City of Key West now requires that they be connected to the sanitary drain. But most of us lawbreakers let the water continue to drain into the ground. I will occasionally spot an earthworm or gecko running for dear life as the water water hits the ground. Ah, communing with nature.

If you want to buy a home in Paradise and enjoy your morning shower outdoors,"> and search the Key West Board of Realtors Multiple Listing Service website. You can see all mls listings, not just the ones some realtor wants you to see. And then please call me at 1-305-766-2642. Thanks.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Two Tales of a City -- Part 2




Part 2

Lots of Realtors and other town folk headed to the Santa Maria Condominiums Open House last Friday to see the newly constructed complex. We were feted to sushi (again--but this time prepared by the sushi chef from Ambrosia Restaurant, cheese and pate`, shrimp cocktail shooters, crab-melon shooters, top drawer liquor, and sounds from The Bubba System
.

Two units were available to preview. The first was a ground level 945 square foot two bed/2 bath unit priced at $1,500,000. That's $1587 per square foot. The unit looks just like the artist's conception from two years ago. When you enter there is a sofa to your right and two swivel chairs, a cocktail table and a plasma tv to your left. Straight ahead is the ultra-streamlined kitchen with under counter everything. The bedrooms are on either side to the rear. The model had both bedrooms with windows just at street level so that Key West's homeless could easily look in to see who is at home. There is a semi-private patio area at the front of each unit, but it offers no real privacy.

The two story unit is larger in size, but the rooms are still small. The kitchen is at the rear and has room for 3 bar stools (same as the other unit--I guess only 3 people can dine at one time). The bedrooms are equally small, but this unit has 4 balconies--each with glass fronts that offer no privacy or room for chairs. The top floor did, however, have a terrific aerial view of the property and the Key West skyline.

The units have lots of marble, wood, and glass. All units are furnished exactly the same because they are part of a mandatory rental program. The management company charges a 40% management fee plus adds on all expenses related to guest stays. The decor inside and the exterior construction is definitely modern (ala South Beach in Miami) and totally out of character with the rest of Key West. But some people may like this look as opposed to the weathered character of the William Fleming House. And the Santa Maria Condominiums have privileges of the use of all of the amenities of the adjacent Reach Resort (gym, restaurants, and private beach).

I'll pass on this one.

Monday, February 19, 2007

Two Tales of a City




Part 1
I attended two Broker's Open Houses on Friday and saw two totally different kinds of properties that are priced just about identical. I thought it would be interesting to compare the two for prospective buyers.

Friday afternoon we were treated to sushi, veggies and fruits at the poolside cabana at the William Fleming House, a historic condominium at 800 Fleming Street. The 2 bedroom 2 bathroom unit is on the second floor and occupies 1421 square feet of space plus and additional loft area (not counted in the square footage). This unit is constructed of Dade County Pine walls, floors and ceiling, so it has that "old Key West feel" that some many buyers want. But it has a new and very modern kitchen and equally elegant bathrooms that give this property a distinctive New York loft feel--at least to me.

The ceilings are very high and the doors and windows open to decks overlooking the pool below and the pristine homes on William Street. This unit is priced at $1.075,000 or $757 per square foot. The condo is located on one of the best blocks in Old Town and is a convenient walk to everything. The property is 3 blocks to Duval and 3 blocks to the historic seaport.

So many condominium's feel cramped and confined. But this one is the opposite: it has the feeling of lots of living space and different living areas with very sophisticated edge.

Tomorrow I will discuss the new Santa Maria Condominiums: hence the title "Two Tales of a City".

To see more detail on this listing, please click the title above "Two Tales of a City".

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Here and There




It's Valentines Day and everybody is in a good mood, right? There are two photos to the right. One is looking out onto a snowy yard from inside a cold house up north in America. The second is a photo out an open window overlooking sunset in Key West.

I just checked the weather in upstate New York near Saranac Lake, Adirondack Regional Airport, New York. It is -16F. Brrr. It is 9F in Denver, my life long home until moving to Key West in late 1993. The upper midwest and northeast is covered in snow.
And it is 81F at 11:30 AM here in Key West. That is one of the reasons I moved to Key West: The Weather!


If you want to move to Key West to avoid winters like this, click the above title "Here and There" to preview all real estate listings in Key West. Please contact me to help you find your new dream home in Paradise. You won't be sorry. Call me toll free at 1.877.295.7099.

Monday, February 12, 2007

For Sale by Owner in Key West: Buyer Beware




I was nosing around on the Internet last week and found an ad for a Shipyard Condo that was "For Sale by Owner". I read further: "This one bedroom (800 square feet), fully furnished condo is located in Truman Annex..." The condo was priced at $610,000.

Thinking I might turn this FSBO into a listing, I checked out the property. While the owner did not list the unit number, it was easy enough to figure out from public records, as I knew his name, and coincidentally had researched listing the unit a couple of years earlier for the previous owner who sold it to the present owner as a FSBO. (The previous owner wanted me to cut my commission to get the listing and still offer a 3% split to the selling broker. But what he really wanted was for me to do a CMA (competitive market analysis) to establish a price for the unit).

I knew that the unit was 600 square feet as opposed to the 800 square feet the seller had advertise. I sent the owner an email advising him of his error and told him that there were 23 other units on the market in the Shipyard complex, 4 of which were also one bedroom and similar size, but priced differently. There has always been a waiting list of potential buyers for Shipyard condos, but this new market has created an oversupply of available units. So prices are dropping. It could be that the previous owner misrepresented the square footage when he sold the unit to the current owner. I just checked the site where I found the ad for the unit, and the current owner is still running the same ad with misleading information.

In the 1986 landmark case Johnson vs. Davis, the Florida Supreme Court found that sellers cannot conceal material defects. In that case, some prospective buyers were looking at a home and noticed evidence of a roof leak. When they asked about it, the sellers admitted there was a leak long ago but that it was completely repaired. Before closing on the house, it rained, and the buyers discovered that the roof was still leaking. They sued to get their deposit back and won.

Material Defect
Defects, including any property damage, malfunctions of major systems and environmental hazards affecting the condition of a home, which should be readily disclosed to a buyer.

I mention the Johnson vs. Davis case as an example of things to avoid when dealing with a FSBO. I advise every buyer of mine to engage a professional home inspector to inspect a property as part of the purchasing process. Sellers often forget, overlook, or even intentionally misrepresent the condition of their property when trying to sell it.

I am of the opinion that sellers who are unwilling to pay a 6% commission to a realtor to sell their property are going to be difficult and cheap to deal with. Difficult because they want to control things. They want to control the information regarding the property and what the prospective buyer may see, when, and for how long.
They may unintentionally represent or omit material facts regarding the property such as square footage, previous flooding, or some other matter that might kill a sale. Cheap because they think all there is to selling a property is putting up a for sale sign, running an ad in the newspaper or Internet, and filling out a printed deed form obtained from a legal stationery store. They think they do not need a realtor to do something so simple.

But buyers who deal with a FSBO do so at their peril in my opinion and experience.

In a lighter note, I am including some photos from my yard. One pic is of a huge Canary Island Date Palm with bougainvillea on a trellis below. The other pics are of baby pineapples by my pool. My Date Palm got sick after Hurricane Wilma and started yellowing. I called the Florida Extension Office and a representative came to my house, took pictures and sent them to the University in Gainsville to determine what was going on. The tree needed fertilizing to combat the salt water damage from the storm. Case solved. The baby pineapples are like rabbits, if you get my drift. I "borrowed" one from the grounds of a hotel in Miami about 8 years ago. It has reproduced itself several hundred fold. It is truly a joy to watch as each new crop of babies come to fruition.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

One of my biggest real estate mistakes in Key West




During my first trip to Key West in March 1984 I decided that I wanted to buy a guest house and move here. I would ditch the corporate world of America and escape to Paradise.

My first Realtors were a gay couple that did not own a car. So I had to walk to or take a taxi to look at property. They got out of the business (I wonder why...) and I met Mitzi Krabil, a realtor who worked at the same company. I made many trips to Key West and looked at several existing guest houses and properties that could be converted into guest houses with Mitzi. And for a variety of reasons (mostly self created), I did not buy any property.

Then in late 1986 or early 1987 Mitzi called me and said that the Q Rooms on Fleming Street were just listed for sale at $280,000 and suggested that I buy it quick. Now Mitzi had never suggested anything that brash earlier. I knew what the Q Rooms were: a run down boarding house with 14 rooms and 14 licenses meaning that I could convert property into a 14 room guest house. I had once seen a street person sleeping under the front porch. I let my snootiness get in the way of my brain and said no to the notion.

The building was located on the corner of Fleming and Simonton Streets--just a block from Duval, but right in the heart of Old Town. It had the right number of rooms to create a successful and profitable small hotel operation (12 to 15 rooms is perfect). Like I said, I turned up my nose. Two building contractors (and their wives) purchased the property for $270,000 in March 1987 and opened the Hotel Marquesa and the Cafe Marquesa in 1989. (I'll tell you a story about the Cafe another time.) They later purchased two adjacent parcels and enlarged the property. The enlarged property with 27 guest rooms, two pools, glorious gardens, and covered parking opened just in time for Christmas in 1994. And it has been a raving success from day one.

The photos to the right show the building as it appeared on my first trip to Key West in 1984 and today plus a photo of one of the pools. If you click on the title "One of my biggest real estate mistakes in Key West" you can tour the Marquesa's website. I would estimate the current value of the hotel and restaurant as $15 million. I mention this experience because of missed opportunities. I think I reacted to the opportunity to purchase the property the way a lot of would-be buyers react--especially in a volatile market. I found a reason not to buy the property. I vividly remember the bum under the building every time I think about what could have been.

The real estate market in Key West is depressed today just as it is in most pats of the country. Would-be buyers are waiting for the prices to settle before making a move. The demand is there, but the buyers are pretty much holding back--waiting. I understand why they are holding back. But there are some real bargains available today in Key West. And those bargains will be bought by someone at some price, and later someone like me will rue the day that he or she made the decision not to buy.

Wednesday, February 7, 2007

The Sun also Rises on Paradise Harbor




The Sun also Rises on Paradise Harbor

When meeting a potential home buyer for the first time I always ask the type of home the buyer is looking for including, size, location, number of bedrooms, degree of “doneness” so that I can help find the right type of home to fit the buyer. Many buyers answer “waterfront”. When I tell them Key West has only a few (as in very few!) waterfront or even water view homes, they reluctantly accept the fact that they may not get what they want. But there is a new opportunity for water view homes in Old Town.

Yesterday I wrote about 8 new single-family homes being built in a compound in the 1500 blocks of Petronia and Pine Streets. Just across the road another developer is constructing seven new single-family homes at Paradise Harbor, which is located at the Garrison Bight. The homes are located at 719 Eisenhower Drive and some have direct water views of the bight. Each home has a boat slip for easy ocean access. The homes range in price from $2,350,000 to $3,495,000.

The homes feature a huge master suite, over sized guest rooms, high ceilings, state of the art kitchen, spacious dining area, and a third floor library/game room. The yards feature a pool and foliage designed with water conservation in mind. Key West has never had a development like this within walking distance to Old Town. (Walk time to Duval Street is 15 minutes. Walk time to the historic seaport is 7 minutes.)

I can’t predict the future, but I am confident the sun will rise over the new homes at Paradise Harbor, and that the present price point on these homes is way undervalued. The houses are not inexpensive by any means. But when the Key West real estate market returns, the homes directly on the water will have appreciated more than just about any property in Key West. The other homes will increase in value, but not to the same degree in my estimation.

This is not my listing, but you can see more detailed information on it by clicking The Sun also Rises on Paradise Drive above. Better yet, please call me at 1-305-766-2642.

Tuesday, February 6, 2007

Something New under the Sun




Scarcity creates value. That's why I think real estate in Key West is such a great value--even at today's prices because you can't grow the island any bigger than it is. Or can you?

Key West enacted an amendment to the city charter to restrict growth by limiting height and density of construction and renovation. There has been a big legal battle over redevelopment of the Jabour Trailer Park into waterfront condominiums. A similar battle was waged over redevelopment of the Atlantic Shores Resort into high-end ocean front condominiums. That case went to the Circuit Court of Appeals that reversed a ruling of the Monroe County District Court that misinterpreted the city ordinance.

But any time somebody wants to build something to increase the present use of a big piece of property it is almost assured that someone else will get their nose out of joint and want to interfere in the process. Not being judgemental. Just stating the facts.

Over the next couple of weeks I am going to mention several new development projects in Key West that may appeal to a variety of potential buyers.

Today's entry are eight new Victorian homes situated in the Heart of the Meadows in the 1500 blocks of Petronia and Pine Street. The Meadows is located within easy walking distance to Duval (about a 15 minute walk.) Each home is different is size, design, and price. Prices range from $1,695,000 to $1,995,000. This is a secure and gated community with private carports & indigenous landscaping. Pascal Delisse Interior Designs has created stunning interior schemes and will provide endless custom options with early purchase. Features include vaulted ceilings, hardwood & travertine floors, chefs kitchen with custom cabinetry & granite counters, luxurious master suite, dramatic custom lighting, impact windows, breathtaking patios & porches and individual private pools. The neighborhood itself is getting quite a makeover. A separate waterfront development is going on across the street (Eisenhower Drive). And the home directly across the street to the north has just been completed renovated. That house takes up 1/2 the city block and will add value to all homes around it. That my friends is a given in real estate.

Click the tile above Something New under the Sun for more information on these homes.

Monday, February 5, 2007

Life in the Slow Lane



Life in the Slow Lane

That's what life is for most of us fortunate enough to live in Key West year around. But for those Key Westers who really live on a lane, life is more slow and much more quiet.

I am speaking of course of the 104 named lanes in Old Town Key West. In 1980 a Conch named C.W. (Billy) Pinder prepared a history of Key West lanes for the City Commission which he subtitled "A Bit of History, A lot of Dimension". He recited the name and location of each lane and suggested in his forwarding Memorandum that "the Police, Fire, Sewer and our department has expressed interest in this booklet" inferring that a lot of people in responsible positions did not know where some of the lanes were located. And to no wonder the reason why: several lanes have more than one name.

Here are but a few of the lanes for your edification: Billygoat Lane is also known as Hibuiscus Lane and the entrance is located next to 512 Grinnell Street. Carey Lane is also known as Thompson Alley (not to be confused with Thompson Lane -- there are two of those) and is located on Margaret Street near the sexton's office to the Key West Cemetery. Du Pont Lane is a dead end off the 500 block of Petronia near Duval and is also known as Titanic Court. Then there is Goat Alley also known as Carson's Lane. Of course is located on the north side of the cemetery and is now referred to as Angela Street. One of my favorites has always been Graveyard AlleyGruntbone Alley (also now known as Peacon Lane). We have a Love Lane, Passover Lane, Poorhouse Lane, Whalton Lane (not to be confused with Whalton Street--but people still get confused!), Wong Song Alley , and the two Thompson Lanes--one in Bahama Village and the other a mile away near the new Strunk Ace Hardware on Eaton Street.

Key West lanes are very special places. Most are dead end streets that are but one lane wide. Some lanes actually go for two blocks and a couple of those connect to through streets on both ends. But most are just dead ends. And that's what makes them special. You see tourists usually can't find them, motor scooter riders go too fast to see them, Conch train and trolley car drivers drive past because they can't drive in. So life goes on in these little islands within the island that is Key West.

When I am working with customers looking to find a dream home in Key West I extol the virtues of lane life.

The house to the right is a new renovation on Carey Lane. There are three houses on this lane with almost identical original facades and construction. The houses on either side were enlarged and pools added earlier. And this last house was completed in 2005. Totally redone, top to bottom and includes a separate guest cottage and sparkling pool. It's a 3 block walk to Duval and a 3 block walk to the seaport. So close, so far away. So quiet at night, and during the day.

Life in the Slow Lane, ain't it a drag.

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The information on this site is for discussion purposes only. Under no circumstances does this information constitute a recommendation to buy or sell securities, assets, real estate, or otherwise. Information has not been verified, is not guaranteed, and is subject to change.
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