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Wednesday, November 2, 2016

809 Washington Street #103, Key West - A Casa Marina Bargain


Just Listed, but not by me, 809 Washington Street #103, Key West, Florida. This unit is one of nine town homes located in the Casa Marina Estates which was built in 2007. According to the listing Realtor, this home has 2240 sq ft of living space divided between three floors. Additionally, there is an assigned off street parking space which conveys with the home.
These town homes were introduced to the Key West real estate market just before the national real estate market collapsed in 2008. The units were built to sell and did initially sell in the $1.6 million price range. After the market collapse, many owners sold their properties via short sales and some were sold as bank foreclosures. The owner paid $1.6 million for this property and is offering it for sale today at $975,000. It is neither a short sale nor lender owned. This is a real market transaction, and I view this property as a real bargain given the size, quality of construction, and location of the property. Since this unit is tenant occupied, I borrowed photos from another unit I sold a couple of years ago located in the building next door which is identical in location and size. The kitchen cabinets were painted and the bathrooms upgraded.
When you enter this home you get a sense that it is a real home and not a unit in a building.  If you have been in some of the condos or town homes in Truman Annex or buildings on the eastern edge of the island, you know what I am referring to. This is a substantial home with extra high ceilings, real wood floors, beautiful cabinets, stainless steel Viking appliances, crown molding, high baseboards, and custom wood trim.  These amenities coupled with the size and location were among the reasons the original purchasers paid the prices they paid.
The above photos show the pool and rear yard configuration for these units. The top and bottom photos are of 811 Washington and the middle is of 809 Washington. The top photo shows the side yard which explains the difference in lot size of this unit versus the interior unit which does not have the extra space. And the middle unit does not have the side windows which permit extra light to enter the unit.
809 Washington MASTER BATH
811 Washington MASTER BATH

This home has three bedrooms plus three and one-half baths. The main floor has a half bath tucked away under the staircase to the upper floors. The master bedroom sits at the rear of the home and has a vaulted ceiling which adds size and dimension to this space. Notice also the two sets of French doors which open out to the rear covered deck. The front and rear of the house has first and second floor covered decks. The master bedroom deck provides a great spot for napping in a hammock or watching the kids or grand kids in the pool below. I included a photo of the bathroom in 813 Washington which changed out the original claw foot tub for a more modern walk-in shower. This is an easy and relatively inexpensive treat that will make the space your own.

Again the above photos show 811 Washington #103 and not the unit offered which is occupied by a long term tenant. CLICK HERE to view the Key West MLS datasheet and to view listing photos.
The two rainbow photos were taken at Higgs Beach in the 1970s. The middle photo was taken there about one month ago. While the White Street Pier has been upgraded and re-named, the views of the water and skies though ever-changing are forevermore brilliant.  I live in the Casa Marina Area and love it. You can walk or ride to the beach in a matter of minutes. You can join the Casa Marina Club to use its private beach, gym, and get a discount of food and beverages. Or you can ride your bike to one of several nearby gyms and yoga studios to take care of your body. I prefer the beach just after sunrise when locals are walking their dogs, jogging or speed walking, or walking for the exercise. The single family homes in the Casa Marina Area are getting pricier all the time. That is why I think 808 Washington Street is such a good buy compared to the cost of a single family home in this area and compared to the cost of a comparably priced single family home located elsewhere in town but that does not enjoy at the structural qualities and amenities of this property.
Please call me, Gary Thomas, 305-766-2642, to schedule a private showing of 809 Washington Street #103. I am a buyers agent and a full time Realtor at Preferred Properties Key West.


Tuesday, November 1, 2016

The House of the Future is Not What was Imagined

I grew up in a western suburb of Denver, Colorado in the years immediately following the end of World War II. My generation are known as baby boomers. We are now or soon will be retired - my how time flies.  Like so many children of my generation, I would watch Walt Disney's Disneyland on Sunday night. Walt Disney would introduce each show to let us know a bit about what we were about to see. Walt was like a kindly old uncle who shared programs featuring animals, kids, cartoons, and folk heroes.  A few years ago I wrote a blog after Fess Parker's death was announced. He played Davy Crockett who was introduced to my generation on Disneyland. Wikipedia informs me that there were just five one-hour episodes which played between 1954 - 1955. Those five episodes showed the world the power of television. Every boy in my class had a coonskin cap to mimic the one worn by Davy Crockett. The coonskin caps weren't just at my school; they were everywhere. I am confident the guys on Madison Avenue who are responsible for selling cereal and toys appreciated the instant significance of television's power of persuasion.
The Mickey Mouse Club began to air in 1955. I was in the third grade. I lived one block from school and would get home just as the program came on TV. I loved the Spin and Marty episodes and The Hardy Boys.  I was a nerdy little kid who even sang along with the Mouseketeers. I fell under the spell of whatever it was that Walt Disney was peddling. Every now and then Walt Disney would appear on the Sunday program or on the Mickey Mouse Club to spend a few minutes telling viewers about the Disneyland park being constructed in Anaheim, California. He showed photos or film clips of the progress which at that time were ho-hum to me. Disneyland was to have separate areas: Main Street, Adventureland, Frontierland, Fantasyland, and Tomorrowland each of which related to various programs on the Disneyland TV series or Disney movies. After the park was completed and I saw how wondrous the place was, it became exceeding imperative that I needed to go to Disneyland for my life to be complete. Nobody in my school had been there. I had to be the first!
And so in the June 1957 my mother, my dad, and I got in our 1952 Studebaker and headed west to Disneyland.  Along the way we stopped at the Petrified Forrest, the Grand Canyon, and Las Vegas each of which slowed us down from reaching the reason for our trip. I spent hours and hours in the back seat of that car dreaming of the magic kingdom. But upon arrival in Los Angeles instead of heading directly to Disneyland, my parents took a couple of adult detours to see a glass church on the ocean, the Farmer's Market, and Hollywood.
We eventually made it to Disneyland and like any kid (or adult), I was so happy to be there. I bought a souvenir guide like the one pictured at the top of today's blog. We set out to visit every inch of the park. While I remember a lot of what I did and saw, my purpose today is to share the one attraction that left a marked impression on my life. While Main Street was Walt Disney's homage to the way life used to be, Tomorrowland was his vision of what life might become. There was a space rocket, rocket rides, and The House of the Future. The house, most of the interiors, the furniture, and most of the furnishings were made of plastic. The objective was to show the public the flexibility and utility of plastics as a building material for all aspects of modern life. 

If you have twelve minutes to spare, you can watch a YouTube video (above) which shows the house of the future as it existed sixty years ago The video is well worth twelve minutes of your time. Among the features cited are the atomically irradiated food center; the supersonic dishwasher which cleans dishes by ultrasonic waves; a refrigerator comprised of three cells for regular cold food storage, frozen food, and irradiated food. The kitchen included a microwave "range". The walls, ceiling, floors, and kitchen cabinets, counter-tops, and bath fixtures were made of various forms of plastics. The furniture was also made of plastic - even the man-made fabrics. The Climate Control Center was designed to control heat, air conditioning, ventilation, and also provide scent control by adding the scent of roses or salty sea air to the home. The new age telephone offered push button dialing (as opposed to the rotary dial so familiar at the time) as well as being able to speak without a handset. There was a wall unit device in the bathroom with a closed circuit TV screen where an owner could see who was at the front door and provide two-way communication. The bathroom also had a built-in razor for dad and an electric toothbrush for the family. The shared wall between the boy's bedroom and the girl's bedroom was a collapsible accordion-style room divider. I can't imagine any teenage boy or girl wanting a sibling to open a wall like that without warning - or even with warning.

I walked through the house of the future more than half a century ago. While many of the home's features still survive in our real world, the slick aspects of plastics everywhere did not become our modern reality just like Russia never attacked us with an atom bomb.

Today home buyers in Key West want buy older house constructed of solid wood. They want a place with character - not module that looks like every other module - the way the house of the future would have looked. Some buyers prefer little cigar maker cottages while others want to buy large  Grand Conch Houses. Most of our homes were built well over a hundred years ago.  The Old Town area of Key West has street after street after street with all kinds of historic old homes that were built over the decades of varying styles. Many of the old homes have been renovated while a few are still relatively untouched. Some buyers prefer to buy a house that needs renovated just so that they can incorporate their sense of design and style into their particular house of the future. It is the lack of uniformity that attracts buyers to Key West to find the perfect old home which buyers can transform into their new home. Even houses of more recent construction mimic the building styles of the past to some degree (bottom photo below).
We all create our own future. If you are a potential buyer who wants to create your future on a little island in the middle of the ocean please consider contacting me, Gary Thomas, kw1101v@aol.com or call me at 305-766-2642.  I am a buyers agent and a full time Realtor at Preferred Properties Key West. I am so happy to report that the house of the future is not what was envisioned by the makers of the plastic house at Tommorowland. In Key West, the house of the future will probably be a great old house that has been saved by someone who cared about preserving the past.


Friday, October 28, 2016

1200 Florida Street - Key West



The recently completed renovation of 1200 Florida Street may be the dream cottage you have been waiting to find. The listing Realtor describes this property this way:
"Just completed renovation of a charming Historic District bungalow with separate guest cottage. This one level, two bedroom, two bath home has a large living area with pine floors and whitewashed ceiling opening to a beautiful cottage style kitchen with adjacent dining room. The spacious master suite is at the rear of the home and has a separate sitting area, large bath and open to the pool.  Additionally there is a nice sized sitting room with french doors to a rear deck. The separate cottage with bedroom and bath sits poolside and is perfect for guests who like a private space. This sunny corner property has been tropically landscaped and offers off street parking and storage."
Everything about this home is new - the floors, the interiors, the kitchen and baths. It's fresh as can be and really charming. The furnishings are negotiable which means a new owner could buy this place pretty much turn key.  That's good news because the place works perfectly. 
As with many Key West homes, the inside and outside blend together with ease. Both the kitchen and dining area and the adjacent master bedroom have French doors which open out to the deck and pool. The guest cottage likewise has French doors which open out to the pool. With a nifty view like that why would anybody want to stay inside?
I have sold three homes within three hundred feet of this home in the past five years. This is a great neighborhood with quick access to Old Town, the beaches, nearby Bayview Park, and the gyms and yoga studios in the Truman and White area.
CLICK HERE to  view the Key West MLS datasheet and listing photos. Then please call me, Gary Thomas, 305-766-2642, to schedule a private showing of this really interesting home which is priced right at just $1,198,000. I am a buyers agent and a full time Realtor at Preferred Properties Key West.


Wednesday, October 26, 2016

How to Win a Negotiation without Going Postal


I remember the time I had a few minutes to spare between showing appointments. I asked my buyer if he would like a cup of coffee. He said yes. So I drove over to Sandy's Cafe at the corner of White at Virginia Streets in Key West. I had been at Sandy's at about the same time the day before. The guy behind the counter who waited on me then was helping another customer. A new guy behind the counter asked me what I wanted.

I said "One small cafe con leche with two sugars and a decaf." He asked "Sugar?" and I said sugar in the con leche but not the decaf. He walks to the coffee machines and starts the laborious process of freshly brewing coffee just for me. He bangs the machine, cleans something, adds coffee, turns on the machine, grabs the machine and fiercely jerks it. He removes the small coffee brewer and pours hot coffee into a small white Styrofoam cup. He then added the milk and sugar and then put on a ilid. He placed the cup in front of me. He looked at me whereupon I asked where the decaf was. He said "We only have decaf for con leche decaf." I replied I did not want the decaf con leche, only the decaf. He removed the coffee can from the shelf over the coffee machines as if to prove to me that he did indeed have decaf coffee. But then he said they do not sell decaf coffee, only decaf con leche.

Since I ordered exactly the same thing the day before with no trouble at all, I was perplexed by my inability to get it a day later. I did not lose my cool. Instead, I remembered how Jack Nicholson dealt with a similar situation many years ago in the movie Five Easy Pieces.  Jack Nicholson's character (Dupea) was in a diner and tried to order plain wheat toast which wass not on the menu but which could easily be made.
Dupea:  I'd like a plain omelet, no potatoes, tomatoes instead, a cup of coffee, and wheat toast.
Waitress:  No substitutions.
Dupea:  What do you mean? You don't have any tomatoes?
WaitressOnly what's on the menu. You can have a number two - a plain omelette. It comes with cottage fries and rolls.
Dupea:  Yeah, I know what it comes with. But it's not what I want.
Waitress:  Well, I'll come back when you make up your mind.
Dupea:  Wait a minute. I have made up my mind. I'd like a plain omelet, no potatoes on the plate, a cup of coffee, and a side order of wheat toast.
Waitress:  I'm sorry, we don't have any side orders of toast...an English muffin or a coffee roll.
Dupea:  What do you mean you don't make side orders of toast? You make sandwiches, don't you?
Waitress:  Would you like to talk to the manager?
Dupea:  ...You've got bread and a toaster of some kind?
Waitress:  I don't make the rules.
Dupea:  OK, I'll make it as easy for you as I can. I'd like an omelet, plain, and a chicken salad sandwich on wheat toast, no mayonnaise, no butter, no lettuce. And a cup of coffee.
Waitress:  A number two, chicken sal san, hold the butter, the lettuce and the mayonnaise. And a cup of coffee. Anything else?
Dupea:  Yeah. Now all you have to do is hold the chicken, bring me the toast, give me a check for the chicken salad sandwich, and you haven't broken any rules.
Waitress:  You want me to hold the chicken, huh?
Dupea:  I want you to hold it between your knees.
Waitress:  Do you see that sign, sir? Yes, you'll all have to leave. I'm not taking any more of your smartness and sarcasm.
Dupea:  You see this sign? [He sweeps all the water glasses and menus off the table]

I got the decaf without the con leche.  And I didn't have to postal.


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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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