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A resource for all Real Estate news about Santa Cruz County and the Monterey Bay area.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Tuesday, May 08, 2012
OPEN HOUSE This THURSDAY 5/10/12 9:30-NOON!!!
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Friday, May 04, 2012
Bonny Doon-The Place to Call Home
Close To the Silicon Valley Yet So Far Above It
Located just 7 miles north of downtown Santa Cruz
and 2 miles from the Pacific, Bonny Doon is 75 miles from San Francisco, 65
miles from Carmel and approximately 40 minutes from Silicon Valley. The most discerning home buyers who seek
privacy, views, or elbow room will be thoroughly delighted.
- 1 Hr. to San Jose International Airport
- 1.25 Hrs. to San Francisco International Airport
- 1.25 Hrs. to Menlo Park without Sitting on the Freeway
Destination Maps
- Map to Apple in Cupertino
- Map to Cisco in San Jose
- Map to Cupertino City Center
- Map to Google in Mountain View
- Map to Hewlett Packard
- Map to IBM in Morgan Hill
- Map to Intel
- Map to Kaiser Permanente in Campbell
- Map to San Francisco International Airport
- Map to San Jose International Airport
- Map to Stanford University
- Map to Sun Microsystems
- Map to Facebook in Menlo Park
- Map to Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
- Map to St. Mary's Medical Center
An Oasis in the Coastal Santa Cruz Mountains
Most people know Bonny Doon
because they are familiar with Bonny Doon wine.
Bonny Doon sits at the top of the Santa Cruz Mountains high above Los Gatos and Santa Cruz.
It is an unincorporated mountain community with 1500 homes mostly lived
in by Santa Cruz residents, people that commute to the Silicon Valley, artists,
writers, sculptors, horse lovers, and beach enthusiasts. Bonny Doon
offers breathtaking views of the Monterey
Bay. Bonny Doon offers mountain roads that lead to several key
locations in the Silicon Valley without any
traffic at any time of day or night.
Bonny Doon sits just a few miles above key Santa Cruz Mountain towns
offering organic food and good shopping – Felton, Ben Lomond, Boulder
Creek. Most homes in Bonny Doon sit on
more than two acres. From just about
anywhere in Bonny Doon, you can get to the ocean and the beaches in a matter of
minutes. The same is true when heading
from Bonny Doon to Santa Cruz,
the great coastal beach community, within a matter of minutes, you’re
there. Bonny Doon
has an award winning elementary school and preschool.
“Drop Out” To Bonny Doon
Many Bonny Doon residents are artists,
craftspeople, educators, geologists, scientists, professionals, telecommuters,
and Silicon Valley escapees. Painters, poets, potters, professors and policemen
call Bonny Doon home. There are
astrophysicists and microbiologists; venture capitalists and laborers; Stanford
PhDs and graduates of the Woodstock Music and Arts Fair. Some residents work from home, some work in
Silicon Valley, some drive up scenic Highway One to San Francisco, and some
just relax at home.
Why Downsizing to Bonny Doon Makes Sense
Do you find yourself sitting in traffic, wasting
time, just to live in a home that is part of a busy community? Would you enjoy
living somewhere that has a little more quiet and privacy? Think about downsizing to Bonny Doon. Bonny Doon’s high end homes have everything
that most multi-million dollar homes have which are located in the Silicon
Valley, Marin, or in the high priced communities in the Eastbay. Surprisingly, you can get to most places in
the Silicon Valley and San Francisco directly from Bonny Doon without hitting
traffic at any time.
Thursday, May 03, 2012
OPEN HOUSE 5/03/12 1:30-4pm!!!
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Tuesday, May 01, 2012
May E-Newsletter
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Santa Cruz County median home price $480,000 in March: Sales up, listings down
Santa Cruz County median home price $480,000 in March: Sales up, listings down
Posted:
04/28/2012 01:17:54 PM PDT
Of the 171 sales, 9 percent were for more than $1 million, more than any month since August, according to Gary Gangnes of Real Options Realty, who tracks the numbers, and 43 percent involved bank-owned properties or "short sales," where the lender accepts less than what is owed.
He noted the unsold inventory index, the number of listings divided by sales, has dropped to 4.6 months, a level at which prices are likely to rise.
Foreclosures, where a mortgage-holder has been given notice their home will be sold, are down 14 percent from a year ago, according to the Santa Cruz Record, but nearly 400 local homeowners face that situation and about 175 have lost their homes at foreclosure auctions.
Local real estate agents offer a variety of scenarios for what might happen during this buying season, five years after the peak of the housing bubble when the median reached $775,000.
"We won't see a big burst of buyers out of the woodwork until maybe next year," said Justin Bare of David Lyng Real Estate, who expects people who sold in a short sale and are renting will need to time to rebuild their credit to buy again.
"A lot of people bought too high," he said. "They're still trying for a loan modification or they're trying to sell but their price is too high."
Anything less than $500,000 "is getting 10 to 20 offers," according to Bare.
"I had one on Sims Road (in Santa Cruz) and the first day there were 13 offers, with six all cash," he said. "It was listed for $299,000 and we ended up at $350,000. It was only 1,000 square feet. That's a pretty good price per square foot but it needs a lot of work."
He handled the sale of a three-bedroom house on Old Graham Hill Road in Santa Cruz for $480,000 after the seller had taken it off the market. He had buyers willing to deal with retaining walls needing $80,000 worth of work if they got their price.
With so few homes for sale, more buyers are "buying location" and "starting to see beyond the initial look of the house," Bare said.
As of the first week in April, there were 782 listings, compared to more than 1,000 three years ago.
Patti Boe of American Dream Realty said she is seeing buyers from Silicon Valley who gave up vacation homes and stayed in hotels during the recession back in the market again.
"We have a good strong economy in Silicon Valley," she said, noting the spillover effect as people working over the hill want to come to Santa Cruz to surf and be near the water.
At the high end, she sees more than one buyer interested but not always willing to pay full price.
Banks had halted jumbo loans for high-end homes, but now they're back "a little bit," she said, observing buyers for homes priced at $1 million and up often have cash.
A buyer paid $2 million in March for a three-bedroom home on Pleasure Point Drive; the asking price had been $2.6 million. Boe said the value dropped due to the Pleasure Point Park project that took away some front yards.
"I think it's going to be worth more," Boe said, noting the new owner got an offer for the full asking price but declined to sell. "The way the park is built, it will shield the house and create more privacy."
Bradd Barkan at California Dreaming in Felton expects to see "nothing but short sales and bank-owned" homes because of banks not having enough staff to deal with sales expeditiously.
He handled two sales to the same buyer, $80,000 and $85,000, both cash deals. One in Ben Lomond was less than 1,000 square feet and had been sold for four times that during the bubble; the other was in Lompico.
"When the market was booming, the bank did lend on these things," Barkan said.
What's lowering prices, he said, is unpermitted construction, common in San Lorenzo Valley, as homeowners sought to avoid the expense and red tape. He cited the case of a cabin on Cooper Street in Felton where the owner doing unpermitted work ran out of money and the bank foreclosed.
Katy King of Monterey Bay Properties believes the market has changed from two months ago.
"I'm not finding the same values," she said.
She represented the buyer of a three-bedroom home needing work on Mosswood Court, where a short sale for $477,500 closed in March.
"You wouldn't get that today," King said.
The asking price is $399,900 on a new bank-owned listing, a two-bedroom home on Hoover Road in Soquel that needs work.
"Comps tell you to write a lower price (offer) but you're not going to get it at that price," King said.
This month, housing analyst Mark Hanson, based in Menlo Park, questioned whether the shrinking number of listinigs is a sign of recovery.
He contends it's a byproduct of federal policy to postpone foreclosures, mortgage-holders owing more than what their home is worth (20 percent of borrowers in Santa Cruz County) and investors and first-time buyers who don't supply the market with a lower-priced house when they buy one the way a move-up buyer does.
In his perspective, "anything done to prevent the flow of distressed property into these markets will prevent a true recovery or even throw the market back into a housing recession."
Follow Sentinel reporter Jondi Gumz on Twitter: @jondigumz
March 2012 statistics
Single-family homes
Median price: $480,000 ($476,900 in 2011; $519,000 in 2010 and $399,000 in 2009, $650,000 in 2008)
Listings: 782 (857 in 2011; 896 in 2010)
Sales volume: 171 (163 in 2011; 129 in 2010)
Distressed: 40 bank-owned; 33 short sales
Unsold Inventory Index: 4.6 month (5.3 months in 2011)
Average price: $542,511 ($527,712 in 2011)
Condos
Median price: $299,000 ($247,000 in 2011; $363,033 in 2010)
Listings: 243 (268 in 2011; 259 in 2010)
Sales volume: 37 (32 in 2011; 28 in 2010)
Distressed: 5 bank-owned; 3 short sales
Unsold Inventory Index: 6.3 months (8.4 months in 2011)
Average price: $299,812 ($306,250 in 2011)
Source: Real Options Realty, www.ror.com
CLOSE TO THE MEDIAN
City of Santa Cruz
1024 Sumner St., $440,000
410 Dakota Ave., $455,000
1744 Escalona Drive, $465,000
119 Beachview Ave., $476,300
528 Western Drive, $525,000
Santa Cruz County
405 Pine St., Capitola, $475,000
140 Mosswood Court, Santa Cruz, $477,500
160 Old Graham Hill Road, Santa Cruz, $480,000
266 Smith Road, Amesti, $481,327
14 MacLeod Way, Scotts Valley, $483,000
Lowest
11392 Lakeview Ave., Lompico, $45,000
1250 Country Club Drive, Ben Lomond, $85,000
571 Barkett Lane, Felton, $96,000
15715 Kings Creek Road, Boulder Creek, $130,000
106 Carey Ave., Freedom, $140,000
Highest
817 Via Gaviota, Rio Del Mar, $1.425 million
1114 W. Cliff Drive, Santa Cruz, $1.485 million
208 Sunset Ave., Santa Cruz, $1.65 million
3054 Pleasure Point Drive, Live Oak, $2 millon
111 Via Concha, Rio Del Mar, $2.12 million
Source: Real Options Realty
Labels:
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Buying,
Economy,
Finances,
Forecast,
Foreclosure,
Interest Rates,
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Santa Cruz County,
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Location:
Santa Cruz, CA, USA
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