Corey Chambers Los Angeles Real Estate Newsletter December 2020 SoCal Home

Wishing You Happy Holidays With The December 2020 Newsletter

The Giving Back and Paying It Forward Real Estate Newsletter! | NOVEMBER 2018

Corey Chambers SoCal Home   |   The Giving Back and Paying It Forward Real Estate Newsletter!  |  December 2020

SoCal Home Be A Bright Star.  Your referrals help kids!

Happy Holidays!!!
December rings in as the most joyful time of the year. This challenging year is coming to a close. Celebration of Christmas, along with other holiday celebrations, all mean different things to different people, but most always represent happiness and good wishes. If you look around, you will notice a giving spirit exists unlike at other times of the year. Unfortunately, many home owners feel the bind of being ready to enjoy the holiday but trapped with a big task. They are desperate to exit their current home and give themselves a big Christmas Gift — a NEW place to call home.

Here’s how you and I can help. As a result of my teams work with over 5,000 families over a 20 year time span and through three recessions, we have developed a special program to quickly get an acceptable “cash” offer on any home for market value. So we are giving Home Owners wanting to make a move a very special gift this holiday season. For the month of December, we will guarantee, in writing, the sale of an area home in 30 days at a price acceptable to the home owner. In the event there is no sale, we’ll pay the homeowner $3,750. The homeowner and I just need to agree on price and time of possession. We do that starting with a simple, FREE consultation.

Here is what you can do to help!
If anyone you know, including yourself, is considering making
a move, we would like to offer them a FREE, No Obligation to Sell for Top Dollar Consultation. On this call, we’ll discuss just how they can make their move, get what they want and do it with the least hassle.

AND while we are on the phone, I will instantly send over a FREE Special Report titled “Costly Home Seller Mistakes to Avoid When Selling During the Holiday Season”. Just like we are thankful for you and your business, I am confident your referrals will be thanking you for steering them in the right direction on getting their home sold!!!

*A GREAT Guarantee: Sold in 30 Days or I pay a $3,750.00 Cash Penalty!
*A FREE Consultation to Discuss What Price can Be Expected.
*A FREE Special Report that details Mistakes to Avoid When Selling in Today’s Market.

AND remember, YOUR referrals help the Kids!
We are still on a mission to raise $25,000 for Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles CHLA, so
we are donating a good portion of our income from home sales to them. As you know CHLA does a tremendous job of helping kids fight through and survive nasty life threatening diseases like Cancers, Leukemia and non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma: stuff that many times rob the life right out of young people.

Attached is a story of one young child’s health being saved. CHLA survives on Sponsorships and Donations. So YOUR REFERRALS REALLY DO HELP THE KIDS!
Who do you know considering buying or selling a home you could refer to my real estate sales team?

Not only will they benefit from our award winning service, but we donate a substantial portion of our income on every home sale to Childrens Hospital right here in Los Angeles.

Corey Chambers and His Team are committed to server our community.

Your Referrals Really Do Help the Kids…

I want to make it easy to refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move, so here are your options:

1. You can go to www.CoreyChambers.me and enter their contact info on line or forward the link to who you know considering a move.

2. Of course you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910.

How the Donation Works:

We donate a portion of our income from homes we sell to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. As you know, Children’s does Lifesaving work helping kids fight through and survive nasty diseases like cancer, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, leukemia and others. They also lead the way in spinal cord injury recovery and early diagnosis of autism.  Children’s Hospital Los Angeles provides this care and keeps patient costs to a minimum due in large part to Donations and Sponsorships.

Who do you know considering buying or selling a home you could refer to my real estate sales team? Not only will they benefit from our award-winning service, but you can rest assured a very worthy group of children will benefit as well!

To refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move, just give me a call or pass on my number to them!

In my career of helping families sell their home and/or buy another, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring friends. People like you! So for those you know that are considering a move, you have my word that we will do our very best in helping them buy or sell the place they call home.

I hope this special month of Showing Thanks brings you much joy and happiness. With all my appreciation,

Your Home Sold Guaranteed!

P.S. We love honoring our past clients like you. Read all about that at: www.ReferralsHelpKids.com

P.P.S. “You have really changed our daughter’s life for the better. You have our deepest appreciation.”
I have attached an article that demonstrates the great work done by CHLA and how your referrals really do help the kids right here in Los Angeles. Keep em coming!

Corey

Why I Support Children’s Hospital Los Angeles:

I grew up right here in the Los Angeles area. Born at St. Francis Hosptial. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a nasty disease and getting treated for that at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. It was then that I began to pay closer attention to the work they do at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard-working health care professionals, most making their home right here in the Los Angeles area, all coming together for a common cause. That cause is to help young people overcome unfortunate health issues that life sometimes throws our way. Being in the Los Angeles area, a California native, I take pride in supporting in a way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rally’s around our annual goal of raising money and donating portions of our income to help Children’s in their quest to heal young people when they need healing. My team and I are committed to providing outstanding results for buyers and sellers referred to us by our past clients. I have discovered that Children’s Hospital Los Angeles shares similar commitments to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations we are happy to contribute and proud to support them. 

Music Therapy Hit the Right Note for Nano

A love of mariachi helps a young patient battle a rare genetic condition.

By Katie Sweeney  --  Story and photos courtesy Children's Hospital Los Angeles
By Katie Sweeney — Story and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

He wears a large black sombrero with festive gold braiding, and the maraca in his hand doubles as his microphone. A guitarist strums and sings beside him as he tilts back his head and belts out the chorus:

Ay, yai, yai-YAAIIIIII
Canta y no llores

The tune is “Cielito Lindo,” a traditional Mexican folk song, and the performer is 6-year-old Adriano—a mariachi star-in-the-making better known to his many fans as simply “Nano.” And the concert venue? Nano’s bedside in the Bone Marrow Transplant (BMT) Unit at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

The BMT Unit has been the site of countless Nano concerts, thanks in large part to that guitarist singing along with him—Music Therapist Hana Cho, MT-BC.

“Hana is one reason he stayed alive in the hospital,” says Nano’s mom, Eliana. “She brought him something he loves: music. He lives for music. That’s just who he is.”

‘This can’t be happening’

Nano’s love affair with song—and especially mariachi—started at an even younger age. When he was a baby, his mom would soothe his tears by singing the chorus to “Cielito Lindo” (Pretty Darling).

“Every time he would cry, I would sing that to him: ‘Ay, yai, yai-yai, canta y no llores—sing and don’t cry,’” she translates. “Be happy! And that became his favorite song.”

The song has become a sort of anthem for Nano through the months he’s had to spend at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. He was born with a rare genetic condition called Fanconi anemia, where mutations in certain genes slow the normal daily process of DNA repair in cells. This fragile DNA leads to bone marrow failure and other problems.

He was 15 months old when he was diagnosed at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. “When the doctors told us, it just broke me,” says Eliana. “I was like, ‘This can’t be happening.’”

Some Fanconi anemia patients can live for years, even decades, before their bone marrow fails. But by the time Nano was 4, his blood cell counts were dropping too low, and random bruises began popping up on his body.

“As Nano grew, his marrow function worsened, and it got to the point where he was going to need blood transfusions,” explains Michael Pulsipher, MD, a hematologist and Head of Transplantation and Cellular Therapy in the Cancer and Blood Disease Institute at CHLA, and an expert in Fanconi anemia. “He really needed a bone marrow transplant.”

Bone marrow transplants in Fanconi anemia patients are highly specialized. Because of patients’ fragile DNA, doctors must use different and less-intense treatments, including lower-dose chemotherapy medicines.

Unfortunately, none of Nano’s family members—including his three siblings—were a suitable match. A search among unrelated donors also came up empty. Nano’s best option was an umbilical cord blood transplant from one of several national registries that bank cord blood that’s donated after babies are born.

“Cord blood is very rich in bone marrow stem cells,” Dr. Pulsipher says. “It allows us to do a mismatched bone marrow transplant that we couldn’t otherwise do.”

Born to perform

Nano’s transplant went well, but afterward, he developed graft-versus-host disease of the gut and skin, a common complication. He’s also suffered recurring bouts of pneumatosis, a painful condition where air gets in the lining of the intestinal walls.

Fanconi anemia patients heal very slowly. Nano’s hospital stay stretched longer.

“It seemed every time he would heal from one thing, he would get sick with another,” Eliana says. “It was just back to back.”

But throughout all these ups and downs, there was a constant bright spot: music. From the start of his hospital stay, Nano was visited weekly by Cho, the music therapist.

“Music therapy is not music lessons,” Cho explains. “It’s using music to support a child’s emotional and developmental health and well-being during the stress of hospitalization. We disguise therapeutic techniques through music.”

For Nano, though, it was all fun. He already had a “guitar” (really a small ukulele), and he was in awe of the many instruments Cho brought with her, including bongo drums, maracas, tambourines and more. At first, he and Cho sang standard preschooler songs like “Wheels on the Bus.” But it wasn’t long before he had another request: “Cielito Lindo.”

“He was like, ‘You don’t know that one?’” Cho says with a laugh, remembering the surprise on his face. “I said, ‘Well, I guess I’d better learn it!’”

Nano has several other Latin-inspired favorites, too—including “Un Poco Loco” (A Little Crazy) and “El Latido de Mi Corazón” (The Beat of My Heart), both from the Disney movie “Coco.” Cho learned them all, and soon, they were a regular musical duo on the BMT Unit.

“Tell everybody I’m going to do my songs,” Nano would instruct his nurse. “I’m doing a concert.”

Then he’d get into one of his authentic miniature mariachi suits–like his cream-colored suit with the fine gold embroidery, or his blue-and-gold vaquero-style outfit. His dad had brought the suits home after a trip to Mexico, and it was a 10-minute process for him to get ready—donning pants, boots, belt, vest, jacket and one of his signature sombreros.

With the nurses gathered in the hallway, Nano would start with his grito—a high-pitched whooping shout that is a traditional part of mariachi. And then the singing—and sometimes traditional folklorico dancing—would begin.

“At the end he’d take his hat off and bow,” Cho says. “He’s just a born performer.”

One of Nano’s nurses even sketched a picture of him in one of his mariachi outfits. And this past fall, Nano joined other CHLA patients in decorating a pair of cleats from Major League Baseball star Justin Turner, who hit a home run while wearing them.

On the cleats, Nano drew his favorite things: McDonald’s french fries, a sombrero and his signature lines: “Ay, yai, yai, yai … Canta y no llores.”

“Everybody knows him by that,” Eliana says. “Everybody knows who sings that song.”

Tears, joy and Iron Boy

Nano’s journey has not been all song and dance. There have been plenty of tears.

One tough moment came before his bone marrow transplant, when he first had a central line placed in his chest. Then 4, he was sobbing inconsolably, crying out, “‘Mom! Dad! Why did you let them give me an owie? Why? Why?’”

Those cries would break the heart of any parent. But his dad, Marco, had a sudden inspiration. He popped in the movie “Iron Man” and explained to Nano that the medicines he would be getting in his chest would give him the same super powers as the hero on the screen.

“You’re his partner,” he told Nano. “You’re Iron Boy.”

Nano’s tears quickly subsided, and his new nickname was born. His aunt even made him an Instagram page: “Iron Boy: My Road to Recovery.”

There were other tough times, too—like all the days in the hospital when he felt too sick to sing or dance or even lift his head from his pillow. On those days, when Cho arrived for music therapy, she would ask if he wanted her to leave.

His answer was always the same: Stay.

Sitting at his bedside with her guitar, she would sing soft lullabies while he rested. “He loves Hana,” Eliana says. “The connection they have through music—it’s not a connection you could have with anyone else.”

As you might expect, on the day Nano went home from the hospital, there was plenty of song and celebration.

For the occasion, he wore his best mariachi suit and a bright, camel-gold sombrero. In the BMT Unit, he gave a farewell grito. Outside, he and his parents were greeted by a mariachi band, as they sang along to “Cielito Lindo.”

Then, finally, he was home.

Stay strong, stay standing

Whenever Nano sees a TV commercial for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, he turns to Eliana and says, “That’s my hospital, Mom.”

“Yes, baby,” she replies. “That is your hospital.”

His care team has spanned multiple areas of the hospital, including Hematology, Pulmonology, Intestinal Rehabilitation, Orthopaedics, Urology, Physical Therapy and more.

Nano’s family would also like to send a special thank you to the BMT nurses. “They’re our second family,” Eliana says.

Meanwhile, their journey continues. Recently, Nano was back in the hospital with another bout of pneumatosis, which quickly cleared. After slowly building up his tolerance to food again, he is now back home and doing well.

“Long-term, our hope is that we’ll be able to completely wean Nano off his immune suppression medicines, so he can live a more normal life,” Dr. Pulsipher says. “But we have to do that very slowly and carefully.”

Until then, “We’ve just got to stay strong and stay standing,” says his mom. “We’ve got to keep fighting.”

And of course, keep making music. And keep following those wise words from “Cielito Lindo”: Canta y no llores.

Sing and don’t cry.

Learn more about the Artists Program 

How you can help:

Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members who are considering making a move. Just give me a call or pass on my number to them!  (213) 880-9910  Corey



LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP]

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SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | Popular | Luxury
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

Copyright Š This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE#01889449 We are not associated with the homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact (213) 880-9910 or visit LAcondoInfo.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker. Nb change links for December: |   PDF  |  VIDEO

Corey Chambers Los Angeles real estate newsletter November 2020 SoCal Home

Corey Chambers Wishing you A Bounty With The November 2019 Newsletter
Corey Chambers Wishing you A Bounty With The November 2020 Newsletter

The Giving Back and Paying It Forward Real Estate Newsletter! | NOVEMBER 2018

Corey Chambers SoCal Home   |   The Giving Back and Paying It Forward Real Estate Newsletter!  |  NOVEMBER 2020SoCal Home

November is one of my most favorite months of the year. The leaves begin to fall, the weather cools, football is on, and the Thanksgiving holiday has all the family and friends together.

I call it the Thank You Month. An extra opportunity to say Thank You for being a valuable part of our community service business. As most begin to prepare for the Holiday season, plan Thanksgiving get-togethers and the like, it’s easy to become wrapped up in all that we have to do to ensure a fun, joyful time for all we are responsible for and overlook all that we have to be thankful for. Gratitude though is an attitude that we appreciate all parts of life, both the big and small things alike.   |   VIDEO

Go Serve Big!!!  Investing in the People of Our Great Community.  #coreychambers #chla
Go Serve Big!!!  Investing in the People of Our Great Community.  #coreychambers #chla

 

Do You Know Someone That is Thinking About Selling, Yet is Concerned Because of the Time of the Year?

Firstly… Many homeowners are anxious to leave their current home. Actually, loathing selling this time of year as it adds to the frustration of not being settled for the Holidays. You may know someone or a family that fits this description. 

Here’s where you and I can HELP: 

As a result of helping THOUSANDS of home buyers and sellers over a 10-year time span, we have developed a special program to help Home Owners wanting to make a move and Sell Fast, For Top Dollar and with the Least Hassle! 

For the month of November (until Dec 20), we will guarantee, in writing, a cash offer at a price acceptable to the seller – all within 24 hours!* 

You may have seen our ads around town about this:

Guaranteed Cash Offer on Your Home at a Price Agreeable to You Within 24 Hours! (Emphasis on price)* Call Corey Chambers and Start Packing! 213-880-9910 

Your Home Sold Or I’ll Buy It*

I know there is some risk on my part to make such an incredible guarantee, but we are selling just about every client’s home at the market value price, sometimes even more, so there is no reason for area homeowners, your friends or family, to fret about selling right now. 

Just pass on my number or give me a call. 213-880-9910

AND Secondly… YOUR referrals help the Kids. 

We are still boldly on a mission to raise $25,000 for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

Corey Chambers Serving the community with your help.


How the Donation Works:

We donate a portion of our income from homes we sell to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. As you know, Children’s Hospital does AMAZING work in helping kids fight through and survive nasty diseases like cancer, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, leukemia, and others. They also lead the way in spinal cord injury recovery and early diagnosis of autism. 

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles provides this care and keeps patient costs to a minimum due in large part to Donations and Sponsorships.

We are proud to be an official sponsor of Children’s Hospital!

So, YOUR REFERRALS REALLY DO HELP THE KIDS… 

 Who do you know considering buying or selling a home you could refer to my real estate sales team?  Not only will they benefit from our award-winning service, but you can rest assured a very worthy cause will benefit as well! 

To refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move, just give me a call or pass on my number to them! 

Over the last two decades of helping thousands of families sell their home and/or buy another, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring people. People like you! So for those you know that are considering a move, you have my word that we will do our very best in helping them buy or sell the place they call home. 

I hope this special month of Showing Thanks brings you much joy and happiness. With all my appreciation,

Go Serve Big!

Your Home Sold Guaranteed! 

P.S. The  patient story attached from Children’s Hospital will tell the story of WHY it’s important that we keep giving to their cause. Check it out. 

P.P.S. It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home. Just give me a call at 213-880-9910 or pass my number on to them.

Award-winning Service Plus Benefitting The Local Community!

Over the last two decades of helping thousands to buy, sell or lease a home, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring people. 

People like you! So your referrals can rest assured that not only will they get the award-winning service we are known for and the guarantee to back it up, but that a solid portion of the income we receive will go toward a very worthy cause. 

Corey Chambers Real Estate Downtown Los Angeles

Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move:

You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info on line or forward the link to who you know considering a move.

Of course, you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910.


Why I Support Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles

I grew up right here in Los Angeles. Born right nearby at St. Francis Hospital. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a nasty disease and getting treated for that at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. It was then that I began to pay closer attention to the work they do at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard-working health care professionals, most making their home right here in the Los Angeles area, all coming together for a common cause. That cause is to help young people overcome unfortunate health issues that life sometimes throws our way. Being a Los Angeles area, California native, I take pride in supporting in any way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rallies around our annual goal of raising money and donating portions of our income to help Children’s in their quest to heal young people when they need healing. My team and I are committed to providing outstanding results for buyers and sellers referred to us by our past clients. I have discovered that Children’s Hospital Los Angeles shares similar commitments to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.


In It for the Long Haul

A little girl and her mom face neuroblastoma head-on.

By Monica Rizzo

For most kids, a trip to Disneyland sparks curiosity and wonderment. But during a family outing to “the happiest place on earth,” 15-month-old Ariana didn’t seem as captivated as the other kids.

“She had no reaction being on the Dumbo ride,” explains Ariana’s mom, Jennifer. “I’m looking around at all these children and they are laughing and smiling and elated to be flying, and my child was somber and quiet. I knew there was something going on.”

Jennifer said her first inkling that something was wrong actually happened a few weeks prior to that Disneyland outing, when she had taken Ariana to the pediatrician’s office for a stomach bug. At the time, she was concerned that her daughter’s stool was an odd color; she’d lost a little weight, and that her stomach was protruding.

“They felt something in her abdomen and figured it might be stool,” Jennifer says. Following the Disneyland trip, Jennifer returned to the pediatrician, who again felt “something” in her abdomen and ordered an ultrasound. The imaging revealed that Ariana had a mass in her abdomen—a tumor—with two parts, each approximately 8 centimeters. After a series of scans, biopsies and tests, Ariana was diagnosed in December 2017 with Stage 4 high-risk neuroblastoma.

Neuroblastoma is a cancer that develops from immature nerve cells in the body, and most often affects children ages 5 and younger. It is the third most common cancer in children and the second most common solid tumor in children, besides brain tumors.

“I was a mom who literally went into shock,” Jennifer recalls. She remembers her daughter’s medical team assuring her that Ariana’s diagnosis was not a death sentence.

‘The odds are in our favor’

“Obviously when a parent hears cancer they think, ‘My kid is going to die,’” says Araz Marachelian, MD, MS, Director of the Neuroblastoma Program at the Cancer and Blood Disease Institute at Children’s Hospitals Los Angeles, who spearheaded Ariana’s treatment. “In the past, this used to be a fatal disease. Twenty to 30 years ago, the prognosis was dismal.”

Thanks to decades of groundbreaking research and collaborative work—often happening at CHLA—outcomes for neuroblastoma have improved significantly.

“Patients with high risk neuroblastoma can be cured now, whereas before this was nearly impossible,” Dr. Marachelian says. “Even though the treatment is challenging, I tell families ‘the odds are in our favor. We are in this fight together.’”

The pep talk was just what Jennifer needed to hear as she rallied for the long haul to support Ariana during her 17-month treatment, which included five weeks of chemotherapy, followed by surgery, and then another round of chemotherapy. Ariana began showing marked signs of improvement, and her treatment continued with two rounds of high-dose chemotherapy, two stem-cell transplants, radiation and six months of immunotherapy.

The time in the hospital was hard, Jennifer admits, noting that she created a calendar so that family and friends could schedule visits. The structure allowed Jennifer to focus on Ariana’s care and communication with the medical team. She also leaned on the very supportive team on 4 West, the hospital’s inpatient hematology/oncology unit, and found comfort from the numerous supportive programs at CHLA like dog therapy, music and art therapy and the Literally Healing book program.

To make her hospital stay more comfortable, Child Life arranged to have the organization Dec My Room decorate Ariana’s hospital room with a Disney princess theme for her second birthday.

“They have the biggest hearts,” Jennifer says of 4 West’s team of doctors, nurses, physician’s assistants and Child Life staff. “We became a family. They are so empathetic, and they are dealing with really sick kids and parents who can’t control their emotions, and parents who aren’t available to be there because they have to work. And they didn’t just do it for me, they did it for everyone.”

Ringing the bell

In April 2019, Ariana received her last immunotherapy treatment and rang the bell on 4 West—a tradition at CHLA—with her care team cheering her on.

“The nurses did a farewell song and we did a pizza party for everybody,” Jennifer says, calling it a day she will never forget.

Not long after, Ariana was cleared to return to preschool and resume playdates with other kids.

“She was back out into the world like nothing ever happened,” says Jennifer, who bought a pass to Disneyland and “literally went there every weekend because I was making up for lost time!”

While the COVID-19 pandemic has put a halt to Disneyland outings, it hasn’t affected Ariana’s treatment schedule, which includes regular scans to see if there are any cancer cells.

“I was a little leary about having to take Ariana back for her follow up appointments during the pandemic,” Jennifer admits. “But the hospital is so on top of everything with screening everyone who comes in and making sure people wear masks and maintain a safe distance from each other. It really put my mind at ease.”

These days, Jennifer can’t help but be in awe of how Ariana, who crossed the milestone one-year mark with clear scans in July 2020, followed by her fourth birthday celebration in August, has grown into a spunky, silly and engaging young girl.

“She’s so funny. She has the best sense of humor. She’s likes to chat, dance and play dress up and makeup,” Jennifer gushes. “She’s amazing. She’s my hero.”   |   Learn more about the Cancer and Blood Disease Institute


How You Can Help

Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move. Just give me a call or pass on my number to them!  (213) 880-9910  Corey


LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP]

  Lofts For Sale     Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | PopularLuxury
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

Copyright Š This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE#01889449 We are not associated with the homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact (213) 880-9910 or visit LAcondoInfo.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.