Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter August 2023 | The SoCal Home

Brother
 it’s Hot & Not Just Outside!

RED HOT Opportunities!

You don’t have to be the weather service to predict the weather this time. We all know
 it’s the hottest time of the year. But that’s not all that’s hot. This is the season to buy and sell homes.

This is GOOD for most reading this, but there will be some exceptions. There always are. An example could be selling a house and making it out great, meaning a buyer pays a bit more than they would have not too long ago. And in some areas, the opposite happens. The Seller does not make out that great, but the buyer does. Most homeowners who do not have to know this will hold back on buying or selling. That will, of course, impact supply and demand. Results right now?

How does this impact you? Well, it is a HOT time to invest in real estate. Single-family, multi-family, even lofts. If you didn’t get the memo, here is a particular clause from our Buyer and Seller Agreements of our VIP Client Program, enabling past clients to create additional wealth through real estate. 

VIP CLIENT PROGRAM: Seller _ does OR _ does not wish to participate in Broker’s VIP Client Real Estate Investor Program (REIP), whereby Seller will receive notices of free real estate investor training and notices of real estate investment opportunities by mail, email or phone at times when investment opportunities arise. The Seller may opt out of The REIP at any time. The Seller is never obligated to invest in real estate. So, if you or anyone you know likes making money in real estate using other people’s money, please contact The Corey Chambers Group immediately. While these HOT investment opportunities are available. Making gains in assets and wealth is nice! We especially like it because it allows us the opportunity to GIVE more. How about you? 

As you probably know, we donate a portion of our income to some AMAZING, worthy causes, like Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. It’s one of the country’s leading non-profit children’s hospitals. This year we are on a mission to raise $25,000 for CHLA. Their work in helping kids fight through and survive nasty debilitating diseases like cancer, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and leukemia, as well as their work in other life-threatening childhood diseases.

At CHLA, they have performed first-of-its-kind surgeries to save local kids! As the leading not-for-profit hospital in L.A., you probably know they need sponsorships and donations to continue their leading-edge care and keep family expenses to a minimum. We are committed to donating a portion of our income from home sales to this worthy cause. So, YOUR REFERRALS really do HELP THE KIDS


Who do you know is considering buying or selling a home or investing in real estate? Could you refer me to my team? Not only will they benefit from our award-winning service, but the kids at CHLA will also benefit. So call or pass my number on to anyone you know considering buying or selling. 

My number is 213-880-9910. You and your referrals mean more than ever to my team and me. As we progress through this red-hot summer, please know we are incredibly thankful for you and a particular part of our business. 

Your friends, neighbors, work associates, and family members who may be considering a move can now do so and celebrate true independence from the fear of getting stuck with two homes or none at all. And remember
 Your referrals help the Children
 As I share with you each month, we are on a mission to raise $25,000 for the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Helping Hands Fund. We do this by donating a portion of our income. Children’s does excellent work in helping kids overcome cancer and other life-threatening diseases. In fact, Kids under their care are 300% more likely to enter into remission IF they can get into the recovery center. But CHLA depends on Sponsorships and Donations to keep rolling. 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 portion of our income on every home sale to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Helping Hands Fund. In addition, 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.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info online or forward the link to who you know considering a move.

2. Of course, you can always call me directly at 888-240-2500.

You and your referrals mean more than ever to my team and me. So as we move forward in this new season, please know that my team and I are incredibly thankful for your being a particular part of our business.

With all my appreciation,

Corey Chambers, Broker

P.S. The story of this girl and her family may cause you to look at your loved ones differently. It did me. Check it out.

It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home. Here are the Options Again:

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

Call me direct or pass my number on:

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 hearing about a young person close to our family suffering from a serious illness and getting treated for that at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. Then, I began to pay more immediate attention to their work at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard-working health care professionals, most making their homes 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 Hospital in its 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 its patients. And since their services survive sponsorships and donations, we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.

A New Bladder and a Transplanted Kidney Means All Systems Go for Olivia

Olivia needed her entire urinary tract restored. Her parents trusted doctors at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles to pull off the most complex procedures and give her life. — by Jeff Weinstock

Rachel Lestz, MD, didn’t relish what she was having to do. But as a nephrologist treating the most extreme renal problems in children, she understood that being the target of blame-the-messenger was an unavoidable hazard of practicing medicine.

“When I’m telling a family that their child is going to need dialysis, is going to need a kidney transplant—all the dreams and hopes that they had now have to shift,” says Dr. Lestz, Medical Director of Pediatric Kidney Implantation at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. “I always say to families, ‘You may have a very bad association with me because I shared this with you, and that’s OK.’ It’s a normal thing.”

On this occasion, in November 2013, she had to inform Claudia that her newborn daughter, Olivia, who had been airlifted to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles at 13 days old, was in kidney failure and would eventually need a kidney transplant to save her life. “She was born without enough kidney function, effectively,” Dr. Lestz says.

As often happens, Claudia connected Dr. Lestz to the diagnosis and resented her for delivering it, even though Dr. Lestz tried forcefully to explain that a solution was available.

“I remember her saying ‘kidney failure’ and I just shut down,” Claudia says. “She was trying to get me to stop crying and to hear her, saying, ‘She will be OK. We’re going to get her through this. She will be OK.’ But all I heard was she wasn’t OK and someone interrupting me, and I was like, ‘Oh, she is not nice.’ She was definitely not my favorite doctor at the time.”

And now? “We love her to this day.”

Building a new bladder

Olivia’s kidney weakness was one piece of an undeveloped urinary tract that included the absence of a bladder, creating an obstruction that doomed the whole system, as the kidney had nowhere to deposit the urine it produced.

The discovery came soon after Olivia was born, alongside her fraternal twin sister, Mia, a bit early at 36 weeks. Olivia went home while Mia needed a few extra days in intensive care to resolve some breathing difficulties.

Things reversed when they were back in their Santa Barbara home. Mia got stronger and began to develop, while Olivia didn’t eat well and had little energy. Claudia took her back to the hospital, where blood work and multiple other tests produced a shock: Olivia had only one kidney and it was full of disease.

“I was in disbelief, just distraught,” Claudia says. “I thought she was my healthy child.”

To relieve the pressure in the kidney, the immediate intervention taken at CHLA was a nephrostomy tube. The procedure sidesteps the bladder altogether. A catheter is placed directly into the kidney to collect urine and carry it away through an opening created in the patient’s back, draining into an external bag that gets emptied manually. It’s short-term fix, since the presence of a catheter, or any foreign instrument, in the body brings a risk of infection.

“We try to get that out as soon as possible,” says Evalynn Vasquez, MD, CHLA’s Associate Chief of Urology.

The next level up is a cutaneous ureterostomy, in which doctors redirect the ureter, a tube that in healthy urinary tracts sends urine from the kidney to the bladder. In cases such as Olivia’s, with a malfunctioning or absent bladder, doctors bring the ureter to the skin, where it leaves through a tiny hole made in the belly and leaks into a diaper the patient wears.

In spring 2014, Olivia underwent surgery, which maintained her for five years. Late in 2019, her kidney function bottomed out, necessitating a transplant.

But a new kidney needed to partner with a bladder. Since Olivia didn’t have one, one would have to be built before the transplant could happen. Creating a “neobladder” is a major surgical improvisation that Dr. Vasquez, Director of CHLA’s Complex Reconstruction and Malformations Program, says is done regularly on adult bladder cancer patients, but rarely on kids.

“In pediatrics, it’s not very common for patients to not have a bladder,” Dr. Vasquez says, noting she had performed the procedure several times on adults. “Olivia was the first in a pediatric patient that I had done.”

Using tissue taken from Olivia’s bowel, Dr. Vasquez crafted a makeshift bladder—essentially a pouch to catch the urine from the soon-to-be transplanted kidney. She then had to construct a passageway—called a Mitrofanoff after the doctor who devised it—to funnel urine from the new bladder to the skin, where it could be siphoned off by a catheter through an opening in the abdomen, called a stoma. Dr. Vasquez discreetly created the stoma in Olivia’s belly button so it wouldn’t be visible. Olivia, now 9 years old, inserts the catheter herself to empty the neobladder every few hours.

“The goal was to have her live essentially a normal life,” Dr. Vazquez says. “To have her not have any difficulty catheterizing, and to able to be dry and wear regular underwear and not get any urinary tract infections—you’re holding your breath and waiting to see how she does.”

The procedure’s success depended on whether Olivia would be able to self-catheterize without difficulty, without fear and while keeping dry. Olivia, only 6 at the time, picked up on the task so quickly, Dr. Vasquez asked her to share her skills.

“I told her, ‘Olivia, you have to teach all my patients how to do this because you’re so good at it.’ I have another patient who was born without a bladder, and I’ve connected them so they can talk, so she can be a support system for her.”

A donor, then a dog

After the procedure Olivia went on dialysis, a machine which carries out the waste-removal functions that failing kidneys can no longer execute. Her priority level on the waiting list for a transplant rose. Within six weeks, on Jan. 30, 2020, Claudia got word that a donor was found.

“I was at the kids’ school,” Claudia says. “I took the call while I was volunteering in the classroom, and one of the moms looked at me and I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, I think we have a match.’”

On the following day, Olivia’s new kidney, accompanied by a new ureter, was installed and connected to the neobladder. Her urine can now pass between the two organs, travel down the Mitrofanoff that leads to the hole in her bellybutton, where Olivia catheterizes every few hours to drain the bladder. All the surgical engineering is internal and allows Olivia to live without wearing a diaper.

“All you see on her is just this big scar on her stomach where her surgery was,” Claudia says, “Nobody has to know she has a pouch.”

The only outward sign of the entire apparatus is the grin she wears.

“This little girl and her spirit are so remarkable,” Dr. Vasquez says. “I’ll never forget, I saw her in the preop area and she was so excited. She sees me and says, ‘Dr. Vasquez, I’m getting a kidney!’

“She’s done so well, and it’s amazing how she’s survived everything she’s been through.”

Dr. Lestz sees Olivia monthly to monitor her new kidney. “Her kidney function’s actually normal,” Dr. Lestz says, “even for her age three years post-transplant.”

It’s a long way from the start of Olivia’s life, when Claudia and her husband, Jesus, were uncertain of her survival. “We had an emergency baptism for her,” Claudia says. “We called our priest and he came to the ICU.”

The one area of struggle has been eating. After taking her food since infancy through a gastrostomy tube inserted in her belly, Olivia is working to overcome her fears of eating by mouth, though nothing medically prevents it.

“Otherwise, she’s great,” Claudia says. “She’s thriving, happy, loves her friends. She has this amazing light. She brings joy to all of us.”

That includes her siblings, who received their own reward when Olivia got her transplant.

“We told the kids that after Olivia got a transplant they could have a dog, so they related her getting a kidney transplant to getting a dog. They were very excited: ‘Oh my gosh, we’re getting a dog!’ We looked at them like, ‘What?’ And they were like, ‘You said, when Olivia gets a transplant we could have a dog.’ We forgot about that arrangement completely.”

In the background, the loud barking confirms that mom and dad made good on the deal. All in all, it was a bargain.  — Story and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

Learn more about the Division of Abdominal Organ Transplantation at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

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

www.ReferralsHelpKids.com or call Corey at 213-880-9910

Copyright © This free information is provided courtesy of L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with the information provided by Corey Chambers, Broker, DRE#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 are subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if the buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter June 2023 — The SoCal Home

THE GIVING IT BACK AND PAYING IT FORWARD NEWSLETTER

corey-chambers-real-estate-newsletter-clients

Happy Fathers Day to
 Everyone?

You guessed it:  Fathers Day is June 18. But why should I mention this to you?

Well, since you have been kind enough to be part of our business, I wanted to take the opportunity to give you a free gift on Fathers Day. Chances are that you are not a dad, but I am sure the dads won’t mind. So I am going to go ahead and give you (and those you know) TWO very special free gifts.

Yes, TWO Gifts.

Gift #1 We will sell your home at your price, or we will buy it.*

Yes, this is the guarantee I am most famous for. And you will know that, whether it’s a super awesome real estate market or a housing recession, I have not wavered from this guarantee. The peace of mind from a guarantee like this is a fantastic gift.

I can think of none better.  My team and I are committed to results. In fact, Results-Oriented is one of our core values. For more than 30 years, people have been coming to us when they want their home sold, at their price and with the least hassle. We look forward to the next 30 years of  Guaranteed Results for L.A. homeowners.  #coreychambers #realestate #news

Your Referrals Change Lives!

Go Serve Large!!! Investing In The People Of Our Great Community.

With The Corey Chambers Team, Your Referrals Really do Change Lives!

If you or a friend are thinking about selling, make sure to choose a real estate company you can trust!

A Real Estate Company That Gives Back!

Gift #2… Donations to one of the areas Leading NonProfits, CHLA Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. In last month’s letter, I updated you on our goal of raising $25,000 for CHLA. In case you missed it, we donate a portion of our income from home sales to help the kids.  Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is a 501(c)(3). a nonprofit institution that provides pediatric health care and helps young patients more than half a million times each year in a setting designed just for their needs. Its history began in 1901 in a small house on the corner of Alpine and Castelar Streets (now Hill St. in Chinatown) and today its medical experts offer more than 350 pediatric specialty programs and services to meet the needs of patients. CHLA provides more than $316.2 million in community benefits annually to children and families. As the first pediatric hospital in Southern California, CHLA relies on the generosity of philanthropists in the community to support compassionate patient care, leading-edge education of the caregivers of tomorrow and innovative research efforts that impact children at the hospital and around the world. YOUR REFERRALS HELP THE KIDS! Keep them coming!

Our goal this year: Raise $25,000 for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles!

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 and ironclad guarantees but the kids of Children’s Hospital will benefit too! Just give me a call or pass my number on to anyone you know considering buying or selling. My number is 213-880-9910.

Your Referrals help the Kids!

Life moves fast for some and we are eager to make the Home Selling and Buying experience a smooth rewarding one. 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! As we move forward this Summer, please know we areA Real Estate Company That Gives Back!

Thank you in advance for your referrals! My number is 213-880-9910.

Go Serve Big!!! 

Corey Chambers

 

P.S. Check out the story enclosed of this amazing young person whose life was given back thanks to CHLA.

CHLA Your referrals help kids!

A real estate company with experience, proven results, and a give-back philosophy!

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

You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info online, or forward the link to someone 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 the Greater Los Angeles Area, born in Los Angeles County 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 a way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rallies around our annual goal or 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 commitment to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations, we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.

Sincerely,

Corey Chambers

*seller and Corey must agree on price and time of possession. Corey Chambers, Broker DRE#01889449


Can a New Way to Treat a Tumor Help Kai Beat Brain Cancer?

Melissa found Children’s Hospital Los Angeles in July 2021, when she was on a frenzied search for help for her infant son. —  By Jeff Weinstock  (Courtesy CHLA)

After her infant son was diagnosed with a rare tumor, Melissa crossed the country searching for help. She found it at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles in the office of Dr. Ashley Margol, one of the few experts in an innovative therapy called MEMMAT.

Five months earlier, Kai had been diagnosed with atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor, known as ATRT, an especially menacing brain cancer with a bleak prognosis. The doctors who made the diagnosis after removing the tumor recommended that Melissa and her husband, Chasen, not intervene with treatment.

“We ran from them as fast as we could,” Melissa says. But where to? Searching out an alternative opinion was an immense effort. “Nobody said, ‘This is how we treat it, this is what we’re going to do,’ because there’s no real protocol for ATRT.”

The family moved east, picking up stakes from San Jose, California, to pursue treatment, but after four months of chemotherapy, Kai relapsed just before his first birthday. The cancer reappeared in the same area of Kai’s brain, along with more, smaller lumps nearby and on his spine. The medical team told the family that there was no answer for recurrent ATRT and discontinued Kai’s care.

Again facing a desperate scramble to find an expert who would treat Kai, Melissa contacted doctors across the country, but got nowhere until a pediatric oncologist in Texas listened to her story and thought of a colleague. She told Melissa, simply, “Call Dr. Margol.”

A new way of attacking a tumor

One of the few physicians with expertise in ATRT, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles oncologist Ashley Margol, MD, Director of the hospital’s Brain Tumor Center, administers a treatment protocol called MEMMAT developed specifically to target recurrences of the most destructive pediatric cancers, including atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor.

Melissa says she didn’t hold back. “We emailed her, we called her. She called us back and said, ‘Get on a flight. I’ll see him in a couple of days.’”

How fast was the response? The time elapsed between the date Dr. Margol received the email and the date the family was in her office was five days.

“We were completely overwhelmed,” Melissa says. “We had no idea this even existed, this possibility. We were thinking we were only going to have a certain amount of time with our kid. And then we were presented with a little bit of hope, which was—no, you can’t describe that.”

The acronym MEMMAT is a merger of recurrent medulloblastoma, ependymoma and ATRT. It’s what’s called an antiangiogenic therapy, which means it is designed to prevent new tumors from forming by cutting off their blood supply, as opposed to standard chemotherapy, which kills active cancer cells.

“I’ll give you an example,” Dr. Margol says. “If I have a plant and I start depriving it of water, that’s one way of killing it, right? Versus if I pulled the plant out of the dirt and chopped it into 10 pieces. We know that tumors, unless they have their own blood supply, can’t grow. Eventually they wither away and die. So it’s kind of a different way of attacking a tumor.

“Honestly,” she says, “there’s no standard of care for relapsed ATRT. There’s really no standard of care for upfront ATRT. It’s such a rare disease. There are only about 50 kids in the U.S. every year who are diagnosed with it.

‘Fifty percent doesn’t mean anything’

What separates MEMMAT from conventional chemotherapy is the delivery of medicine, which goes directly into the fluid surrounding the brain through a small catheter called an Ommaya reservoir. That’s a potential advantage over the standard intravenous injection of chemotherapy, which can run up against a protective screen called the blood-brain barrier and be kept from reaching cancer cells in the brain and spine.

The therapy knocked out the several new, smaller tumors Kai presented with at CHLA, while the recurrent large tumor was removed by neurosurgeon Mark Krieger, MD, Surgical Director of the Brain Tumor Center, who holds the Billy and Audrey L. Wilder Chair in Neurosurgery. Multiple rounds of radiation followed. Last October, with repeated MRIs showing no evidence of cancer and seeing no benefit to be gained from more chemotherapy, Dr. Margol advised ending the treatment to spare Kai any further side effects. The most recent scan in January was also clear.

“Dr. Margol and the MEMMAT protocol absolutely saved Kai,” Melissa says.

However, Dr. Margol has had frank talks with the family about the chances of surviving the disease. MEMMAT is not seen as a cure, she says. It can extend and improve life, but recurrent ATRT remains a nearly insurmountable cancer.

“I don’t go over statistics because children are not statistics,” Dr. Margol says. “Fifty percent doesn’t mean anything, right? Your kid is 100%. So I don’t have that conversation. There is never a scenario where I tell someone, ‘I’m sorry, there’s nothing I can do.’

“I do tell every family, ‘My goal is to cure your child, and I’m going to do everything I can to make that happen.’ My goal is always for the family to understand that we’re on the same team from the get-go. I don’t know how the journey’s going to end, but we’re all on this train together.”

An ellipsis that signals hope

Each clean MRI report offers some relief, but hardly enough time to exhale before the next one. As each scan draws closer Melissa gets a swell of “scanxiety,” as parents of pediatric cancer patients call their nervousness before an impending test and the wait for the outcome.

“About a week leading up to MRIs, we’re irritable, we’re scared, we’re worried, we’re all the things, but we still have to function,” Melissa says. She asks her husband to check the patient portal for the results. “I can’t open the app. He does it because I just sit and shake until we know we’re in the clear for another little while.”

That’s just one of the ways Chasen has held Melissa together. She says that Kai’s 6-year-old brother, Cruz, also provides support. “It’s a family fight,” she says. “I’m only a small part of the reason we’re still upright each day.”

Kai turns 3 in July. He gets physical and occupational therapy to address the weaknesses related to his disease and treatment, including walking and talking. A stroke he suffered after his initial brain surgery impaired the right side of his face, which makes eating a challenge.

“I don’t think of them as deficits at all,” Melissa says. “I think of Kai as thriving based on what he’s been through. He’s the sassiest 2-year-old you’ve ever met in your whole life. He’s been telling us every day that he wants to go to preschool. We’re like, ‘OK, well, let’s try to get you potty-trained and we’ll take that next step,’ because he seems to be ready.”

Dr. Margol told the family that if Kai gets to two years with no appearance of cancer, then she will be comfortable saying his prognosis has improved meaningfully. Yet seeing in her notes that he has passed the one-year mark draws a small inflection of optimism. “Oh yeah, look at that,” she says.

“I told the family, ‘It’s still a very small possibility that we can cure him, but we’re certainly going to try.’ To be honest, I didn’t think we would be in this space right now where he doesn’t have any tumor, but …” In the upturn of her voice as it trails off, in all the open-ended qualifiers, in certainly, but, and small possibility, is a slender allowance of hope.

“I don’t know that I think about whether there’s going to be a cure,” Melissa says. “I live in survival mode, truthfully. I want to be hopeful. I’m just really cautious about how optimistic I am. The reality is that ATRT is a beast and can come back at any time. So it’s scan to scan. I’ll take it all day long because I didn’t think I would get the opportunity to experience such a beautiful kid, and I’m getting that. I’m grateful for it.”

  —  Story and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

How you can help:

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

www.ReferralsHelpKids.com or call Corey at 213-880-9910


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Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Broker, DRE#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.