New Homes: River of Tears – Three Mistakes to Avoid Before Buying a Condo by the Water

New Construction Houses and Condos For Sale in Los Angeles

Bright, shiny, new, clean, modern and up-to-date  —  these are the happy things that lure us to new construction homes. Because developers create a glut when they build dozens at a time, they can even make for a better deal than a resale home sometimes. But what dangers do a shiny new object distract us from?

There are three areas of thought that can help prevent disasters before a prospective new home buyer considers a walk into a new homes sales office:

#1 Leaving the checkbook at home will not protect.  —  Just browsing? Better plan ahead; and here’s why:  As soon as someone steps into the sales office of a new home development, they are asked to sign in.  That signing in seems innocent and safe enough, but it is often the first and biggest mistake in the process.

Most who stroll in to see new homes instinctively know that they will probably not purchase a home there, but they are rightfully curious. The first problem is that the buyer has unknowingly signed away their right to get free help from a licensed real estate professional. Unless they are accompanied by an agent or broker on the very first visit, the buyer has actually agreed to give away their free protections given to them by the laws of the great state of California.  The innocent visitor has waived rights to free representation by a local real estate professional.  Should they fall in love with the new condo or house, the buyer now has but two choices: buy the home directly from the developer’s sales team without the assistance of a knowledgeable professional — or do not buy a new home at that new development.  The visitor has inadvertently hired the fox to guard the hen house. The first step of the buying process has begun, and possibly on the wrong foot.

#2 Today’s home buyers in Los Angeles have high standards, which might not be met.  Home shoppers want a clean, quiet home with open space, high ceilings, lots of big windows and light, a pretty view of some kind, architectural character, neighborhood safety, convenient parking and walkable to coffee, shops, entertainment and public transportation.   Some of the shiny homes in today’s new construction market suffer instead from excessive freeway noise or train noise, gnat swarms, boxy architecture, small windows, freeway view or no view, inconvenient tandem parking spaces, dangerous raceway bike path and prowling coyotes. Some new homes for sale do not yet have final approval from the City of Los Angeles, and in-house lenders sometimes experience big delays, so the sales could potentially be delayed many months.

Some new park-side houses under construction near the river have a land lease so that the owner does not really own all of the property.  This limits the long-term value of the property because the land lease impact snowballs to a greater and greater negative factor over time.

#3 The Los Angeles River will flood – The area around the river is a flood plain.  The city has prepared for a major flood to happen about every 100 years. It could happen in a thousand years, or it could happen next winter. While the new homes may not technically be inside the official flood zone, the concrete LA River has nearly overflowed its banks before, and, sooner or later, it will flood neighboring homes and businesses, especially underground parking, ground level, first floor and possibly even flood 2nd-floor units.

Homebuyer Protection Programs

When the buyer does find the right home, they must face competition from the seller and from other buyers. In today’s real estate market, there are a relatively large number of buyers, and few sellers. Most buyers are unpleasantly surprised that they are usually outbid by other buyers or sometimes virtually ignored by the seller. To have a good chance of success in the current home buying environment, buyers can take advantage of strategies that help them to beat out other buyers to the best deals by getting priority access to all of the properties. This includes getting access to the largest number of pocket listings, off-market, unlisted and unadvertised bargains. Buyers are more satisfied with their home purchase when they get access to the pros and cons, including the negative information on properties such as lawsuits and litigation, along with undesirable construction and defects that sellers sometimes try to ignore or even hide.  Buyers want to understand the neighborhood and know what is going on and coming up in the neighborhood.  Like a fly-by-night used car lot, new home sales offices typically pack up and leave town after they reach their sales goals.

Rather than relying on a sales office agent, or a friend/relative who happens to be an out-of-area agent from another neighborhood, smart home buyers take advantage of specialized neighborhood knowledge combined with the latest real estate technology such as a neighborhood heat map. Buyers get the best home purchase terms, incentives, loan rates and fees when they have access to compare several local lenders who know the building.  Buyers avoid expensive mistakes when they get help scheduling a local inspection company who specializes in that type of building in that area.

The most serious and astute of home buyers consider all of the costs and possibilities to save as much money as possible on their home purchase.  A local neighborhood specialist often knows what the bottom line is for the seller, allowing the home buyer to place the lowest offer rather than offering tens of thousands of dollars too much on a desirable new home.  A  savings guarantee can ensure that the new home buyer can negotiate down $10,000 from the asking price or the agent pays $1,000 toward the buyer’s closing costs – visit www.Save10Grand.com.  A Free Home Warranty could cost the buyer $575.00, but some agents will offer to pay for this if the seller won’t pay for it.  Usually, nothing is guaranteed in real estate.  It is all too common for buyers to buy a new home, then find out they don’t love it as much as they thought.  There is a solution: The Love Your Home Guarantee. Get the details at www.LoveYourHomeGuarantee.com

 

The take-away.  Always bring a local neighborhood specialist real estate professional before browsing any new construction condominiums or houses.  It’s free, and the right Home Buyer Protection Program can prevent numerous problems while giving many surprising benefits at no cost to the buyer.

Get as much free information as possible by getting on the new homes interest list.  Fill out the online form:

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Copyright © 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.

No More Historic Lofts: Why Developers Won’t Convert Any More For Sale in Downtown LA

The loft conversion boom reads like an obituary:  #LA #Historic

Downtown Los Angeles — Loft boom (2003 to 2013), died three years ago at the age of 10. The large number of conversions was part of the transformation and renaissance of Downtown Los Angeles from a place of blight to a prosperous, rapidly growing area of urban renewal, attracting the middle class and wealthy to return to the Downtown area. The loft conversion boom died at the end of 2013 after the birth of its last child, Barker Block Warehouse One

From 2003 to 2013, many old LA buildings were converted to live/work lofts under the City of Los Angeles Adaptive Re-use Ordinance.  Since then, one developer attempted to go condo with an already converted loft rental historic building called The Title Guarantee Building by Pershing Square. The loft condominium sale was abruptly called off just hours before Downtown agents were schedule to meet for its launch briefing. The Downtown specialist agents and brokers were bummed because selling conversions accounts for up to half of their incomes.  While the developer would not provide a reason for the sale cancellation, the rationale is clear… like other loft conversions before it, the developer planned to sell the units as condos, but later crunched the numbers and realized that the long-term big money is in renting out the units, not selling them.  Title Guarantee was not alone in being built for sale but then never selling; Chapman Flats, The Brockman and others were designed to be condos, and may still go condo when the time is right.

As Downtown rents skyrocket, increasing on average more than $400 per month in less than 3 years, landlords and rental building owners have profited handsomely.  With now more than 500,000 jobs, Downtown LA is a boomtown of employment and rentals. Of course, most DTLA condo owners are doing well, sitting pretty on loads of equity, and able to lease out their units at higher-than-expected rent amounts.  Many new apartments are being built recently, as well as a few new high-rise condo buildings such as Metropolis and Ten50. As renters continue to flood into Downtown, the rental boom is expected to continue for many years, while those who prefer to own a historic loft are left with a very dwindling inventory and pricey choices. Many Downtown home buyers now end up buying homes outside of Downtown, such as the new homes on the LA River.

The death of the conversion boom is not necessarily all bad.  The lack of new conversions creates scarcity and higher prices, thus leads to more value and equity for those who own a historic Downtown loft.

Mills Act historic lofts can offer potentially very big property tax savings. Which historic loft buildings are most likely to go condo next? Get on the New Lofts Interest List.  Fill out my online form:

 

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Corey Chambers, REALTOR®
(213) 880-9910
coreychambers@yahoo.com
http://www.laloftblog.com/

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Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE#01889449  Not associated with the homeowner’s association, seller 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.

Based on information from the Association of REALTORS®/Multiple Listing as of [date the AOR/MLS data was obtained] and /or other sources. Display of MLS data is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed accurate by the MLS. The Broker/Agent providing the information contained herein may or may not have been the Listing and/or Selling Agent.

*seller and Corey must agree on price and time of possession – details and conditions visit coreychambers.com