Arlington County's Department of Environmental Services is hosting a series of free workshops in the Spring to help you make environmentally-friendly choices for home, office and community.
Check this out.
Download Calendar GreenIt Arlington
Arlington County's Department of Environmental Services is hosting a series of free workshops in the Spring to help you make environmentally-friendly choices for home, office and community.
Check this out.
Download Calendar GreenIt Arlington
Posted at 08:17 AM in Arlington Real Estate, Living Style, Real Estate, Urban Living | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
There was a time (when I was active) everyone I know seems to know "someone" who is in real estate. Mom, friend, niece, nephew, relative.. all sorts of relationship labels. Just because you know this person via a person close to you, doesn't mean that this agent is good for you.
So how can you tell if your agent is right for you? Washington Post Express got it down to a few things important when you're looking for someone to represent you (buying or selling).
In this day and age of Internet and social media, "agents use of online tools is more important than certifications they have," says Jon Heithaus, CMO of Metropolitan Regional Information System.
What you say?
Posted at 12:24 PM in Alexandria Real Estate, Arlington Real Estate, DC Real Estate, Housing market, Real Estate, Real Estate Investments | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: home buying, housing, investment, real estate
Posted at 12:03 PM in Arlington Real Estate, Living Style, Suburban Living | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
When you have a camera and wandering around the neighborhood, this is what you get. Pictures of streets in Clarendon.
Posted at 08:47 PM in Arlington Real Estate, Housing market, Living Style, Real Estate, Urban Living | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
“How is the market?” That’s usually the first intro question that anyone I’d met in my past career life as a Realtor, would ask me. Listening to what agents have told me, at the present time, there is a shortage of supply.
According to the new report by Delta Associates and MRIS (Metropolitan Regional Systems), the Mid-Atlantic housing market showed signs of moderate recovery. No housing boom yet. But it’s moving. Via Washington Post.
Sales volume was up 9 percent over the same time a year ago, and prices ticked up 3.3 percent. The average home spent 71 days on the market, down from 110 days during the first quarter last year -- the shortest time since 2006.
First American Logic reports that home prices in Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, including sales of foreclosed homes (also known as distressed properties), increased by 4.48 percent in February 2010 compared to the same period last year.
REPORTS FOR NORTHERN VIRGINIA and WASHINGTON DC
NVAR (Northern Virginia Association of Realtors) region – Arlington and Fairfax counties:
The total number of homes sold in March up by 4.62 percent from 1,384 to 1,448 homes. Average days on market dropped from 89 days to 52 days. Homes for sale currently under contract (for the same period) increased by 12.49% from 2,306 in 2009 to 2,594 in 2010. That brings to year-to-date sales price of $429,605, up from $385,285 or 11.5%.
Among the three types of dwellings – single family, townhouse and condo – sales of condos actually improved a lot in March, it’s up from 385 to 446 units.
Here’s why we have shortage in the market, via NVAR.
GCAAR (Greater Capital Area Association of Realtors) – Washington DC:
SINGLE FAMILY HOME
Total number of single family homes sold in March up 49.5% from 204 to 305 units, which brings the year-to-date sales of 742 units up 39.2 from last year at 533 homes. However, the average sales price have been trending down. In 2009, average sales was $551,236. March 2010, the average sales price was $487,648, a drop of 11.5%. Ditto for median sales: from $408,000 to $335,000 or 17.89%. [via GCCAR]
Homes for sale supply up 11.7% from 599 units to 669 units. In comparison to last year, single family homes supply on a year-to-date basis drop by 30.6%. This is the same situation Northern Virginia faced: shortage of supply.
CONDOMINIUM
The number of condominium sold up 19.2% from 172 to 205 condos. What’s striking is the number of condos under contract: it’s up 58.5% from 248 to 395 units. Year to date data showed an increase of under contract condos up 40.3%, from 590 to 828 units.
Sales price stay flat at $408,000- $409,000 level. Even median price shows not much of a drop around $350,000- ish. [via GCCAR]
Condos supply for DC paint a different picture than single family homes, because supply is actually trending up.
THE FORECAST
This is the forecast per Center for Regional Analysis (CRA), George Mason for up to June 2011.
TAKEAWAYS:
For buyers still on the sideline, waiting for something perfect to come. Nothing perfect will ever come. You’re the only one who can make your house perfect! Yes, YOU.
With regards to the right price, the one thing that I learned from the day of peddling mutual funds and stocks, home prices will always fluctuate. No one has control over it. So you will have to trust your gut and move forward. Take the plunge.
That’s my take.
How about you? What have you heard about the housing market lately? If you’re buying, what's your experience been?
Technorati Tags: housing market,business,current affairs,washington dc,northern virginia,arlington,fairfax,homes for sale,first time buyers
Posted at 10:54 AM in Alexandria Real Estate, Arlington Real Estate, Business, Condominium, DC Real Estate, Fairfax Real Estate, Foreclosure, Home buying & selling, housing market, Real Estate | Permalink | Comments (19) | TrackBack (0)
Images speak louder than words. Here are some pictures I took recently in DC and Arlington East Falls Church neighborhood. You can see the striking difference between urban (city) living and living in the DC suburb like Arlington. I took the pictures of the streets in Arlington's East Falls Church and Dupont Circle at the same day.
At EFC streets, you don't see that many people as on the streets of Northwest DC in downtown, Dupont Circle and George Washington University. Living in the city have its advantage: people, walkability to stores, easy access to public transportation, etc. In the suburb of DC like Arlington, unless you're really close to the center of - along orange line metro in Arlington - there's practically not much going on around your neighborhood. People seldom walk. Walk means exercise. Other than that, they drive. (I'm guilty of it, too).
What do we have here in our hood? The closest stores we have around our neighborhood in North Arlington (a mile from EFC metro), is CVS, 7/11, a Chinese restaurant, a deli and a few other mom and pop stores.. that offer basic services.
That's the suburb for you.
A side note: the pictures you see below are mixed with some old pictures I've taken from around Rosslyn neighborhood in Arlington. I have taken like thousands of neighborhoods pictures in Northern Virginia and Washington DC, but just haven't had the chance to upload them. I'll add more sets when I have time.
This post has been entered into tcktcktck's (a coalition of 300 NGO's working towards real progress in climate change) contest: send a blogger to cover Rio+20 Earth Summit to join the tcktcktck's team. For me, covering the Summit and become part of the movement - is a dream! Please head off to tcktcktck's Facebook page and "like" this post there. Thank you - Dewita
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I attended a townhall meeting last Saturday in the county where I live, Arlington county, Virginia. For those not familiar where it is, Arlington it's a throw stone from Washington DC. We're just across the Potomac river.
Jay Fisette, Chairman of Arlington County Board hosted the first ever townhall meeting for community energy plan. "No communities that I know of - virtually none - have created a community energy plan, and this is now coming into the forefront," says Jay.
Arlington county definitely has a competitive advantage. Unlike other counties in the Commonwealth of Virginia, the county started early in the game (30 years ago) with its smart growth that links transportation with land use planning.
To kick off the community energy plan, the county has created a task force made up of its stakeholders, from utilities, property owners, citizens, to conservationistas. The purpose of this task force, Jay said is, "to draft and recommend to the county board a community energy plan that will reshape where we get our energy from, whether it's from cogeneration, renewable energy, energy efficiency, that will ultimately reduce our energy use and make ourselves more sustainable and help the environment."
The community energy plan is a holistic approach that can paved the way for the county's transformation to move away from a fossil-fuel economy towards a clean energy economy. The idea is to look into how energy is being used - from neighborhood to neighborhood - then comparing scenarios between business as usual with efficiency.
Energy use in the county is divided into heating, cooling, lighting and other type. The types of buildings stock for the county includes hotels, offices, retails, homes (condominium, single family, townhouse) and other. For that, the county has identified its biggest energy sucker: the big buildings. That's why, they have property owners, landlords sit on the task force. For the county to move on with their plan, they need everybody's buy-in (which is a smart strategy).
image: citizens discussing the plan at the meeting.
The primary driver for this community energy plan is to make Arlington competitive.
This image below shows the baseline of county's energy use. You'll see here how countywide, big buildings consumed 45% of its energy use vs. residential 23% and transportation 28%. So if energy use can be efficient, just by reducing the use from this sector alone, the move could save businesses' money that in return would be good for bottom line.
Furthermore, more than half (56%) of its energy comes from electricity (coal-fired plants). Knock this off (or reduce it), will make the air cleaner.
After the preliminary presentation, we then break up into groups. Listening to inputs from the residents, one of the things mentioned was the language in condominium document that couldn't make assessment when they tried to something for newer more efficient, that the language of the doc says ".. improvement has to be in-kind." It has something to do with Virginia Condominium Act. It is a universal language, at this moment. Only Virginia assembly can change this.
What do I say, this is just the beginning. We obviously have some work to do. This will be a work-in-progress. However, I applaud the county board, for leading the change.
Making the case
While at the meeting, I caught up with Jay about Arlington's energy plan. Listen to what he has to say about the plan..
Posted at 01:36 PM in Arlington Real Estate, Business, Commercial Real Estate, Green Building, Green Living, Real Estate, Strategy, Sustainability, Urban Living | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: arlington county virginia, clean energy, climate change, commercial real estate, energy, environment, green, housing, real estate, renewable, residential, sustainability, sustainable
This show is part of PBS' Blueprint America series about U.S. infrastructure, where Kojo Nnamdi hosts a panel of transportation experts to talk about the metro Washington DC transportation blueprint and where's taking us. The first 5 minutes or so is the most important part of the whole discussions. It lays out all kinds of transportation projects each jurisdiction - District of Columbia, Maryland, Baltimore, and Virginia - are working on. (yours truly was among the audience.)
“Its not about getting people from point A to point B, but more about building better communities,” said Robert Thomson aka “Dr. Gridlock” of The Washington Post, one of three guests panelists along with Ron Kirby, Director of Transportation for the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments; and Alice M. Rivlin, Senior Fellow and Director of the Greater Washington Research at the Brookings Institute. [via Blueprint America]
Building better communities, that's the challenges we have...Are We There Yet? D.C.'s Transportation Blueprint from WHUT-TV on Vimeo.
Are We There Yet, D.C.'s Transportation Blueprint (2) from WHUT-TV on Vimeo.
Posted at 08:16 AM in Alexandria Real Estate, Arlington Real Estate, DC Real Estate, Fairfax Real Estate, Housing market, housing market, Living Style, Loudoun County Real Estate, Maryland Real Estate, Prince William Real Estate, Real Estate, Smart Growth, Suburban Living, Transportation, Urban Living | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: business, housing, life style, maryland, transportation, urban living, virginia, washington dc, WHUT
Image via Wikipedia
Arlington is leading the way to progressive change in community energy plan. This is probably the first community energy plan in Virginia aimed to get everyone from the community to participate in setting the direction for the future of the county's energy use.
The community energy plan is part of the initiative from Energy Planning and Management.
Arlington County is embarking on a community energy planning process to address the burdens and opportunities of energy supply, delivery, and use in our community. Energy planning and management is needed to minimize the economic costs and environmental harm from energy use. Smart energy planning can produce opportunities for economic growth and sustainability.
The process of developing the Community Energy Plan is divided into two elements:
Got voice?
Come to their energy townhall meeting, which is going to be held on Saturday, April 17, 2010 from 2-5pm at Washington Lee High School Commons Room, 1301 N. Stafford Road, Arlington, VA 22201. The info for the invite to the townhall meeting is here.
Posted at 08:29 AM in Arlington Real Estate, Business, Commercial Real Estate, Energy conservation, Green Building, Green Living, Real Estate, Sustainability, Urban Living | Permalink | Comments (7) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: arlington county, business, energy efficiency, energy plan, sustainability, urban living, virginia
Image by Getty Images via Daylife
Looking to fix up your house? Here are the 10 tax breaks for going green, via Forbes.
For further reading you can check out few sites:
Posted at 10:39 AM in Alexandria Real Estate, Arlington Real Estate, Condominium, DC Real Estate, Energy conservation, Fairfax Real Estate, Home buying & selling, Housing market, housing market, Loudoun County Real Estate, Maryland Real Estate, Prince William Real Estate, Remodeling, Transportation, Urban Living | Permalink | Comments (18) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: energy efficient, going green, housing, remodeling, renewable energy, residential real estate, tax credits

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