Tuesday, July 31, 2012

30 Cool, High-Tech Gadgets for Your Home!

Gadgets are becoming a part of our everyday life and like the mobile phone (one of the first gadgets) we are starting to be addicted, depending on them for our daily actions. As technology advances, so do these gadgets that we are fond of and we are amazed by the new concepts created by young and ambitious designers. These innovations appear from a necessity of solving the problems that old products have and besides new and improved functions, they also come with a beautiful design. 


Check out this link to see all 30 futuristic gadgets. But first, read about our favorites below, and the ones we have to question! :)


http://www.designyourway.net/blog/inspiration/30-cool-high-tech-gadgets-to-give-your-home-a-futuristic-look/




Transparant TV: This just looks awesome... if nothing else, it definitely would be a conversation piece!




The IQ Alarm Clock: Might be fun the first morning or two, but would definitely get annoying after that! 


1limit Faucet: Really cool idea, especially for the tree-huggers of the world! I'm not totally sold on the aesthetic quality though...maybe it would grow on you?



iChef + Oven: This might top the list as our favorite here at Northouse Realty Group... how fool proof is that?! 

Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director
Visit our website at www.grhomelink.com 
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500

Monday, July 30, 2012

Incredible Homes with Outrageous Outdoor Amenities!

Falling Rock Lane, Indian Wells, Calif.
$12 million
Listed with Coldwell Banker Previews International

Suspended over a pond gushing water into 19 waterfalls, this contemporary desert manse 
has living and dining rooms that extend out through retractable glass walls to sun terraces
 that look out over a canyon. The master bathroom leads to an outdoor shower and tanning 
area. The patio boasts a resort-style swimming pool with swim-up bar and fire pits.


Wishing this was your backyard?! Check out these 16 homes with AMAZING, outdoor amenities! 


http://realestate.msn.com/16-homes-with-outrageous-outdoor-amenities?ocid=vt_twmsnre#1

Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667 
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR 
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director 
www.grhomelink.com 
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500

Friday, July 27, 2012

Home Values Rise for First Time in Five Years!




Home prices hit a bottom and are finally bouncing back, according to an industry report released Tuesday. Nationwide, home values rose 0.2% year-over-year to a median $149,300 during the second quarter, the first annual increase since 2007, real estate listing site Zillow reported. Prices were up 2.1% from the first quarter.
Even though June marked the fourth consecutive month of home value increases, overall home prices are still down almost 24% since April 2007, when Zillow began to track home values.
"[I]t seems clear that the country has hit a bottom in home values," said Zillow's chief economist Stan Humphries. "The housing recovery is holding together despite lower-than-expected job growth, indicating that it has some organic strength of its own."
Last winter, Zillow projected that the housing market turnaround would not arrive until the end of the year.
Other home price indexes have also recorded gains lately, including the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index. In it latest release, it reported thathome prices in 20 major markets rose 1.3% in April, the first monthly increase in seven months.
Where home prices are rising the fastest

Zillow uses a different methodology in calculating home values than other home price indexes like Case-Shiller and the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Sales of foreclosed, bank-owned properties, for example, are not factored into Zillow's data. Zillow does include short sales, however, which are more difficult to distinguish from conventional sales.
"Our index is geared to consumers, conventional sellers deciding whether they want to put their homes on the market," said Humphries.
The indexes that include foreclosures in their market data show larger price declines. The peak-to-trough drop for the S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, for example, is about 34% compared with Zillow's 24%.
Fewer than one third of the 167 metro areas Zillow surveyed recorded annual increases in home values, but the size of the price gains in these areas more than offset the losses posted by the remaining two-thirds of the markets.
In Phoenix, the biggest gainer, home values soared 12.1% year-over-year to a median of $136,200. Meanwhile, the biggest loss sustained by any of the 30 largest metro areas was in Chicago where median home values fell 5.8% to $158,600.
Foreclosures remain one of the biggest risks to the housing market recovery, Humphries said. In the wake of the national foreclosure settlement which clarified how banks can legally pursue foreclosures, Humphries expects the pace of foreclosures to pick up.
"That will translate to more homes on the market," he said. "But we think demand will rise to absorb that."
Zillow expects the housing market to continue to slowly recover, with median home values projected to climb 1.1% -- relatively flat -- over the next 12 months.



Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director
www.grhomelink.com
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500

Thursday, July 26, 2012

JK Rowling to Build Huge Tree Houses in Edinburgh Garden


The 'Living the Highlife' treehouse design by Blue Forest (© Blue Forest UK Ltd., http://aka.ms/blueforest) 

Some kids have all the luck. J.K. Rowling’s spawn live in luxury, and, we imagine, have the best bedtime stories ever. Now their cool mom is planning to have enormous Hogwart-style tree houses built on the grounds of the family mansion in Scotland. 


Most kids are lucky to get splinter-infested boards nailed together up a tree by a cursing dad, but Rowling’s will have professionally constructed interlocking houses estimated to cost $232,000 (£150,000). The 40-foot, two-story buildings will have plenty of "Harry Potter"-esque touches, including rope bridges, turets, lanterns above the doors, balconies, spiral staircases and trap doors. Cue kids around the world begging their parents for the same. [Source]

Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667 
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director
www.grhomelink.com
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500

Monday, July 23, 2012

Tips for Home Sellers

If the thought of making pre-sale home repairs all over your entire house feels overwhelming, take a step back and consider where you should really focus your attention. When you're considering the interior of your house, here are the top repair hot spots on which to focus:


1. Electrical Panel
Just prior to sale, you are not likely to be doing any major upgrading on your electrical system, but you will need to locate your main electrical panel and give it a good cleaning. Brush out all the cobwebs, dead spiders, and dust and wipe off any rust or mildew.

2. Plumbing and Sewage
Make sure each and every sink and tub in the house is draining properly and that the drain lines are clear. Flush them all, but don’t stop there. Your buyer’s inspector won’t. He will run water in several sinks and flush several toilets at the same time. This is a great test of the house’s main drain line. So, if your house doesn’t flow with the flush, get that plumber over now!

3. Water Pressure
Another revealing plumbing trick is to run the dishwasher and washing machine along with a sink and shower. How’s the water pressure? Do you need a bigger hot water tank? Is it big enough to handle a small family? Find out now and plan on doing some re-piping if necessary.

4. Hot Water Heater
Look under the water heater to check for rust or leaks. If you find any, replace it now, and save some money and negotiating. A rusty or leaking water heater will be an immediate request for replacement to your buyers from their inspector.

5. Septic Tank
If your house is on a septic tank system, schedule it to be emptied at least two weeks prior to sale. The last thing you want to do is empty that tank during showings.

6. Leaks
Most pipe and faucet leaks are an easy and inexpensive fix, but a real turn off for buyers. Inspect each and every faucet and hose bib inside and outside the house—both above and below countertops.

7. Heating and Cooling
Test your heating and air conditioning systems. If the systems are eight years of age or older there may be a problem about to happen, or you may have to replace something before you sell. And some buyers don’t care how small a problem is; they will often ask for a credit for a whole new system. So make sure yours works. Also, this is the time to change your filters, and make sure the units and visible ducts are spanking clean.

8. Thermostats
Test your thermostats. If they are broken, replace them now!


Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director
www.grhomelink.com
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

U.S. Housing Bust Is Over!

The housing market has turned—at last.
The U.S. finally has moved beyond attention-grabbing predictions from housing "experts" that housing is bottoming. The numbers are now convincing.
Nearly seven years after the housing bubble burst, most indexes of house prices are bending up. "We finally saw some rising home prices," S&P's David Blitzer said a few weeks ago as he reported the first monthly increase in the slow-moving S&P/Case-Shiller house-price data after seven months of declines.
Nearly 10% more existing homes were sold in May than in the same month a year earlier, many purchased by investors who plan to rent them for now and sell them later, an important sign of an inflection point. In something of a surprise, the inventory of existing homes for sale has fallen close to the normal level of six months' worth despite all the foreclosed homes that lenders own. The fraction of homes that are vacant is at its lowest level since 2006.
The reduced inventory of unsold homes is key, says Mark Fleming, chief economist at CoreLogic, a housing data-analysis firm. For the past couple of years, house prices have risen in the spring and then slumped; the declining supply of houses for sale is reason to believe that won't happen again this year, he says.
Builders began work on 26% more single-family homes in May 2012 than the depressed levels of May 2011. The stock of unsold newly built homes is back to 2005 levels. In each of the past four quarters, housing construction has added to economic growth. In the first quarter, it accounted for 0.4 percentage points of the meager 1.9% growth rate.
"Even with the overall economy slowing," Wells Fargo Securities economists said, cautiously, in a note to clients, "the budding recovery in the housing market appears to be gradually gaining momentum."
Economists aren't always right, but on this at least they agree: A new Wall Street Journal survey of forecasters found 44 believe the housing market has reached its bottom; only three don't. (The full results of the Journal's July survey will be released at 2pm ET)
Housing is still far from healthy despite the Federal Reserve's efforts to resuscitate it by helping to push mortgage rates to extraordinary lows: 3.62% for a 30-year loan, according to Freddie Mac's latest survey. Single-family housing starts, though up, remain 60% below the 2002 pre-bubble pace. Americans' equity in homes is $2 trillion, or 25%, less than it was in 2002 and half what it was at the peak. More than one in every four mortgage borrowers still has a loan bigger than the value of the house, though rising home prices are reducing that fraction slowly.
Still, the upturn in housing is a milestone, a particularly welcome one amid a distressing dearth of jobs. For some time, housing has been one of the biggestcauses of economic weakness. It has now—barely—moved to the plus side. "A little tail wind is a lot better than a headwind," says economist Chip Case, the "Case" in Case-Shiller.
From here on, housing is unlikely to drag the U.S. economy down further. It will instead reflect the strength or weakness of the overall economy: The more jobs, the more confident Americans are about keeping their jobs, the more they are willing to buy houses. "Manufacturing had led growth and construction had lagged," JPMorgan Chase economists said last week."Now the roles are reversed: Manufacturing growth has slowed as private construction comes to life."
Plenty could go wrong. The biggest threat is a large shadow inventory of unsold homes, homes which owners won't put on the market because they are underwater, homes that will be foreclosed eventually and homes owned by lenders. They have been trickling onto the market, slowed in part by government efforts to delay foreclosures; a flood could reverse the recent rise in prices. Or the still-dysfunctional mortgage market could get worse. Or overly zealous regulators or a post-election change in government policy could unsettle mortgage lenders or home buyers.
But the housing bust is over!


Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director
www.grhomelink.com
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500

Monday, July 16, 2012

Interest Rates Fall to A New Low!


MSHDA just dropped their rates to 4.0% for 30 year fixed!  The borrower only needs 1% of the purchase price and MSHDA give a 2nd mortgage with NO INTEREST AND NO PAYMENTS up to $7,500 to cover closing costs and pre-paids.
If you've been thinking about buying, now is the time to do it! Call us today for help with all your real estate needs!


Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director 
www.grhomelink.com 
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500

Monday, July 9, 2012

Gorgeous, HUGE, 4BR Ranch in Jenison!

Check out this new listing from Northouse Realty Group! For more pictures and information, visit http://1881pinegrovedrive.epropertysites.com/





Call us with all of your Real Estate Needs! Northouse Realty Group (616) 206-9667
Jeff Northouse - REALTOR
Christine Lassa - Marketing Director
www.grhomelink.com
Brokered by Five Star Real Estate (616) 257-1500