Sound and transparent advice has earned Sandi Park the loyal respect from her clients, social media followers and subscribers to her acclaimed newsletter, The Brick. She stays on top of all important aspects of the Hudson Valley real estate market. This solid pulse enables Sandi to expertly counsel clients throughout the purchase and sale process, empowering her clients with informed and confident decisions. Want to stay up to date on the latest in Hudson Valley real estate? Check out Sandi's newsletter, The Brick: linktr.ee/hudsonvalleynest Sandra "Sandi" Park Licensed Real Estate Broker Global Luxury Specialist 914-522-6282 spark@hudsonvalleynest.com
Actually, realtors do need an education. Perhaps you are referring to other parts of the world. For myself, I am college educated and had a career in executive marketing, project management and negotiations prior to real estate. How about you? I'm amused by your commentary, though, thanks for the laugh!
Feral was an interesting way to put it. LOL. I was shaking in there I was so excited. Some of these houses with the cheap "fix and flip" done to historics is heartbreaking. I'll take a 1930's bath any day!!!
Truth! I don't recall ever being so excited about a phone. In fact, I remember finding the rotaries annoying with how they could dig into the finger when dialing. All went away in an instant and I was nothing but smiles ❤
In New York State averse possession can kick in at the 15 year mark. I spoke with an attorney about this and he said it's best to have a boundary line agreement drafted at the outset to help avoid starting out as neighborly to potentially lose a piece of land after a period of time goes by. What state are you in that it's 7 years?
That’s an oven for baking. You would start a fire in it to heat it. Then either push everything to side or remove it. You would then use it for everything you need to bake. Bread. Beans. Pies. Cookies. Etc.
@@SandiPark_HudsonValleyNest so somebody redid the fireplace updated with glazed brick on the inside add new fire door complete with spiffy new Phillips screws and fire retardant insulation
@SandiPark_HudsonValleyNest Still nice and also has the benefit of being useful because now it's safe to use. My house is 1888. I do not use the fireplace, too old and I don't want to spend the $4,000 to $ 7,000 to realign it! Dependent on whether you do a stainless Steel liner or new clay liner. I'm leaning towards doing a stainless steel liner with a gas insert or just selling everything and moving to South Carolina no fires necessary.
I just left another historic. The construction was so solid. There is solid construction these days too, but the density of wood and craftsmanship of historic (not to mention the charm) makes me salivate every time. Just love it
It’s exactly what you said! GREAT WORK AND SOLID CRAFTSMANSHIP! As far as the materials…they were all authentic and original materials. No plasterboard or cheap remade wood materials mashed together. 🤷🏻♂️👍🏼
for anyone who is wondering how this will be paid for reading the fine print this goes into effect if she gets in office. but how they are paying for this is if you own a house property land etc if you go to sell that property 40 something almost 50% of what what you would make when you sell whatever you have to sell GOES BACK TO THE GOVT. so example make $100000 on a house you split that with the govt and they get $50000 of your money
Hi! I'm not clear on what you mean by that..? The concept of TND is not new, but rather has been formally named within the new urbanist movement in architectural design. I am an advocate of TND's as they are a natural for much sought multi generational living and speak to an overall sense of community I believe largely lost in suburban sprawl. What are your thoughts on it? I can't tell by your comment whether it was intended as a positive or negative for this development type. ?
It was priced solid to market all considered, which was confirmed by buyers that both put in offer and did not. It's a very special property, but if overpriced and not properly marketed it would sat on the market, which was the case for seven years with two other realtors. It was properly priced and marketed this round. We secured multiple offers within 60 days and an overall healthy showing schedule. My clients did well.
This is a stunner, no doubt. It's not large just to be large if that makes any sense. The spaces are all so beautifully done along with the property. Sorry for the delayed response. I was out of the country for a bit.
Same thing my house was used for before we bought it.🤣😂 The feds thankfully caught on and the house was auctioned, flipped, and sold as our first family home. We heard the story from the neighbors.
Not only be comfortable with the Realtor but the Realtor needs to be comfortable with the "potential" client. We are in this mess because of Realtors not doing the right thing as far as I'm concerned. I agree with the DOJ comment.
Hi! I totally agree that the realtor should be comfortable with the client. It is absolutely a two way street. I should have clarified that. Thank you for mentioning. There have been incoming sellers and buyers I have chosen not to work with as we didn't align for one reason or another. The reality is realtors can work for many months without being paid while incurring expenses to boot (gas, photography, videography, marketing, advertising, design services, postage, this is just for starters) I want to work with clients I align with and trust, as well. There have been areas in our industry that could be improved. I find certain oversights unfortunate and certain new policies perplexing. Not sure how this mess could be blamed on all realtors, but realtors as a whole being the fall guy or being thrown under the bus are certainly nothing new. The government being involved in who and how much is paid to a self employed person should be perplexing well past realtors, imho. I also frankly think the bar of entry to be a realtor is too low . I painfully have worked with some of the examples of people that create a bad rap for our industry. Real estate can be highly emotional. Bad experiences can easily and exponentially magnify
That could have been interesting, but nope! It was a carpenters workshop. He taught cabinet making continuing education classes. The responses on this have run the full gamut and quite colorful!
There were all kinds of clues for it to be a workshop that I didn't notice. Many of us didn't. The woodshed peeps out there picked it up out of the gate, but the top guesses were death and drugs. The ramp was for his wheel chair bound wife.
I have to say, it really is interesting how colorful the commentary got with this post. When the imagination gets going. 😂 I thought it was a for embalming and was quickly corrected about various elements that did and did not exist that knocked it off the list. I've learned more about the proper lighting to grow weed Thani thought imaginable too (which this appears not) Drugs and death were the two top guesses by a landslide with a slew of other interesting guesses to boot. In the end, it was indeed a basement. A cabinet makers workshop that taught CE classes. His wife needed a wheelchair. Hence the ramp. The carpenters and others that use workshops caught the "clues." 😉