Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Belmont Shore Homes For Sale, Long Beach Homes

Belmont Shore Homes For Sale, Long Beach Homes



Long Beach Homes For Sale





Belmont Shore is one of the hidden gems in Long Beach, California. This beachside community has so much to offer everyone, great shopping and restaurants abound on 2nd Street. The Belmont Shore community truly offers homeowners a piece of heaven to live where you can walk to everything. If you are thinking of buying or selling your home please call me, I can help you.



Ricardo the Realtor - 562.533.4003



Here are some of the current listings of Homes For Sale in Belmont Shore. If you would like more details or would like for me to arrange a private tour, please feel free to call me.


# Status Price Beds Baths Type SqFt Garage Address


1 Active $599,900 2 1 SFR 975 1 111 Prospect Ave LONG CA 90803

2 Active $615,000 2 1 SFR 920 1 204 La Verne Ave LONG CA 90803

3 Active $749,000 3 2 SFR 1,389 3 160 La Verne Ave LONG CA 90803

4 Active $829,000 3 4 SFR 1,686 1 70 Nieto Ave LONG CA 90803

5 Active $899,000 4 3 SFR 2,622 1 104 Park Ave LONG CA 90803

6 Active $979,000 3 3 SFR 2,244 2 33 Pomona Ave LONG CA 90803

7 Active $989,000 3 3 SFR 2,300 1 144 Covina Ave LONG CA 90803



# Status Price Beds Baths Type SqFt Garage Address

8 Active $1,049,000 3 3 SFR 2,153 3 162 Prospect Ave LONG CA 90803

9 Active $1,075,000 3 3 SFR 2,884 2 152 La Verne Ave LONG CA 90803

10 Active $1,175,000 4 4 SFR 2,888 2 5375 E Vista St LONG CA 90803

11 Active $1,195,000 4 3 SFR 2,380 1 45 Covina Ave LONG CA 90803

12 Active $2,495,000 5 5 SFR 4,038 3 325 Bay Shore Ave LONG CA 90803




Belmont Shore Realtor, your Realtor for Long Beach Homes & surrounding coastal and sought out neighborhoods. Century 21- Long Beach Homes, Fine Homes & Estates



Are you looking for coastal real estate, waterfront properties, beach life style or a golf course life style in LA or OC areas?



Your Long Beach Realtor & surrounding cities. Long Beach communities include: Alamitos Beach, Alamitos Heights, Belmont Shore, Belmont Heights, Belmont Park, Bixby Knolls, Bluff Park, College Park Estates, Downtown Long Beach, Naples Island Realtor, Park Estates, The Peninsula, Virginia Country Club, Los Cerritos, California Heights.






Surrounding cities include: Artesia, Bellflower, Cerritos, Compton, Cypress, Huntington Beach, Lakewood, Los Alamitos, Rossmoor, San Pedro, Seal Beach, Signal Hill, Sunset Beach, Westminster.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Chino Hills Home For Sale 3 Bedroom 2 Bath, Chino Hills CA (Approved Short Sale)

Chino Hills Home For Sale 3 Bedroom 2 Bath for $232,200.00

Chino Hills Home For Sale


APPROVED SHORT SALE!!! Bank has approved this 3 Bedroom 2 Bath home with indoor laundry room. Beautiful Chino Hills Home next to golf course.


We are ready for Escrow! Situated on a small quiet street you will find this home is perfect for a family or investor. Great front room with fireplace.

Front Room with Fireplace


You have a dedicated indoor laundry room. Fans in most rooms. Master bedroom is large with patio doors to backyard and has separate vanity with mirror.Home needs minimal TLC and offers a great private backyard with mature fruit/avocado trees. Perfect for a hammock. Bank Approved Short Sale.

Chino Hills Home, Bright Kitchen


Chino Hills Home For Sale
Built in 1993
One Level Floor
Area Sq Ft 1,220 per Assessor
Area LotSize 4,200 per Assessor
Dim 30x140 per Assessor
Garage, # cars 2



"Call me today!"


Ricardo the Realtor
Century 21 Beachside
562-533-4003
RicardoTheRealtor.com
RicardoTheRealtor@Century21.com

Monday, January 3, 2011

2011 Home Trends For Buyers - Long Beach Homes For Sale

2011 Trends for HomeBuyers
Long Beach Homes For Sale

Homes For Sale, Long Beach
1. Smaller homes that 'live' the same


"One big trend is the smaller homes," says David Barista, editor-in-chief of Professional Builder and Custom Builder magazines. In fact, the median size of new U.S. homes fell from 2,277 square feet in 2007 to 2,135 square feet in 2009, according to the National Association of Home Builders.



"There's a couple drivers here," Barista says. "I don't think buyers are looking for that opulence of several years ago; they're looking for something more modest. (But) they still want the amenities and the spaces" in these smaller homes.



So he's not seeing the number of rooms in a home being cut; instead, the size of the rooms — and the overall home size — is shrinking 10% to 15%. That, of course, also brings down the price, which is key in a market in which new houses are competing against foreclosures.




Despite that shrinkage, Barista says homeowners still want nice touches such as quality faucets, higher-end appliances and granite countertops in that smaller kitchen.


2. The old front porch, revisited...


Front and side porches are making a comeback, says Kermit Baker, chief economist for the American Institute of Architects, which performs a quarterly Home Design Trends Survey. One reason is simple: Front porches help create a sense of community, something that more traditional suburbs lack.
 
But something else is driving the interest in front porches, Baker says. Thanks to the recession and the soft housing market, homebuilders have sharply curtailed their construction of big, self-standing communities of hundreds or even thousands of homes. Instead, they're doing more "in-fill," adding dollops of homes here and there among existing homes. Porches can help integrate these homes with the existing community, Baker says.




3. A ‘greener’ home...

Not surprisingly, energy efficiency is one of the year's hottest trends.



Efficiency takes many forms, from builders adding insulation in the walls, to better windows with glazing and higher "R-value" — or insulation ability — to sealed ductwork that doesn't leak air, to Energy Star-rated appliances throughout the home. Some builders are even installing low-energy LED lights for accent lighting, Barista says.



"There is a premium that (builders are) paying for these products," Barista says, "but they're doing their best not to pass along all the cost to the consumers."Ideal Homes is one of many builders now offering a guarantee on ongoing energy savings for homeowners for their new home. The builder "does the math" on the savings for buyers, estimating their savings as part of the sale process.




"Multiple large national builders, including Beazer Homes and Meritage Homes, are now offering energy-efficient homes, some as standard (no premium cost to the buyer) and many rated or certified through third-party programs," Barista says, such as Energy Star or the National Green Building Program.

The trend is less about consumer demand and more about builders needing to stay competitive, not only with other homebuilders but also with existing homes and foreclosures.




"They see 'green' as adding value to their products," Barista says.

 
4. No 'upstairs, downstairs' drama
 


Single-story homes remain popular, according to the AIA. Why? It's simple: As the baby boomers age, such homes are easier for older folks to navigate. They're also easier for aged friends or parents to visit, too.



5. The downscaled kitchen and bath.


Our desire for big kitchens and bathrooms ballooned during the boom years, and homebuilders were happy to oblige. That's changing.



"Functionality is now preferred to more and larger kitchens and bathrooms within U.S. homes," Baker wrote earlier this year. "But since kitchens remain the nerve center of the home, doing more with less space is a key consideration."



The upshot: Practicality and multiple use rule. Making a kitchen a family space is a priority. Kitchens will have areas devoted to charging laptops, mobile phones and PDAs, Baker says.




In the bathroom, some of the bloom is off the rose. Adding linen closets and storage is in. Adding a doorless shower? Not so much.



6. A home that serves you well.

"Buyers are looking for value and how features contribute to the efficiency of their lifestyle," says Stephen Melman, director of economic services for the National Association of Home Builders.



That's why "walk-in closets in master bedrooms and well-designed laundry rooms are likely candidates to repeat as most likely features for 2011," says Melman, whose association is performing a survey of the year's most requested items in homes. Those requests may not be dramatic, but they underscore how homeowners want their home to work easily for them.



And there you have next year's hot house. Get yourself a big master closet and a big front porch and start enjoying yourself in 2011.






Long Beach Homes For Sale... Search for homes here  Live In Long Beach
Century 21 Beachside, Long Beach