Thursday, December 30, 2010

NEW MAJOR ARTS HUB COMING TO DELRAY BEACH

Long known as a walkable trendy downtown area with emphasis on the creative works of a large variety of artists, now planning for a February 2011 opening, the 5500 sq ft Arts Garage is being built on the grounds of the Old School Square 531-space parking garage  at 180 NE 1st Street.  An artists community already long exists in Delray Beach, e.g. musicians who perform along Pineapple Grove Way, marketing and public relations computer savvy students who help the artists, actors who are performing in local productions and painters who work on their canvases.
 In 2006, the Creative City Collaborative resulted from a $50,000 study detailing the importance of the arts as an economic engine and agent of revitalization, and is just awakening from dormancy.  It is a nonprofit organization whose executive director and staff and the finishing of the interior space are funded by the Community Redevelopment Agency.   Live and musical performances, foreign and documentary films, classes and workshops are being planned.  There will be musical theatre classes for children. A schedule of events and classes will be announced soon.
 The Collaborative was created by the City Commission to foster the arts, and will occupy this city-owned building.  Bays will be created for workshops, exhibit space and a performing arts stage.  It is being planned as an “open place with open doors.” This will be a pilot project for a warehouse owned by CRA on NE 3rd Street which the Collaborative plans to turn into an arts incubator. 
 Artists who would like to participate are encouraged to contact the Collaborative.  Email garage@delraybeacharts.org for further information.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

THE LITTLE RED SCHOOLHOUSE in PALM BEACH





Pioneer Day at the Little Red Schoolhouse in Palm Beach is tentatively scheduled for Tuesday, January 15, 2011 from 1-3 pm.  Check with the Preservation Foundation at  561-832-0731. It is now home to a program of Palm Beach’s living history taking children back in time for a mini-day in a one-room school of the 1890’s, home to The Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach.





The Little Red Schoolhouse is in Phipps Ocean Park in Palm Beach, 2185 South Ocean Drive in Palm Beach.  Refurbished in 1960 by the Gardeners Society of Palm Beach and the Town of Palm Beach, it remained unused until 1990 when it became part of the pioneer education program.  Education in America’s one-room schoolhouses stressed discipline, moral values and “the 3 R’s.”  Visiting students today participate in a spelling bee, trace Spencerian script and recite from Tom Sawyer, Little Women, The Ancient Mariner and McGuffey’s Readers.  Period artifacts are also part of the pioneer educational experience.







Starting with seven students in 1886, there were 35 students by the 1880’s.  The schoolhouse was located about a mile north of the Royal Poinciana Bridge on Lake Trail in Palm Beach.  Children arrived by boat, bicycle or on foot from Lake Worth families and were all taught together in one room.  The school ceased operation in 1901 and became a tool shed on the John S. Phipps property, falling into decline and deterioration in future years.  




Preserving past educational history and its artifacts is so important to the school children of today.  There are interesting positive lessons to learn from the past.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

DECEMBER 26 & 27, 2010 HEAD TO 4TH ANNUAL DELRAY BEACH HOLIDAY ART & CRAFT FAIR


 Delray Beach will hold the next Art & Craft Fair in Pineapple Grove, north on NE 2nd off Atlantic Avenue, from 10 am to 5 pm.   More than 100 booths will be featured.   Items to browse and purchase will include some of the finest arts and crafts in the US, e.g. life sized sculptures, paintings, handmade jewelry, pottery and some very unique treasures.  Don’t miss the adjacent crafters market place with handmade body products, beautiful candles, wood plant holders and an expansive green market.
 Show is now closed in jewelry category and only wait list applications will be accepted for this category.
 Exhibitor parking is at City Hall on NW 1st Avenue.  Both size is 10’x10’ but a double space may be available too.  For show fees email info@artfestival.com.  Setups begin at 5 am Saturday morning.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Monday, December 06, 2010

ADDITIONS COMING TO BOCA RATON REGIONAL HOSPITAL


BRRH has received a $10M donation from business woman Christine E. Lynn and is developing the Christine E. Lynn Womens Health & Wellness Institute with this donation.  Another donation will enable renovation and updating of the orthopedic rooms beginning in early 2011.

Some revenue slid IN 1Q 2010 because the hospital started a discount program for uninsured patients who now get 50% off gross charges at the hospital.  With uninsured patients paying smaller bills, there was less bad debt on the hospital’s books.  The loss was less than the same quarter last year which was $4.1M.

Typically, 3Q is the slowest part of the year for admissions as more patients are seen when the snowbirds are in the area in the winter months.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

LATEST HOUSING MARKET NEWS


·        Palm Beach - There were 517 sales of houses and condos for $1MM+ in the first 9 months of 2010, up 13% from the same period in 2009 – buyers are driving hard bargains and sellers are selling!

·        October statewide year-to-date existing home sales in Florida were u p 7% and condo sales up 33%

·        NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said what is slowing down the housing market recovery includes:
o   Recent foreclosure moratorium
o   Tight credit
o   Appraisals coming below a negotiated price
·        Yun also said the good news is:
o   Low mortgage interest rates
o   Favorable affordability conditions
o   Pentup demand by buyers may soon be unleashed
·        Economists forecast 1 million new jobs in Florida over the next 7 years

·        Foreclosure Shadow inventory (not yet on the market) poses a threat to market values going up

·        Proposed limits on mortgage interest tax deductions are slowing sales

·        Should some of the savings from earmarked money being canceled be put in the form of a new tax credit to help home buyers?

Saturday, November 20, 2010

REMOVE MORTGAGE INTEREST DEDUCTION?

NAR Chief Economist and GURU
Lawrence Yun, said,
According to the
WALL STREET JOURNAL,
that removing the mortgage
interest deduction completely
could cause home prices to
fall by about 15%,
should it be wiped away
entirely.

“”That is,” he said, “an ugly 
scenario, particularly given 
housing’s fragile state.”

While the chances of the 
deduction going away 
are slim, he painted
a grim picture of
what could happen.

“Housing is critical 
to the economy,”
he said in an interview.
“In my view, 
[losing the deduction]
that will surely put us in a
broader economic 
recession.”

Saturday, November 13, 2010

THE BAD NEWS... MAYBE THE GOOD NEWS WILL SOON COME OUR WAY



ZILLOW REPORTS ALMOST HALF OF ALL 
SEPTEMBER SALES IN SOUTH FLORIDA 
SOLD FOR A LOSS.
 The tri-county area has a 42% rate of underwater mortgages for single family homes.  Home values have fallen since the 2006 peak by 53% with price levels what they were in July 2002.  In October foreclosures increased with one in every 155 Florida housing units receiving a foreclosure filing, 2nd   behind California and 17% of all US foreclosures.

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

BOCA RATON CITY COMMISSION VOTES AGAINST ANNEXING 10 COMMUNITIE


When the City Council members realized the city would get less money than expected by annexing St. Andrews Country Club, Newport Bay, Fieldbrook. Boniello Acres, the old Royal Polo fields, La Lac, Boca Grove Plantation, Mediterrania, the Boca Golf & Tennis Club and Costco, they voted not to proceed at this time. 
An updated analysis showed, due to the decline in the taxable value of those properties, the city would now receive $6.3MM under the current tax rate, and it would cost the city $3.6MM to provide police and fire services, modify and operate traffic signals, put up new signs and install landscaping in the medians.  4,300 residents would have been added, each getting a slight tax cut, $211 for single family homes and $275 for multifamily homes.
The newly elected Governor Rick Scott campaigned on reducing property taxes, so that amount of income could decrease from the currently anticipated $2.7MM the city is projected to collect. The county currently provides water and sewer service for these areas but it was not clear whether the city would then have to be the provider.
One council member urged not completely ruling out annexation, pointing out that in 2003 and 2004 city annexations included Town Center Mall and surrounding neighborhoods including the Via Verde, Waterside at Boca Trail and Marina del Mar neighborhoods, which property tax income helped the city through the recession, so no doubt this matter will come up again.

Monday, November 08, 2010

IF THE ART MARKET EMERGES FROM A SLUMP THANKS TO INTERNATIONAL BUYERS… CAN THE HOUSING MARKET BE NEXT?

Bullish bids for important works of Impressionist and Modern art came in this past week from Russia, China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Quatar, Abu Dhabi and Singapore as well as other corners of the world.  The money comes from fortunes made in oil, gas, gold and other commodities.  Sotheby’s sold $227MM worth of impressionist and modern art last week.  Between $800MM and $1BB of art has sold or is planned for sale last week and this week by Sotheby’s and Christie’s, both prominent auction houses.   

The last major auction was in May 2008 before the financial crisis stemmed the tide, when the art market was down 30% according to Mei Moses All Art index which tracks publicly sold art.  2009 was described as “rocky” in the art market.  In the first half of 2010 returns were up 13%.
Recent “big time” art sales that set records included:

MATISSE: Monumental bigger-than-lifesize bronze sculpture of a woman’s back set a new record at Christies for this artist by selling for almost $49MM ($48,802,500).   Sale estimates were between $25-$30MM and a global bidding wear sent the price up. The piece, “Nu de dos, 4 etate (Back IV)” measures 74.5”.  This work was conceived by Matisse around 1930, but cast in 1978, 24 years after his death.  The piece is No.oo in a collection of 12, the first three versions conceived in 1909, 1913 and 1916-17 are at the Museum of Modern Art. Matisse’s "Danseuse dans le fauteuil, sol en damier," sold for $20.8MM.  Photo is from Christie’s Images Ltd.

MODIGLIANI: A life-sized painting sold at Sotheby’s for $69MM, and Modigliani’s circa 1917 seductive canvas, titled “Nu assis sur un divan (La Belle Romaine),” ["Nude Sitting on a Divan (The Beautiful Roman Woman),"] catapulted beyond a pre-sale estimate of about $40MM.  It sold back in 1999 at Sotheby’s for $16.7MM, which was a record at the time.  His previous record was $52.6, sold earlier this year in Paris.  

GRIS: “Violon et guitare” a cubist oil painting on canvas done in September 1913, sold for $28.64MM after estimates for $18-25MM.  It was sold by Marilyn Arison, wife of late billionaire Ted Arison and sold to benefit the nonprofit YoungArts.  In 1998 they paid $9.9MM for this work of art.  Gris regarded this Cubist still life as his ultimate masterpiece, according to Christie’s.

MONET’s: “Le Bassin aux Nympheas,” part of his iconic water lilies series, sold for $25.7MM.  Its format is awkwardly elongated.  Most of his coveted water lily paintings are in museums and some consider them, painted during the last 20 years of his life, his ultimate achievement.

ROTHCO: abstract painting, off the market for 40 years, could sell this week at Sotheby’s, estimate is between $20-$30MM.  PICASSO: “Man with a Flag” sold for $5.3MM. LEGER: His “Femme sur fond rouge, femme assise”, the stylized figure of a woman seated cross-legged, in black and white on a red background sold for $6.35MM. SEURAT: A black Conte crayon study of a woman standing is seen from the back with a feeling of time suspended and profound mystery as the shadowy figure seems about to enter an invisible world brought $4.3MM. GIACOMETTI: “His “Femme de Venise V,” a craggy, jagged elongated fiture case in 1958 in an edition of 6 brought in $10MM.

This week, Christies hopes to get $240MM from sales of works by Warhol, Lichtenstein, Koons, Richter and Rothco.

Both Christie’s and Sotheby’s had predicted a surge in demand ahead of this year’s autumn auctions, with the art market emerging from a slump triggered by the global financial crisis.

The jewelry market has surged ahead as well. The Bulgari Blue Diamond, designed in the 1970’s as a gift from a European collector to his wife on the birth of their first son, was bought for about $1MM at in 1972. It features two triangular-shaped diamonds, one colorless at 9.87 carats, the other a “fancy vivid” blue diamond is 10.95 carats.  The blue diamond is one in about 10 in existence with a color pure enough to qualify as “fancy vivid.” This is the largest blue diamond to have sold at auction. Photo credit: Reuters/CHRISTIE’S IMAGES LTD. 2010/Handout/.

Sunday, November 07, 2010

OBAMA ADMINISTRATION RELEASES OCTOBER HOUSING SCORECARD

The latest housing figures show continued 
signs of stabilization in house prices and 
high home affordability due in part to 
record low interest rates. 
The housing scorecard is a comprehensive 
 report on the nation's housing market.

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

BOCA RATON INFORMATION

BOCA RATON POPULATION

BOCA RATON MEDIAN AGE (2006)

for more information
BOCA RATON CITY REPORT

Monday, November 01, 2010

EXISTING SALES ARE HEADING ON UP



September showed an increase in home sales, causing NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun to say, “A housing recovery is taking place, but will be choppy at times depending on the duration and impact of a foreclosure moratorium.  But the overall direction should be a gradual rising trend in home sales with buyers responding to historically low mortgage interest rates and very favorable affordability conditions.” 

Let’s keep our fingers crossed that this path upwards will continue.

Interest rates have fallen to about half what they were nearly a decade ago, causing, in some cases, monthly mortgage payments to be less money than renting.  About 35% of the September sales were distressed sales.  According to reports, there will be more to come for some time into the future, while the government struggles to clear up a review of banking agency practices, looking at irregularities and weaknesses.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

SOMETHING YOU MAY WANT TO KNOW ABOUT… THE STORM AFTER THE CALM


According to Bain & Co, luxury goods including designer clothes, leather goods, watches, jewelry and such were predicted to have a 10% increase in sales in 2010, reported in a study commissioned by Italy’s Fondazione Altagamma association of high-end producers.  Sales had declined by 8% in 2009. 



So far US sales of high-end items are up 12% with wardrobe replenishment after a year of careful holding back, Asians up 22% and Europeans spending 6% more for luxury items.  With the holiday season still ahead, Bain predicts a 9-11% growth during that period, so it’s time to open your wallets folks, and keep the stores in business.


Powering the spending are the Chinese with sales growing 30%. Chinese tourists are traveling the world en masse and spending as they go.  The study reports that larger brands are faring better than smaller ones, which may foretell the possibilities of mergers or absorptions of small companies, and menswear is growing faster than women’s wear… amazing?  Our men are browsing the internet for their favorite brands and buying online.

Leather goods purchases had held up and are expected to grow by 16%.

May as well get in on the buying binge now as, due to the likely continuing lowering of the dollar against the euro, growth is predicted to head down 3-5% in 2011.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

A TURN FOR THE BETTER



National Association of Home Builders’ director of economic services says, “For the first time since World War II, I think [foreign] people are more optimistic about the US housing market than Americans.”  


Wall St Journal reports that the successful Sekisui House Ltd, a very large home builder and developer in Japan, is seeking to enter the US housing market and has teamed up with Newland Real Estate Group LLC of San Diego to acquire nearly 500 acres outside Houston which could house more than 1 200 homes.  Local brokers said the price was most likely over $10MM.  


It is anticipated that it will take three years to plot the development and get the project through the approvals process.  


Foreigners are not afraid of the US market as evidenced by the fact that 262 of the a Miami luxury condo’s 372 units have sold and almost 90% of the buyers are foreigners, all paying cash.  It includes a 28,000 sq ft spa and infinity pool on Biscayne Bay.  Units that once sold for up to $670/sq ft now average $319. Hotel-like service is offered, condos are glamorously appointed, great water views abound, daily housekeeping included and a celebrity chef offers room service.  It appears that foreign investors are buying real estate rather than investing in the US stock market, planning to rent out properties and sell when the economy turns around.  It is reported that 80% of all current Miami condo sales are with foreigners.  A property management cottage industry has sprung up across the US to accommodate these foreign buyers.

Locally, The Related Group has held many seminars, e.g. at Robb & Stucky in Boca and at the Boca Marriott, in the past few weeks showcasing their Ft Myers condo complex they purchased at a distress sale and are now offering at very low prices.  Seminars are also being held for condo complexes in foreign cities, and it is reported that buyers are astonished at the values, wondering if they are too good to be true.  They ARE true.


If you would like more information on any of these complexes or similar properties, contact Marilyn Jacobs, Luxury Home Specialist at 561-302-3388.