My NYC Black Folk......Gentrification

AB Ziggy

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http://www.businessinsider.com/brow...ices-fell-off-a-cliff-in-first-quarter-2018-4

Brownstone Brooklyn home prices fell off a cliff in the first quarter




5973595f552be54f008b5f3d-750-500.jpg
Spencer Platt/Getty Images


  • The median home price in Brownstone Brooklyn fell more than 11% year-over-year in the first quarter.
  • The Financial District saw a big drop in home sales.
  • Hospitals have emerged as one of the largest real estate owners in the country.

The median price of a home in Brownstone Brooklyn (Boerum Hill, Brooklyn Heights, Carroll Gardens, Clinton Hill, Cobble Hill, etc.) and North Brooklyn (Williamsburg, the Navy Yard and Greenpoint), dropped 11.4 percent year-on-year to $1.02 million in the first quarter. The decline was partly due to a weakening condominium market. During the period, the average sales price for the segment stood at $1.446 million, which amounts to a 7.1 percent drop compared to the same time last year. Read the report here.

The average asking price to closing price discount in Manhattan's luxury and new development market stood at ten percent during the first quarter. The figure represents the highest in two years. In spite of the bargains, the pace of closings was sluggish. For the quarter, the Manhattan market averaged 181 closings per week, down from the 235 closings during the same time last year.

Sales | Platinum Properties

The number of homes sold in the Financial District dropped 52 percent year-on-year in the first quarter to just 50 units. The decline was attributed to uncertainty surrounding the new tax law, which also dragged down sales in the previous quarter. In spite of the slowdown in sales, the average price of homes in the neighborhood rose by 10 percent year-on-year to $1.26M. Read the report here.

Sales | Olshan

The Manhattan luxury market was undeterred by the volatility of the financial markets. The segment registered 29 contracts at above $4 million between April 2 and April 8, highlighted by the one of the most expensive residential deals of the year. The top deal for the week was for the combination pads of 71A and 71B at 432 Park Avenue, which went into contract with the last asking price of $68.5 million. Read the report here.

Commercial

Enhancing the Value of Hospital Real Estate | CBRE

Hospitals and health systems control $1 trillion of owned real estate across the US. Out of that total, 42 percent are for inpatient facilities while 27 percent are for outpatient facilities. Large players own most of the hospital real estate in the country. The top 50 ranking of healthcare real estate owners include 34 health systems that collectively own $227 billion in real estate assets.
 

Neuromancer

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A Villa Straylight.
http://www.businessinsider.com/brow...ices-fell-off-a-cliff-in-first-quarter-2018-4

Brownstone Brooklyn home prices fell off a cliff in the first quarter




5973595f552be54f008b5f3d-750-500.jpg
Spencer Platt/Getty Images


  • The median home price in Brownstone Brooklyn fell more than 11% year-over-year in the first quarter.
  • The Financial District saw a big drop in home sales.
  • Hospitals have emerged as one of the largest real estate owners in the country.

The median price of a home in Brownstone Brooklyn (Boerum Hill, Brooklyn Heights, Carroll Gardens, Clinton Hill, Cobble Hill, etc.) and North Brooklyn (Williamsburg, the Navy Yard and Greenpoint), dropped 11.4 percent year-on-year to $1.02 million in the first quarter. The decline was partly due to a weakening condominium market. During the period, the average sales price for the segment stood at $1.446 million, which amounts to a 7.1 percent drop compared to the same time last year. Read the report here.

The average asking price to closing price discount in Manhattan's luxury and new development market stood at ten percent during the first quarter. The figure represents the highest in two years. In spite of the bargains, the pace of closings was sluggish. For the quarter, the Manhattan market averaged 181 closings per week, down from the 235 closings during the same time last year.

Sales | Platinum Properties

The number of homes sold in the Financial District dropped 52 percent year-on-year in the first quarter to just 50 units. The decline was attributed to uncertainty surrounding the new tax law, which also dragged down sales in the previous quarter. In spite of the slowdown in sales, the average price of homes in the neighborhood rose by 10 percent year-on-year to $1.26M. Read the report here.

Sales | Olshan

The Manhattan luxury market was undeterred by the volatility of the financial markets. The segment registered 29 contracts at above $4 million between April 2 and April 8, highlighted by the one of the most expensive residential deals of the year. The top deal for the week was for the combination pads of 71A and 71B at 432 Park Avenue, which went into contract with the last asking price of $68.5 million. Read the report here.

Commercial

Enhancing the Value of Hospital Real Estate | CBRE

Hospitals and health systems control $1 trillion of owned real estate across the US. Out of that total, 42 percent are for inpatient facilities while 27 percent are for outpatient facilities. Large players own most of the hospital real estate in the country. The top 50 ranking of healthcare real estate owners include 34 health systems that collectively own $227 billion in real estate assets.
may they continue to fall.
 

Pazzy

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It's better than suburbanification

How so? :picard: why encourage this but be against gentrification then?

On some real shyt, I think the whole gentrification shyt needs to stop because of the negative effect it's having on people on the natives and the gentrifiers moving in. The natives are getting displaced by the gentrifiers that stay for 5 years or less and end up moving out anyway. Why continue to build the city for temporary people and depend on them to make the economy. You see how they're saying the price of brownstones are falling. NYC is losing its coolness among the suburb crowd.
 
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Pazzy

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You do nothing but cry about everything. No space? All these old buildings and blocks are being renovated.

Miss me with that bullshyt when your ass is having problems finding a place to live. Apparently your attitude ain't getting you shyt because you're begging the very same people in this thread you're dissing for help finding you an apartment you can afford.
 

Francis White

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Miss me with that bullshyt when your ass is looking for a place to live.
I’m looking for a place you dumb piece of shyt. I’m looking with the money I have and the amount I can afford. 2100 per month . So what’s your problem?
 

Pazzy

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I’m looking for a place you dumb piece of shyt. I’m looking with the money I have and the amount I can afford. 2100 per month . So what’s your problem?

Yeah, it's been over a month and you ain't found shyt yet, you dumb piece of shyt.

While I don't mind you disagreeing and etc, you don't gotta be dissing folks on some fly shyt to get your point across because you ain't doing shyt yourself. I'd help you find a place to live because I've seen leads but since you're dissing me every time I say some shyt in in, you can do that all by yourself. Have fun.
 

88m3

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How so? :picard: why encourage this but be against gentrification then?

On some real shyt, I think the whole gentrification shyt needs to stop because of the negative effect it's having on people on the natives and the gentrifiers moving in. The natives are getting displaced by the gentrifiers that stay for 5 years or less and end up moving out anyway. Why continue to build the city for temporary people and depend on them to make the economy. You see how they're saying the price of brownstones are falling. NYC is losing its coolness among the suburb crowd.

You mentioned the environment and pollution and suburbanification is far worse for it....
 
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