Posts Tagged tina hunsicker

Top Three Things to Consider when Planning Your Backyard Pool

A lovely pool in a Vinings home for sale listed by Tina Hunsicker .

An appealing pool located at a Vinings home for sale that was listed by Tina Hunsicker.

While the summer is quickly coming to a close, the temperatures are still high in metro Atlanta.  There are still many days left in the pool season!

Swimming pools are a fun amenity to have in a home and I have lots of clients each year looking for a house with a pool or considering to put one in their current home.

As with any amenity, location and type of pool, and considerations on how to reduce ongoing maintenance are key factors.  I do believe a pool adds value, however that value is diminished if the location of the pool or features of the pool don’t fit the house, neighborhood or lot.

I may have a few appraiser friends that can add a statement here as to their impressions, but I’ve seen appraisals come in with as much as a $50k bump for the pool.

That being said, good sized pools with the right equipment, decking and landscaping can easily cost $100,000.

Many people enjoy their neighborhood pools and country clubs, but there’s still nothing like the convenience and beauty of one in your own backyard!  In my own home, we thoroughly enjoy our pool as well!

Below are some comments I’ve taken from the advice of a friend combined with my own thoughts, experience and recommendations when considering having your own pool.

1 – Planning Your Pool

My suggestion would be to try and gauge how comparable the proposed pool would be to the pools located at homes that have recently traded in the target price point of your home.

For example, some of the things I mention below may not apply if you have a $300,000 home, but would be a must at the $1M price point.  I’ll add a caveat here that many people get frustrated with their pool contractor, so check as many references as you can that are close in location to you.

2 – Kinds of Pools

A heated salt-water pool with an interior finish that is either pebble-sheen or pebble-Tec, along with some amount of useable and attractive stone flat deck space for lounge chairs, etc., as well as space for any safety fencing that may be required.

Swimming_Pool_Cover

This automatic pool cover protects a lovely rectangular-shaped infinity-edge pool with a fantastic view.

I also believe that having a rectangular pool with an automated cover will help in resale if the buyer has small children or really wants to minimize maintenance.  The cover reduces evaporation, reduces chemical usage and really keeps the pool clean of debris.

In terms of the interior pool finish, Pebble-sheen is the smoother variant of pebble tech but has similar optical properties in terms of interesting water color. Conventional white plaster shows every kind of dirt, so it’s tougher to maintain.

3 – Maintenance of pools

Mechanicals are important, and in terms of the heater, a +/-400,000 natural gas BTU heater at a minimum for pools 10,000 gallons or more is desirable, especially if there’s a hot tub.

Exploring feasibility of solar options for pool heating would be an excellent idea, especially given energy costs these days. A solar feature would certainly further distinguish the property.

I like the idea of having a hot tub separately as it takes a special design and eats up pool space to have one under the automated cover. Separate hot tubs are less expensive, more comfortable and easier to maintain.

Polaris Robotic Pool Cleaner

Polaris Robotic Pool Cleaner

In terms of maintenance, I love the Polaris automated cleaning robot. If they are configured correctly and maintained, they work very well.

Another popular but more costly option is the self-cleaning jets in the pool floor. I have heard nightmares about their repair and replacement and the cost may not justify the means. There could be some other self-cleaning technologies out there too that your pool contractor can discuss with you.

Maintenance costs of pools are so much less than they use to be.  Having a saline/salt water pool requires next to no chemicals.  Additionally, pool services aren’t really required if you have the cover and salt systems.

If you don’t have the desire to maintain your own pool there are many services that are under $50/visit and you can have them every other week. Chemical balance can be maintained very well through a salt-water pool’s automated chlorination catalyst.

Old pools can be remodeled to have the newer features such as: auto-fill feature, salt-water conversion, fountains, Polaris, automated covers etc.

, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a comment

Healthy inventory levels in Buckhead real estate market – July 2011

Is the Buckhead housing inventory sitting at a healthy rate?

Healthy inventory is defined as being under 18 months of homes or only enough homes to sell in that amount of time.

In the chart below, we see what the inventory looks like for homes for sale versus sold in the Buckhead zip code of 30327.

Looking at our current levels in 30327, we have approximately 12 months of inventory, so if sales remain constant this inventory should turn over in a year which is great news for Buckhead real estate.

Of course, this all varies by price point.  At one point in the past couple of years, we had over 4 years of inventory over $2M in Buckhead. So it’s always best to look at the inventory levels in your particular price point when contemplating a sale.

One of things I’ve noticed this summer is that the banks don’t seem to have the large “shadow” inventory waiting to come on the market that the news has reported.  I’ve seen articles talking about this slowdown and we may yet have another influx of this inventory, but there has been a dramatic decline of bank owned homes listed in Buckhead recently.


*All reports are published July 2011, based on data available at the end of June 2011. All reports presented are based on data supplied by FMLS. FMLS does not guarantee or is not in anyway responsible for its accuracy. Data maintained by FMLS may not reflect all real estate activities in the market. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

, , , , ,

Leave a comment

Vinings real estate homes sold and for sale (inventory as of July 2011)

I’m posting data today on two of the many residential real estate areas in Atlanta that I follow.  I follow many more, however the target area for this blog is 30327 and 30339.  I’m glad to post additional zip codes on request and can narrow the pricing criteria to show traffic in a more specific market.
You can read national press and even Atlanta press and real estate is LOCAL, so by looking a the specific data for an area and a price range you can get the true picture.  This chart is for Atlanta zip code 30339 which is inside the perimeter, and is called Vinings.

What it shows to me is the inventory is really not moving.  National news talked about stimulus last year and how it helped real estate for a short time.  The stimulus was geared toward first time homeowners and with the average sales prices in Vinings and Buckhead zip codes 30339 and 30327 areas being well above first-time homeowner price points, there was little impact from that program.

Inventory has dipped slightly in Vinings but sales are still down about 1/2 of what they were even in 2010.  Something to consider about seeing decreased sales is that it may mean we’ll still see prices dropping in the Vinings area until we get a balance of inventory and sales.  A healthy market is up to 18 months of inventory; currently in Vinings, we have over two years of standing inventory.

 

 

Data source: Trendgraphix. *All reports are published July 2011, based on data available at the end of June 2011. All reports presented are based on data supplied by FMLS. FMLS does not guarantee or is not in anyway responsible for its accuracy. Data maintained by FMLS may not reflect all real estate activities in the market. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

1 Comment