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Copyright 2012 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
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Wednesday, February 15, 2012
2011 Energy Tax Credits: What You Need to Know to Collect
Friday, January 13, 2012
Ft. Nuggent Park Oak Harbor, Wa
Ft. Nugent Park, Oak Harbor, WA. is located on beautiful Whidbey Island. This 40 acre Community Park is located at 2075 SW Ft. Nugent Street. What you'll find at Fort Nugent Park: • a large community built playground • 5 soccer fields • 2 football / soccer fields • 1 baseball / football field • 1 full basketball court • 2 volleyball courts • an 18 hole disk golf course • restrooms / concession building • walking trails • a wetland / natural area • a public art display • over 350 parking spaces Ft. Nugent Park is located across the street from the beautiful, gated development of Whidbey Links Estates and the residential neighborhood of Fireside. Next to Ft. Nugent Park are the neighborhoods of Ft. Nugent Highlands and East Park. It is also located close to town and the waterfront trails of Windjammer Park. We hope that when you are visiting Whidbey Island that you will enjoy Ft. Nugent Park, Oak Harbor, WA. | ||||||||||||||||||
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Friday, December 30, 2011
Whidbey Island Naval Air Station Gets Good News
This is really exciting news for Oak Harbor, Whidbey Island and all surrounding areas. We appreciate our military and we rejoice that it looks like NAS Whidbey Island is secure for a long time and that the new P-8 Poseidons will be stationed here. This is also great news for the local economy and for the Oak Harbor and Whidbey Island real estate market.
Whidbey Island Real Estate Market Update 12/27/2011
As we approach the end of 2011, we wanted to give you a Whidbey Island Real Estate update. Since we are still in December, the final results won't be available to be posted for a few weeks, but I thought I would give you a taste of the real estate market here on beautiful Whidbey Island. I will show you a snapshot of total sales and median prices for the three areas of Whidbey Island; North, Middle, and South. In my next post I will include graphs and explanations for the total 2011 sales.
Whidbey Island Real Estate and Oak Harbor Homes For Sale
- North Whidbey Island, which includes every sale north of Libbey Rd, was down both in total transactions and median sales price. Sales were down approximately 6% from 2010 and the median sales prices was down approximately 5%.
- Central Whidbey Island saw a year where the sales increased approximately 6% but the median sales price remained about the same as 2010.
- South Whidbey Island experienced an increase in sales of approximately 1.5% but declined in median sales price of close to 13%.
Whidbey Island Real Estate and Oak Harbor Homes For Sale
Monday, June 20, 2011
Whidbey Island Home Prices Evaluated
Whidbey Island Home Prices are always a question on local homeowners minds.We are constantly being asked, " How is my home value compared to those in other markets?" For an indepth evaluation of the home market throughout the United States, Coldwell Banker released the 2011 HOME LISTING REPORT. The report lists home values for a 4 bedroom 2 bath home throughout the United States and Canda. To compare your home value to those across the nation or to see where our city ranks please visit Coldwell Banker's Home Listing Report.
Check out America's Top Cities in this video
For information on Whidbey Island home prices or local home values, please feel free to contact us at any time at info@whidbeyrealestate.com or call us at 360-675-5811. We are here to help you with any of your real estate questions for all of Whidbey Island and Anacortes.
Whidbey Island Real Estate and Oak Harbor Homes for Sale
Check out America's Top Cities in this video
For information on Whidbey Island home prices or local home values, please feel free to contact us at any time at info@whidbeyrealestate.com or call us at 360-675-5811. We are here to help you with any of your real estate questions for all of Whidbey Island and Anacortes.
Whidbey Island Real Estate and Oak Harbor Homes for Sale
Monday, June 6, 2011
7 Hot Home Improvement Trends that Make Your Home Work for You
Home improvement trends embrace energy efficiency, low maintenance exteriors, and double-duty space.
We continue to choose maintenance-free siding that lives as long as we do, but with a lot less upkeep. But more and more we’re opting for fiber-cement siding, one of the fastest-growing segments of the siding market. It’s a combination of cement, sand, and cellulosic fibers that looks like wood but won’t rot, combust, or succumb to termites and other wood-boring insects.
At $5 to $9 per sq. ft., installed, fiber-cement siding is more expensive than paint-grade wood, vinyl, and aluminum siding. It returns 80% of investment, the highest return of any upscale project on Remodeling magazine’s latest Cost vs. Value Report.
Maintenance is limited to a cleaning and some caulking each spring. Repaint every 7 to 15 years. Wood requires repainting every 4 to 7 years.
Trend #2: Convertible spaces
Forget “museum rooms” we use twice a year (dining rooms and living rooms) and embrace convertible spaces that change with our whims.
Foldaway walls turn a private study into an easy-flow party space. Walls can consist of fancy, glass panels ($600 to $1,600 per linear ft., depending on the system); or they can be simple vinyl-covered accordions ($1,230 for 7 ft. by 10 ft.). PortablePartions.com sells walls on wheels ($775 for approximately 7 ft. by 7 ft.).
A Murphy bed pulls down from an armoire-looking wall unit and turns any room into a guest room. Prices, including installation and cabinetry, range from $2,000 (twin with main cabinet) to more than $5,000 (California king with main and side units). Just search online for sellers.
And don’t forget area rugs that easily define, and redefine, open spaces.
Trend #3: A laundry room of your own
Humankind advanced when the laundry room arose from the basement to a louvered closet on the second floor where clothes live. Now, we’re taking another step forward by granting washday a room of its own.
If you’re thinking of remodeling, turn a mudroom or extra bedroom into a dedicated laundry room big enough to house the washer and dryer, hang hand-washables, and store bulk boxes of detergent.
Look for spaces that already have plumbing hookups or are adjacent to rooms with running water to save on plumbing costs.
Trend #4: Souped-up kitchens
Although houses are trending smaller, kitchens are getting bigger, according to the American Institute of Architects’ Home Design Trends Survey.
Kitchen remodels open the space, perhaps incorporating lonely dining rooms, and feature recycling centers, large pantries, and recharging stations.
Oversized and high-priced commercial appliances—did we ever fire up six burners at once?—are yielding to family-sized, mid-range models that recover at least one cabinet for storage.
Since the entire family now helps prepare dinner (in your dreams), double prep sinks have evolved into dual-prep islands with lots of counter space and pull-out drawers.
Trend #5: Energy diets
We’re wrestling with an energy disorder: We’re binging on electronics—cell phones, iPads, Blackberries, laptops--then crash dieting by installing LED fixtures and turning the thermostat to 68 degrees.
Are we ahead of the energy game? Only the energy monitors and meters know for sure.
These new tracking devices can gauge electricity usage of individual electronics ($20 to $30) or monitor whole house energy ($100 to $250). The TED 5000 Energy Monitor ($240) supplies real-time feedback that you can view remotely and graph by the second, minute, hour, day, and month.
Trend #6: Love that storage
As we bow to the new god of declutter, storage has become the holy grail.
We’re not talking about more baskets we can trip over in the night; we’re imagining and discovering built-in storage in unlikely spaces--under stairs, over doors, beneath floors.
Under-appreciated nooks that once displayed antique desks are growing into built-ins for books and collections. Slap on some doors, and you can hide office supplies and buckets of Legos.
Giant master suites, with floor space to land a 747, are being divided to conquer clutter with more walk-in closets.
Trend #7: Home offices come out of the closet
Flexible work schedules, mobile communications, and entrepreneurial zeal are relocating us from the office downtown to home.
Laptops and wireless connections let us telecommute from anywhere in the house, but we still want a dedicated space (preferably with a door) for files, supplies, and printers.
Spare bedrooms are becoming home offices and family room niches are morphing into working nooks. After a weekend of de-cluttering, basements and attics are reborn as work centers.
By: Lisa Kaplan Gordon
Published: May 13, 2011
Lisa Kaplan Gordon is a HouseLogic contributor and homebuilder.
.
We continue to choose maintenance-free siding that lives as long as we do, but with a lot less upkeep. But more and more we’re opting for fiber-cement siding, one of the fastest-growing segments of the siding market. It’s a combination of cement, sand, and cellulosic fibers that looks like wood but won’t rot, combust, or succumb to termites and other wood-boring insects.
At $5 to $9 per sq. ft., installed, fiber-cement siding is more expensive than paint-grade wood, vinyl, and aluminum siding. It returns 80% of investment, the highest return of any upscale project on Remodeling magazine’s latest Cost vs. Value Report.
Maintenance is limited to a cleaning and some caulking each spring. Repaint every 7 to 15 years. Wood requires repainting every 4 to 7 years.
Trend #2: Convertible spaces
Forget “museum rooms” we use twice a year (dining rooms and living rooms) and embrace convertible spaces that change with our whims.
Foldaway walls turn a private study into an easy-flow party space. Walls can consist of fancy, glass panels ($600 to $1,600 per linear ft., depending on the system); or they can be simple vinyl-covered accordions ($1,230 for 7 ft. by 10 ft.). PortablePartions.com sells walls on wheels ($775 for approximately 7 ft. by 7 ft.).
A Murphy bed pulls down from an armoire-looking wall unit and turns any room into a guest room. Prices, including installation and cabinetry, range from $2,000 (twin with main cabinet) to more than $5,000 (California king with main and side units). Just search online for sellers.
And don’t forget area rugs that easily define, and redefine, open spaces.
Trend #3: A laundry room of your own
Humankind advanced when the laundry room arose from the basement to a louvered closet on the second floor where clothes live. Now, we’re taking another step forward by granting washday a room of its own.
If you’re thinking of remodeling, turn a mudroom or extra bedroom into a dedicated laundry room big enough to house the washer and dryer, hang hand-washables, and store bulk boxes of detergent.
Look for spaces that already have plumbing hookups or are adjacent to rooms with running water to save on plumbing costs.
Trend #4: Souped-up kitchens
Although houses are trending smaller, kitchens are getting bigger, according to the American Institute of Architects’ Home Design Trends Survey.
Kitchen remodels open the space, perhaps incorporating lonely dining rooms, and feature recycling centers, large pantries, and recharging stations.
Oversized and high-priced commercial appliances—did we ever fire up six burners at once?—are yielding to family-sized, mid-range models that recover at least one cabinet for storage.
Since the entire family now helps prepare dinner (in your dreams), double prep sinks have evolved into dual-prep islands with lots of counter space and pull-out drawers.
Trend #5: Energy diets
We’re wrestling with an energy disorder: We’re binging on electronics—cell phones, iPads, Blackberries, laptops--then crash dieting by installing LED fixtures and turning the thermostat to 68 degrees.
Are we ahead of the energy game? Only the energy monitors and meters know for sure.
These new tracking devices can gauge electricity usage of individual electronics ($20 to $30) or monitor whole house energy ($100 to $250). The TED 5000 Energy Monitor ($240) supplies real-time feedback that you can view remotely and graph by the second, minute, hour, day, and month.
Trend #6: Love that storage
As we bow to the new god of declutter, storage has become the holy grail.
We’re not talking about more baskets we can trip over in the night; we’re imagining and discovering built-in storage in unlikely spaces--under stairs, over doors, beneath floors.
Under-appreciated nooks that once displayed antique desks are growing into built-ins for books and collections. Slap on some doors, and you can hide office supplies and buckets of Legos.
Giant master suites, with floor space to land a 747, are being divided to conquer clutter with more walk-in closets.
Trend #7: Home offices come out of the closet
Flexible work schedules, mobile communications, and entrepreneurial zeal are relocating us from the office downtown to home.
Laptops and wireless connections let us telecommute from anywhere in the house, but we still want a dedicated space (preferably with a door) for files, supplies, and printers.
Spare bedrooms are becoming home offices and family room niches are morphing into working nooks. After a weekend of de-cluttering, basements and attics are reborn as work centers.
By: Lisa Kaplan Gordon
Published: May 13, 2011
Lisa Kaplan Gordon is a HouseLogic contributor and homebuilder.
.
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Bowling for Kid's Sake - Koetje Insurance Team
Recently, many organizations and individuals participated in a fundraiser for our local Big Brothers/Big Sisters organization. One of those fun-filled teams was the Koetje Kingpins from Koetje Insurance Agency. I had the opportunity to video them. Here is the Koetje Kingpins having fun for a good reason.
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