A New French Chateau in Sands Point

by Virginia Dunleavy

Published: February 7, 2013

image5

A newly constructed, 12,000- square-foot French Chateau-style home in Sands Point, listed for $12.5 million, features intricate custom-made plaster moldings, imported marble and glass tiles throughout.

The foyer has a 30-foot-high ceiling and marble floor tiles, each measuring 36 by 36 inches. It opens up to a grand staircase with an imported, wrought-iron banister topped with mahogany railing.

A powder room has imported onyx walls and floors plus “his” and “hers” toilets. And the centerpiece of the home’s ballroom, which measures 1,500 square feet, is the fireplace’s 30-foot-high, hand-carved travertine marble mantel.

All five bedrooms have access to an exterior balcony, and the en suite baths have a different glass mosaic tile theme in the showers. There are a total of 7.5 baths.

The master suite’s fireplace is hand-carved Italian travertine marble. Its bathroom comes with two steam showers, gold-plated faucets, marble floor and a marble Jacuzzi tub with a domed ceiling above.

The two-acre property has a 3,000-square-foot patio surrounding the saltwater pool and Jacuzzi, both with Italian mosaic tiles. Two fountains will shoot up from the pool and be showcased with LED lights. Other features include a library, home theater, an additional five fireplaces, and an attached four-car garage with room for lifts. It’s listed with Andrea Jablow of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates.

A New French Chateau in Sands Point

If You Want a House With a Steam Shower

by Lisa Bruno

Published: February 7, 2013

When you think about it, every home is equipped with a stress-reducing device — it’s called the shower, and it’s not just for daily cleansing. For many, a leisurely hot shower simply melts away tension and soothes the soul.

Some homeowners have upped their game by having a steam shower installed. It doesn’t stop there. Enhancements such as lighting, music systems and aromatherapy can be added. It’s no wonder so many steam showers are equipped with a waterproof bench for two.

Riverhead

3172 Sound Ave.

$1,650,000

When this 5,500-square-foot Mediterranean-style house was custom-built on one acre overlooking Long Island Sound, the spa area with its indoor pool and steam shower was incorporated into the design. The spa — as well as any area in the house with tile floors — has radiant heat. This includes the master bathroom, which has a walk-in shower, tub overlooking the water and dual vanity. Other features include wood floors, oversized windows, sliding-glass doors, two fireplaces and a three-level mahogany elevator. The chef’s kitchen is outfitted with white cabinets, high-end stainless- steel appliances and a center island. There are four bedrooms and five bathrooms. Since the house is set high, the water views are year round, says the listing agent, noting flooding is not an issue. Exterior features include Brazilian wood wraparound decks and retractable awnings. CeeCee Flanigan, Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates, Woodbury, 631-252-4126.

If You Want a House With a Steam Shower

Tips on finding short-term rentals

Updated November 8, 2012 2:22 PM
By VALERIE KELLOGG

The Avalon Garden City, at 998 Stewart Ave. in Garden City, has residences available immediately for residents displaced by superstorm Sandy. The two-bedroom, two-bathroom units are priced at $5,690 per month. Photo Credit: MLS
The Avalon Garden City, at 998 Stewart Ave. in Garden City, has residences available immediately for residents displaced by superstorm Sandy. The two-bedroom, two-bathroom units are priced at $5,690 per month. Photo Credit: MLS

Like so many other Long Islanders who live on the water, Joy Harris returned to her first-floor Bayville apartment after superstorm Sandy to find that flooding had destroyed the house. Unlike countless others now trying to find a place to live on Long Island, her possessions had already been moved to a safe place.

Concerned about the weather forecasts, Harris, 53, an attorney and a judge, had rented a moving truck the Friday before for storing her furniture, parking it in a place where she thought it would be safe during the storm. She put her and her 13-year-old daughter Arianna’s clothing, as well as their electronics and emergency bags, in her car that Sunday when the area was evacuated and drove to North Merrick to stay with her 31-year-old son, Nicholas, and his wife, until the storm ended. She also did one other thing most people who have been displaced from their homes didn’t think to do — the Saturday before the storm, she went to see an apartment she could rent. When she returned Tuesday to her home, finding the windows blown out and starfish and seashells floating in the water that flooded the unit, she called Georgia Ioannou of Prudential Douglas EllimanReal Estate, the rental agent for the new apartment, and put down a deposit.

Harris and her daughter’s things are now at an 1820 Locust Valley Cape she has rented for $2,000 a month. For now, the two are staying with friends in Old Westbury — because the power is out at the new place.

Harris might have had the foresight most storm victims covet, but she says many of the things she did to protect herself are the things others who are now without housing need to do. “Be persistent,” says Harris, who recommends bartering for a room in someone else’s house, an idea she considered. “At-home moms can drive other people’s kids to school or wait on line for someone to get gas in exchange for being hosted in a home,” she suggests.

It’s just one creative solution to muse on as the rental market on Long Island gets uncomfortably tighter in the wake of Sandy. On top of the legendarily scarce supply of safe and legal places to rent in Nassau and Suffolk counties — made worse by a real estate market where many have chosen to rent instead of buy — a whole new set of challenges faces those looking for a home: Most rentals are not short term, most are unfurnished and most are pet-free.

Still, real estate agents say rentals are out there if you look hard and are creative (just make sure to protect yourself along the way).

SEARCH HIGH AND LOW

The Multiple Listing Service of Long Island offers a searchable rental database on its website: mlsli.com. Users can look for available apartments by community, price, whether it is furnished (you can always rent furniture from several businesses on Long Island) and, most important, length of lease.

Still, you want to search elsewhere.

“Many apartment listings get shared on MLS, but not all,” says Wendy Sanders, who, with her husband, Craig, oversees Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate’s rental division for Long Island. Be sure to ferret out listings on newspaper, realty and real estate websites as well as Craig’s List. Some real estate firms are representing properties exclusively. Laffey Fine Homes is listing short-term rentals at a condo complex inGreat Neck, says Diane Leyden, the managing director of the firm’s Great Neck office. It is also a good idea to approach leasing agents of apartment complexes directly, says Cheryl Messina, who works in the Babylon office of Coldwell BankerResidential Brokerage. Avalon Communities across Long Island are offering short-term leases, she and others point out.

And think out of the box: Snowbirds — those who head south during the winter — might be willing to rent out their homes while they are away, says Joyce Styne of Laffey’s Greenvale office. Real estate agents should be able to help. “You call a Realtor who is very well aware of who goes to Florida and who knows the buildings where they live,” she says.

Another idea Styne offers up: working with a builder to rent a newly constructed home that has not yet been sold. In fact, houses on the market that have not sold will probably end up being a popular solution in the housing crisis. “So many of us are sitting on an inventory of empty houses,” says Vicky Germaise, a sales associate in Prudential Douglas Elliman‘s Mattituck office. “Maybe those owners have hit the wall and would be open to renting,” she says, explaining that working with real estate agents would be the conduit to such arrangements.

BE CAREFUL OF LEASES AND FEES

“People are looking for three months or six months,” Messina says. But she suggests also seeking out a month-to-month lease in the event that work done on a property is completed earlier than scheduled. Most leases are for a year, which means that there will be a penalty for moving out earlier. The reason for that — each time there is a turnover in occupancy, the landlord incurs expenses such as repainting, refinishing and cleaning a unit after a tenant moves out, says Sanders, who is based in Prudential Douglas Elliman‘s Great Neckoffice.

And in case you have not rented in a while, here’s a reminder: Many landlords require rent up front, a security deposit and other special fees, such as for pets, says Sanders, pointing out that many are trying to be flexible right now. Also keep in mind that the norm is for agents, they say, to charge a finder’s fee, which may be the same as a month’s rent.

CONSULT YOUR INSURANCE COMPANY

“People are moving without knowing what they are covered for because the market is so tight,” says Sanders. “They are taking leases without being approved.” The risk, of course, is that you might spend money that you won’t be reimbursed for, she says. “You can’t shop around until you know how much you have to spend,” warns Cristina Callegari of Keller Williams Realty Landmark in Bayside.

BE FLEXIBLE

Agents say that most rentals near areas most affected by the storm, particularly close to ravaged Long Beach, are already taken. The need around these communities will continue to grow as families struggle to land closest to where children attend school. Don’t lose hope that you will find a place to live, but be prepared to reconsider your criteria, says Sanders. “Instead of driving five minutes to get your kids to school, you will have to drive 10,” says Sanders. “There is only so much you can do.”

With summer over, off-season rentals may be available on the East End, Germaise points out. “Renting from November to May might be all someone needs,” she adds. Willing to be flexible about showing a house or apartment while you are living there might be the selling point to convince a landlord to allow a short-term lease, says Thomas Musgrove of the firm Your #1 Realty of New York in East Meadow.

SELL YOURSELF

“Be accessible — have your credit already run and your references ready to go,” adds Musgrove, who has specialized in Long Island rentals for more than two decades. Seth Levy of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates in Woodbury suggests gathering other supportive documentation “to show any prospective landlord that you are respectful and pay your bills on time,” including pay stubs, tax returns, and W-2 and 1099 forms.

Lisa Doll Bruno contributed to this story.

Where to look

Here are six Long Island rentals — from houses to apartments within houses to apartments in buildings — available as of press time. There is a mad rush for housing for superstorm Sandy victims, so they may no longer be available by the time of publication. Compiled by Ann Smukler

Bay Shore $1,300 a month

WHERE 162 E. Main St.

TYPE Apartment

LENGTH OF LEASE Flexible

GENERAL DESCRIPTION One bedroom and one bathroom with an eat-in kitchen

USEFUL TO KNOW The apartment has high ceilings, central air-conditioning and hardwood floors

PETS No

AVAILABILITY Immediate

TO GET IN You need to pay one month’s security, the first month’s rent and a one-month agency fee.

FURNISHED No

LISTING AGENT Doris Kennedy, Kennedy LI Realty, Bay Shore, 631-666-9100

Syosset $3,850 a month

WHERE 74 Florence Dr.

TYPE House

LENGTH OF LEASE Flexible

GENERAL DESCRIPTION There are four bedrooms and two bathrooms.

USEFUL TO KNOW There is a new kitchen, a deck off the kitchen and a full basement.

PETS Yes

AVAILABILITY Immediate

TO GET IN You need to pay one-month’s security, the first month’s rent and a one-month agency fee.

FURNISHED No

LISTING AGENT Maria Siringo, Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates, 516-316-8654

Oyster Bay $1,679 to $2,614 a month

WHERE Norwich Gate, 600 Pine Hollow Rd.

TYPE Apartment

LENGTH OF LEASE Flexible

GENERAL DESCRIPTION One-bedroom and two-bedrooms apartments

USEFUL TO KNOW The application fee is being waived; the complex works with a discount moving and storage source

PETS Yes, with conditions (dogs under 30 pounds only, with a monthly fee of $50; fee for cats is $25; there is a maximum of two pets per unit; there is also $400 one-time fee per pet)

AVAILABILITY Immediate

TO GET IN You need to pay the first month’s rent, one month’s security and a $225 redecorating fee

FURNISHED No

LISTING AGENT Nicole Walsh, Heatherwood Communities, 631-878-2525

North Babylon $1,000 a month

WHERE 36 Kime Ave.

TYPE Apartment

LENGTH OF LEASE One year

GENERAL DESCRIPTION One-bedroom, one-bathroom, eat-in kitchen and living room

USEFUL TO KNOW This is an apartment with a separate entry within a private residence.

PETS No

AVAILABILITY Immediate

TO GET IN You need to pay the first month’s rent, 11 / 2- month’s security and a one-month agency fee.

FURNISHED No

LISTING AGENTS Josephine Conte, Mary LiVecchi, Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage, Setauket, 631-941-3100

Hicksville $2,500 a month

WHERE 31 Wishing Lane

TYPE House

LENGTH OF LEASE One year

GENERAL DESCRIPTION This expanded Cape has five bedrooms and two bathrooms.

USEFUL TO KNOW There is a newly renovated kitchen as well as a washer and dryer.

PETS No

AVAILABILITY Immediate

TO GET IN You need to pay one month’s security, one month of rent in advance and a one-month agency fee.

FURNISHED Yes

LISTING AGENT Joan Tramuta, Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate, 516-384-5025

Garden City $5,690 a month

WHERE Avalon Garden City, 998 Stewart Ave.

TYPE Apartment

LENGTH OF LEASE Eight months

GENERAL DESCRIPTION There are two bedroom and two bathrooms.

USEFUL TO KNOW The 1,930-square-foot unit has a washer and dryer and access to full-service gym.

PETS Yes (there are additional fees)

AVAILABILITY Immediate

TO GET IN You need to pay the first month’s rent, a $750 security fee and a $125 per adult application fee.

FURNISHED No (rental furniture is available)

LISTING AGENT Wendy Sanders, Prudential Douglas Elliman, 516-498-2119

Tips on finding short-term rentals

Rich Cribs: Captree Island home with Jacuzzi room, and more

Updated October 24, 2012 3:32 PM
By Elizabeth Gyori and Lara Ewen

There are 360-degree views of nature on CaptreeThere are 360-degree views of nature on Captree Island from this house along the State Boat Channel. The asking price is $1.175 million. Photo Credit: Handout

ON THE WATERFRONT. This .46-acre waterfront property in Babylon, which is listing for $1.175 million, provides 360-degree views of everything from green marshland to the Robert Moses Causeway.

Located on Captree Island along the State Boat Channel, the three-bedroom, three-bath house comes complete with a 150-foot-long  deep-water dock with a boatlift and fishing station. The multilevel deck includes an outdoor barbecue area, where the sellers keep a hammock.

The master bedroom leads to the “stairway to heaven,” says listing agent David Sanders of Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate — a third-story Jacuzzi room with a view of the entire property and beyond. “It’s a very private, tranquil way of life,”  Sanders says of the property, which includes a potting shed and a pond in the front.

Other features include a four-car garage, an attic and basement, a living room-dining room combo, Brazilian teak floors, a chef’s kitchen with granite countertops and custom moldings and cabinets. “It’s very centrally located on the island,” says Sanders, estimating the property is 50 minutes by car from Manhattan, 15 minutes to a Long Island Rail Road station and five minutes from Robert Moses State Park. — Elizabeth Gyori

MORE WATER VIEWS. A five-bedroom, 7,000-square-foot Merrick estate, on the market for $2.9 million, features water views from every window of the house. It includes a 16-foot-high foyer as well as radiant heated marble and onyx floors on the main floor.

Built in 1975, the house was completely redone in 2007. Each bedroom has its own bath with walk-in closets and views of East Bay. The second floor has cherrywood flooring throughout, and the master suite has a fireplace, balcony, dual walk-in closets and tub for two.

There are two laundry rooms, a 12-seat theater and a fitness center, as well as a heated gunite pool and wet bar, cabana, 96 feet of bulkhead, floating dock and boatlift.

It is listed with Phil Schonfeld and Seth Levy of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates. — Lara Ewen

Rich Cribs: Captree Island home with Jacuzzi room, and more

Nassau Home Prices Jump; Suffolk’s Up, Also

by Maura McDermott

Published: September 12, 2012

image24

Nassau County’s housing market heated up in August, with the median home price up 4.8 percent compared to the same period in 2011. Prices rose by a more modest 0.7 percent in Suffolk County, according to the Multiple Listing Service ofLong Island.

The median price for home sales closed last month was $435,000 in Nassau and $322,360 in Suffolk, the listing service reported. The number of homes changing hands increased in the two counties, with sales activity up 12.2 percent in Nassau and 1.8 percent in Suffolk.

Buyers are feeling increasingly confident about the market, said Suzanne Wehren of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates in Woodbury.

“People have been holding back,” she said. “They feel like they waited for prices to hit bottom, and they did.”

In addition, buyers want to lock in low mortgage interest rates, Wehren said.

Nassau Home Prices Jump; Suffolk’s Up, Also

Tennis without the crowds

Updated September 6, 2012 12:17 PM
By Valerie KelloggWhen it comes to the tennis court atWhen it comes to the tennis court at this Upper Brookville manse, it’s game, set, match. An exact duplication of the U.S. Open court was completed about a month ago on the 5.28-acre property, which is on the market for $14.888 million, says Shawn Elliott of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates, which is marketing the home. Photo Credit: Phil Schonfeld

When it comes to the tennis court at this Upper Brookville manse, its game, set, match.

An exact duplicate of the U.S. Open court was completed about a month ago on the 5.28-acre property, which is on the market for $14.888 million, says Shawn Elliott of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates, which is marketing the home. Surrounded by a bluestone patio with a water fountain and ball machine nearby, the court has the same surface, color and size as the one the pros are competing on in Flushing, he says.

Other kinds of tennis courts abound at Long Islands luxury cribs. In Southampton, you can hear the Atlantic Ocean mid-serve at one Gin Lane estate listed for $26.5 million. The 6,000-square-foot home on the beach features an all-weather tennis court that has views of a pond on the other side, says James Conroy ofPrudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate, who is listing the spread with Paul Brennan and Raymond Smith.

Elsewhere in Southampton, a custom-built home listed for $6.75 million offers a sunken Har-Tru court in the same development where Real Housewives of New York City star Ramona Singer lives with tennis-pro husband Mario, says seller Barbara Weinman, who is marketing the home with Lisa Iulo, both of Town & Country Real Estate.

Tennis without the crowds

Real LI: Posts from our daily blog

September 6, 2012 2:09 PM

TENNIS WITHOUT THE CROWDS

When it comes to the tennis court at thisUpper Brookvillemanse, it’s game, set, match.

An exact duplicate of the U.S. Open court was completed about a month ago on the 5.28-acre property, which is on the market for $14.888 million, says Shawn Elliott of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates, which is marketing the home. Surrounded by a bluestone patio with a water fountain and ball machine nearby, the court has the same surface, color and size as the one the pros are competing on in Queens, he says.

Other kinds of tennis courts abound at Long Island‘s luxury cribs. In Southampton, you can hear the Atlantic Ocean mid-serve at one Gin Lane estate listed for $26.5 million. The 6,000-square-foot home on the beach features an all-weather tennis court that has views of a pond on the other side, says James Conroy of Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate, who is listing the spread with Paul Brennan and Raymond Smith.

Elsewhere in Southampton, a custom-built home listed for $6.75 million offers a sunken Har-Tru court in the same development where “Real Housewives of New York City” starRamona Singer lives with tennis-pro husband Mario, says seller Barbara Weinman, who is marketing the home with Lisa Iulo, both of Town & Country Real Estate. — VALERIE KELLOGG

BRIDGEHAMPTON MEADOW

Two parcels in the heart of Bridgehampton — not far fromChristie Brinkley‘s Tower Hill mansion — are on the market for $1.95 million and $1.70 million. Each are about five acres, says the listing broker, Town & Country’s chief executive Judi Desiderio.

Set amid hundreds of acres of preserved land, the cleared lots face a man-made pond. “It’s a meadow surrounded by trees,” Desiderio says, adding, “the setting offers the best of both worlds.”

The design of this secluded area was created about 20 years ago by a man named Bucky Stebbins, Desiderio says. Stebbins sold one lot to actor Kevin Sorbo, who built a house on it. The house has been rented by others over the past few years.

The two available lots, which are owned by a corporation, are suitable for someone who might want to build a main home and a guesthouse, Desiderio adds. — LISA DOLL BRUNO

Real LI: Posts from our daily blog

In NYC Suburbs, Sales Are Up, but Pricey Houses Struggle

August 10, 2012 10:30AM
By
Jane C. Timm

A home at 1 Cross Road in Bedford, N.Y., currently on the market with Houlihan Lawrence for $2.07 million.

Last year, Long Island real estate broker Maggie Keats worked with a young family looking for houses in Sands Point priced up to $2.5 million. But the family didn’t buy anything, and when they started looking again this spring, they’d changed their price point.

“They came to me and said, ‘We’ve reevaluated our budget. If we’d bought last year we could have spent that much, but we just don’t feel comfortable doing that now,’” said Keats, who works in Prudential Douglas Elliman’s Manhasset office.

In late June, her clients finally bought a Sands Point home, paying around $1.8 million for a slightly smaller house than they’d originally envisioned.

After a prolonged real estate slowdown, housing markets in New York City suburbs are finally starting to see a recovery. But while luxury Manhattan homes are currently selling faster than more modestly priced properties, the opposite is true in many suburbs. While activity is on the rise for cheaper suburban homes, pricey houses in some of these areas — especially those with long commutes into the city — are sitting on the market, brokers said.

Suburban homes priced between $2 and $3 million have seen “a clear drop-off in sales activity this year to date,” said Jonathan Miller, CEO of Miller Samuel Appraisers.

That trend is particularly apparent on Long Island, which saw just 44 sales priced between $2 and $3 million from January to mid-June of this year, down from 61 in the same period in 2011, according to data compiled by Miller.

Long Island, as well as Fairfield and Westchester counties, have also had fewer properties priced over $3 million trade this year than last year, although the total number of transactions for all three areas has increased.

One major reason for this trend is the continuing credit crunch. Many high-end buyers are young families moving from Manhattan, with one or both parents working on Wall Street. Five years ago, these buyers would have put a 10 to 15 percent down payment towards their purchase; today, they’re required to put down 30 percent, or even as much as 50 to 60 percent, brokers said.

As a result, buyers who previously would have stretched to buy a home priced above $2 million are now choosing to play it safe with slightly less expensive purchases. And those choices are having a noticeable impact on the housing market in some suburban communities.

“A lot of the architects we work with have mentioned that they’re building houses between 4,000 and 6,000 square feet, versus 8,000 to 10,000 square feet” during the boom, said Alison Bernstein, head of the Suburban Jungle Realty Group, which works with buyers leaving the city for suburbs in Connecticut, Long Island, New Jersey and other areas.

“People are being more conservative with what they want to buy,” she added. “They don’t want to risk everything if something happens.”

Lately, in particular, those fears have been stoked by the economic crisis in Europe.
“Nothing breeds caution like uncertainty,” Miller said. “I think a lot of that has to do with the uncertainty in Europe.”

The Manhattan real estate market is also impacted by weakness on Wall Street, but it’s not as vulnerable as the suburbs, brokers said, in part because of New York City’s appeal to international buyers.

“The international rich believe that Manhattan real estate is — and will remain — a safe investment,” said Gary Malin, president of the Manhattan brokerage Citi Habitats.

To get a sense of how high-end homes are faring in various communities, The Real Deal checked in with brokers in some of the city’s most sought-after suburbs.

Long Island

On Long Island, sales of homes priced between $2 and $3 million have fallen nearly 30 percent year-on-year, despite an overall uptick in the number of sales in the area, according to Miller’s data. (He noted that his data comes from the Multiple Listing Service of Long Island, which focuses mostly on Nassau and Western Suffolk counties.)

Keats, who is based in Nassau County, said she’s seeing healthy activity on homes listed below $2.5 million. But houses priced higher than that, she said, “just aren’t getting the viewings, they’re sitting on the market longer, and they are taking deeper price cuts.”

A major reason for that, several other brokers reiterated, is that buyers can no longer borrow as much money as they did during the boom.

Before the financial crisis, “you could put 10 percent down — you were able to buy more house,” said Shawn Elliott, the founder of Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes and Estates in Woodbury, Long Island. “Today, you’ve got to have 30 percent down, and you’ve got to have a credit score of around 700. It’s changed.”

Fears about the economy are also playing a role.

“People are just more conservative,” Keats said. “I think everyone is very uptight, and very few people have that much job security.”

Fairfield County

In Connecticut’s Fairfield County, sales climbed 9.4 percent in the first six months of 2012, according to Miller. But average prices dropped 9.3 percent to $618,185, from $681,467 at this point in 2011. And the area has seen a steep drop in homes priced over $3 million, with 31 houses trading so far this year, down 40 percent from 52 in the first half of last year.

In pricey Greenwich (which is excluded from Miller’s overall Fairfield statistics because it has a separate MLS), sales over $2 million are down 30 percent this year compared to the same period in 2011, according to Mark Pruner, a Prudential Connecticut Realty broker in Greenwich. By contrast, “the under-$2 million market is up 30 percent,” said Pruner, who blogs about real estate at GreenwichStreets.com.

Many Fairfield County residents commute to Wall Street, he said, so changes in compensation for financial workers have had a significant impact on the area.

Instead of paying bonuses in cash, “investment banks are giving out more of their bonuses in stock options, many of which will vest over the next three years,” he said, “and the value of those are just uncertain.”

Westchester County

In Westchester County, the average price of a home sold so far in 2012 is $782,077, down from $802,414 at this time last year, according to Miller. That’s despite the fact that a total of 1,611 homes have traded this year, up from 1,476 in the first six months of 2011.

“We’re sitting at the highest level of pending sales since 2005,” said Houlihan Lawrence COO Chris Meyers. “This is a full-fledged recovery, and the first time we can say that since Lehman Brothers.”

And yet, sales of luxury homes have lagged behind. So far this year, 29 Westchester homes priced over $3 million have sold, compared to 32 last year. And northern Westchester towns like Bedford, North Salem and Chappaqua are suffering from “low demand” in the $2 to $3 million range, Meyers said.

Muffin Dowdle, a top broker at Ginnel Real Estate in Bedford Hills, said she’s now seeing fewer Wall Streeters with young families moving to the area. “That guy that was going to buy that 6,500-to-7,500-square-foot new house — he is waiting to make sure he still has his job and the stock market chills out,” she said.

Brokers noted, however, that homes in towns like Rye, Port Chester and Scarsdale, which are only around 30 to 45 minutes by train from Manhattan, are faring better than those in Northern Westchester.

As of mid-June, Houlihan Lawrence had 84 listings in Northern Westchester, but just 11 pending sales, Meyers said. By contrast, southern Westchester had 116 listings and 52 pending sales.

Bergen County

The $2 to $3 million market in New Jersey’s Bergen County is still struggling, though it seems to be faring a bit better than last year.

So far in 2012, 29 homes in the $2 to $3 million range have sold, according to Dr. Ruth Miron-Schleider, owner and broker of Miron Properties in Bergen County. In the first half of last year, 24 properties in that price bracket were sold. Still, that’s far below the 39 that sold in the first six months of 2008.

Buyers who, in the past, would have looked at homes priced between $2 and $3 million “are now generally looking for mid-$1 million houses,” Miron-Schleider said.

In particular, Bergen County buyers are now very focused on how much they’ll be paying in maintenance charges and taxes, she said. Bergen has historically had one of the highest property tax rates in the country; last year, the average resident there paid around 8 percent of their annual income on property taxes — twice the national average.

Miron-Schleider said she also sees clients running into problems getting mortgages. “The biggest stumbling block is the financing,” she said.

In NYC Suburbs, Sales Are Up, but Pricey Houses Struggle

If you want a house with a pool

Updated August 9, 2012 12:58 PM
By LARA EWENIf you want a house with a pool,If you want a house with a pool, here is one to consider for $2.488 million. It’s at 3 August Lane in Old Westbury. Photo Credit: Handout

If your thoughts turn to cool dips in the pool as temperatures soar, you’re not alone. Swimming is the fourth-most-popular sport or activity in the United States and the single most popular recreational activity for children and teens ages 7 to 17, according to a new survey by Swim University, a New Jersey-based pool care website. Even if you’re not a world-class swimmer, having a pool on your property, whether in-ground or above ground, can provide a shimmering backdrop for all your outdoor activities.

Long Island has a terrific variety of homes with pools for sale in every price range. Here are six that make a splash.

Old Westbury, $2,488,000
3 August Lane

This five-bedroom, 4-bath 5,000-square-foot Mediterranean-style home features a heated gunite pool with a hot tub. The pool ranges from 3 feet at the shallow end to 12 feet at its deepest. The pool area includes a two-tiered covered patio with a built-in barbecue and wet bar.

The patio’s lower level surrounds the pool and the pool house, which includes a fireplace, full kitchen, bath and its own wet bar. Built in 2000, the house is on two acres. The master suite features a balcony that overlooks the pool and gardens.

The home also has a formal dining room, fireplace, custom kitchen and wood floors throughout. There is a two-car garage.

Listing agents. Ellen Zipes and Jared Zipes, Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty, Roslyn Heights, 516-817-7300

Wantagh, $979,999
2810 Riverside Dr.

Enjoy the water view while swimming in a 7-foot-deep dockside oval heated pool at this 3,200-square-foot stucco splanch with 70 feet of bulkhead on a wide canal off East Bay. The pool features a waterfall and interior LED lights.

Inside the four-bedroom, three-bath home, built in 1964 and fully renovated 10 years ago, improvements include a granite and stainless-steel kitchen, wrought-iron light fixtures imported from France and a living room extension that includes three new large windows designed to take advantage of the scenery. Other property features include a Trex deck and a newly paved circular driveway.

Listing agent. Seth Levy, Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes,Woodbury, 516-528-1737

Manorville, $499,999
18 Bauer Ave.

Built in 1992 on almost an acre of land, this postmodern home features a formal dining room, eat-in kitchen with custom cabinetry and granite counters, a spacious great room and a media room that’s perfect for entertaining.

The 16-by-36-foot heated pool is surrounded by a paver patio, and sits in a lush private yard with large manicured lawn. Inside the four-bedroom, 3-bath home, there’s also a massive master bedroom suite with a marble master bath and a Jacuzzi tub. The house also has skylights, a full basement, and wood and ceramic tile floors throughout.

Listing agent. Theresa Rottkamp, Coldwell Banker M&D Good Life, Moriches, 631-220-5519

Remsenburg, $925,000
149 South Country Rd.

The backyard pool at this 1830 house features a heated gunite pool with bluestone coping, and there’s a pool house with a full bathroom. The five-bedroom, 3-bath home is on a fully landscaped 1.3-acre lot. When the sellers recently renovated the property, all the kitchens and bathrooms were redone and central air-conditioning was installed.

The original flooring was left intact to preserve the home’s historic charm. There are four fireplaces original to the house, and additional details include French doors and a screened-in patio. The property has right of way to nearby Moriches Bay.

Listing agent. Craig Amodemo, Hampton Estates Realty,Westhampton Beach, 631-288-6333


East Hampton, $1,495,000
54 Copeces Lane

This home’s 75-foot-long heated pool was added during a renovation and designed with a coach for the Chinese Olympic swim team.

The contemporary house, set on about three acres, was designed and built in 1972 by Hans Noe. Inside the three-bedroom, three-bath house, there’s a master-bedroom suite with an en suite office with pool views and bathroom, an open-plan living room with a wood-burning stove, and a wall of windows.

There’s a 1,000-square foot artist’s studio, complete with skylights. The property features a generator and a separate, detached storage studio. The house can be purchased with two adjacent vacant lots, for a total of 6 additional acres, to create additional privacy or a compound.

Listing agent. William Stoecker, Town and Country Real Estate, Westhampton Beach, 516-818-4904


Freeport, $266,500
54 Tyler St.

The backyard of this home, located minutes fromFreeport‘s Nautical Mile, has an above-ground pool surrounded by a wood deck accessible from the dining room. The 1,100-square-foot home, built in 1954, features three bedrooms, 1 baths, central air-conditioning, a wood-burning fireplace, recently updated electrical throughout and new windows. The property also features a 1-car garage.

Listing agents. Beth Metzger and Bozenka Muccio, Century 21 Prevete Hirsch, Bellmore, 516-783-5900

If you want a house with a pool

Wine Cellars: Not Just for Basements

by Ruth Bashinsky

July 26, 2012

image27

Wine cellars are coming into the modern age — and out of the dark.

The newest cellars embrace the latest home design trends, from geometric shapes to solar energy. Some aren’t really cellars — they are on the first floor.

“Homeowners are looking for their wine cellar to be a destination point,” says Connecticut architect/builder Evan Goldenberg, who has clients on Long Island. “Many feel that they are spending so much money creating this beautiful space, why shouldn’t it be next to an entertainment room or kitchen where it can be enjoyed?”

FOR SALE

* The wine cellar at this Brookville home, on the market for $3.495 million, is temperature-controlled with floor-to-ceiling shelving. It holds 450 bottles. Listing agent: Andrea Jablow, Shawn Elliott Luxury Homes & Estates, 516-524-7743

Wine Cellars: Not Just for Basements