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Showing posts with label Housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Housing. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Admit It, You Want One of Those 'House of David' Statues


(Flickr pic by Donielle.)

And now one can be yours. Sad news from Curbed LA, which reports that "House of Davids" owner Norwood Young is looking to sell off the home's infamous statues in order to finally unload the house. (He's been looking to sell the house since May, but with no takers so far.)

Writes Curbed:

On two weekends in October, Young will sell off the giant Alice in Wonderland-style chairs, the hanging dining room table, the big Michael Jackson glove hand in the dining room, all of the Davids, and possibly even some of the tiny Santa and MJ clothes that the Davids have worn on special occasions (*but that last one isn't definite yet).

Several of the pieces up for sale were specially made from Young's designs, according to what he told us a few months ago. Winter tells us that Young has an amazing wardrobe (hung on electric racks) and that "almost everything" will be up for sale. Young will hold onto some sentimental and valuable pieces.

The sure-to-be-jam-packed estate sale will be held on October 15, 16, 22, and 23. It'll run 9 am to 3 pm on Saturdays and 12 to 4 pm on Sundays. The new brokers are holding also-sure-to-be-jam-packed open houses starting this Sunday.
And get a peek at the House of Davids in its full glory while you still can!

Monday, May 23, 2011

Hollywood's Tacky House of Davids Hits the Market



The House of Davids (also known as Youngwood Court), of course, is legendary for its bad taste. And owner Norwood Young, despised by his neighbors for keeping such gaudiness on public display, appears to revel in its tackiness.

But the golden age of Davids could be drawing to an end. Well, depending on who purchases the house, which Young has put on the market for $2.4 million.

The cool part of all this: The listing finally gives us a peek into the inside of the house. And yes, it's as cheesy as you'd expect. Curbed LA has the details:

There are fake dogs everywhere, the dining room furniture is invisible and hanging from the ceiling, and there are either oversized chairs in the foyer or the foyer is tiny. The house has seven bedrooms, seven bathrooms, and 19 David replicas on its front lawn. R&B singer Norwood Young has lived, decorated, and pissed off the neighbors on Muirfield Street since the nineties.


(Flickr pic by Donielle.)

Monday, February 14, 2011

Boomer Admits He's 'Embarrassed' That He's Paying Lower Property Taxes


Regular Franklin Avenue readers know I'm not a fan of Proposition 13, mainly because of the generational inequity. While boomer generation homeowners enjoy dirt cheap property taxes, young Gen X and Gen Y are playing three to four times (or even more) as much for the same size (or even smaller) homes.

It's personal: I know I'm paying more property tax on my tiny house than older folks who own mansions in Hancock Park.

At least one boomer is embarrassed. Glendale resident Gerry Rankin wrote this op-ed in today's Glendale News-Press:

My wife and I are living in the house we bought in 1966, 45 years ago. Maybe I’m supposed to feel smug, but I’m actually embarrassed when I think of the property taxes my neighbors on either side must pay. Both are young families with children whom the parents will be putting through college soon. One family bought five years ago; the other, five months ago. Their property tax bills are probably three or four times higher than mine. Is that fair?

One of the most frequently heard complaints from my age-bracket friends involves children or grandchildren moving back into my friends’ homes because they no longer have good enough jobs to pay for their own housing. Are we serious about wanting our children and grandchildren to enjoy a better, not poorer, lifestyle than we’ve experienced?
Perhaps opponents of Prop. 13 need to adopt the rhetoric of organizations like the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association -- and start referring to Prop. 13 as an unfair tax on young adults. Rankin suggests making an even playing field and lowering the property tax rate -- but making sure everyone pays the same amount. For the majority of young adults who bought their house after 2002, this would represent a big tax break. And aren't the Howard Jarvis folks all about tax breaks?

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

The Giant Cow of 6th Street



It's not every day you encounter a giant cow in someone's front yard. But that's what i've seen for a handful of days now as I drive to work.

What's the story of this "Cash Cow" (as the wording on the side reads)? Is it a TV property? A restaurant mascot? Or someone's extremely large lawn ornament? All I know is that I hope it stays; it's now something to look forward to as I approach my new job every morning.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The Mortgage Deduction Debate, and How Angelenos May Get Screwed



This story is what sometimes drives me nuts about the Los Angeles Times. At the end of the day, the paper needs to be local first. Yet this piece, on the possibility that mortgage tax deductions may be erased, barely touches the unique circumstances faced by L.A. homeowners.

For starters, the story -- written by L.A. Times reporter Don Lee from Washington -- begins with an anecdote about Maryland homeowners:

Fifteen years ago, Carol Nietmann and her husband bought a spacious house in Maryland near Chesapeake Bay. And thanks to the time-honored tax deduction for mortgage interest, she said, their new place was a little bigger and a little nicer than they would otherwise have thought they could afford.

Much the same has been true for millions of Americans up and down the income scale. Perhaps the most sacred of all the sacred cows in the tax code, the home mortgage deduction has long been seen as crucial to a major element of the American dream — owning your own home.

It has also been a boon to home builders, construction workers, the financial services industry and local governments that benefited from fatter real estate tax revenue.

But nearly a century after coming into existence, the mortgage deduction may face a day of reckoning. Although out of the spotlight while the lame-duck Congress thrashes to an end, the mortgage deduction issue is likely to resurface next year when the new Congress — including a lot more deficit-hawk Republicans — takes over.

So here's my problem: Out here in L.A., at least since the home price escalation in 2003, homeowners have paid a little more than they can afford... in order to squeeze into a tiny home they could have easily handled in another part of the country. It's the price of living in a city like L.A., San Francisco or New York. And it's those mortgage tax deductions that allow us to pay for these homes, period.

Lee finally touches on the plight of Angelenos -- you know, the people reading his story -- but much further down, and only briefly:

On the other hand, younger homeowners in wealthier areas are likely to feel the biggest pinch. Take Hyun K. Chung of Orange County.

The 37-year-old occupational therapist has a mortgage of about $500,000 on her house, which she bought at the peak of the market in 2006. Her loan carried an interest rate of 6.4% last year, putting her interest payments at about $32,000.

Chung doesn't remember how much her mortgage deductions saved her in taxes, but based on rough estimates, it was probably about $6,600, said James Nunns of the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center.

The deficit commission's plan would slice that to about $3,800, though Nunns said the difference could be significantly offset by lower tax rates and other changes under the commission's proposal. The possible tax changes are still too imprecise to calculate exactly how they would affect people.

So in other words, no one knows how much most of us young Southern California homeowners are about to get screwed. THAT is something you oughta play up.

It's not enough, by the way, that my generation was screwed over by Prop 13 (you know, the California law that means I pay triple the taxes on my little shack than many folks do on their Hancock Park mansions) -- now our mortgage deduction lifeline is threatened as well.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Program Advisory: SoCal Connected Looks at the Housing Market



Tonight's edition of KCET's "SoCal Connected" program looks at whether or not the Southern California housing market has turned a corner. The episode, "Time to Buy?," airs Thursday night at 8 p.m.

From the station's press release:

SoCal Connected discovers that one positive sign is real estate prices now seem to be more in line with income levels. Those who could not buy when prices skyrocketed are now in a better position. But have prices bottomed out, or will they fall still further? Another issue is securing a mortgage. Although at record lows, mortgages are not as easy to obtain as a couple of years ago.

The program also looks at the debate over what to do with people living in their cars on Venice streets. And Patt the Hatt asks whether we have ourselves to blame for the state's bankruptcy. (From the early results of our Wednesday poll, it looks like a lot of you say "yes.")

Saturday, October 4, 2008

The Inland Empire's Less Flattering New Nickname: "Foreclosure Alley"



New KCET series "SoCal Connected" travels to the Inland Empire -- or as the show has redubbed it, "Foreclosure Alley" -- to document the impact of the current housing mess. It ain't pretty. Correspondent Lisa Ling writes:

SoCal Connected tracked down some surreal sights associated with the crisis - a company that specializes in removing whatever people leave behind in their foreclosed homes. The process is called a “trashout” - a term the company came up with because it perfectly describes what happens. Everything that’s left is dumped in a trailer and taken to the landfill.

Then there’s the guy who started a business to spray-paint dead lawns. That’s right. He paints brown lawns green. We also tag along with a couple of code enforcement officers who are spending more and more of their time having to drain slimy, abandoned pools.

Have we hit bottom yet? What will "bottom" feel like?