RAPB's Blog

RAPB's Blog

  //  

Filed under

florida real estate

See all posts on posterous with this tag »
Dec 22 / 3:06pm

Get inspired by the 20 most popular kitchens on Houzz in 2011

In 2011, we saw a lot of kitchens that played with color and texture in textiles and tile. Designers got creative with storage solutions and working with small spaces. Kitchens as part of great rooms were popular, too. Bold light fixtures were a must, but simple and classic cabinetry was still present in every kitchen style. Take a look at Houzzers' favorite kitchen photos, then tell us: Which is your favorite?

See Houzz favorites from last year: The Top Kitchens of 2010

1. This New York kitchen was added to many ideabooks for its unique mix of texture and color. Matte gray cabinetry, industrial light fixtures, maple work surfaces, and a steel and exposed wood drop-down table all play into a natural color palette, while classic Kartell Mademoiselle Chairs add a pop of color and pattern.
2. People are still loving black-and-white kitchens. A black island adds drama here, without becoming too overpowering, while classic white subway tile and modern pendant lights keep the space looking fresh.
3. There are tons of great built-in storage ideas in this adorable seaside kitchen. The dog dish nook is an especially clever storage solution that keeps dog dishes out of the way and prevents your puppies from knocking over their food! The dog drawer bones above hold treats and food, and labeled deep drawers to the right of the island are packed with treats for these lucky pups' owners.
4. Multipurpose rooms that are open, flexible, and functional were all the rage this year. Having an open kitchen and dining room is a great way to combine two spaces that serve similar functions, and makes for a perfect entertaining space, too.
5. The arched entryway and display cabinets are what drew readers to this kitchen. Glass doors on either side of cabinetry lets light come through. Modern pot racks add more storage and enhance the design of this kitchen.
6. The glass pendants above the sleek island in this modern kitchen caught the eye of many Houzz users. A stunning palette of black, white, gray and navy combine in rich finishes and textures to create a beautiful and bold space.
7. While we saw fewer of these this year, all-white kitchens are still on many wish lists. We love the clean look of the off-white subway tile in this kitchen, which makes the bright white cabinetry and trim stand out.
8. Smart storage solutions drew Houzz users to this classic East Coast kitchen. The pull-out pantry has an incredible amount of storage and tucks away with ease. It's a great solution for anyone who doesn't have enough space to build out a walk-in pantry.
9. Iridescent backsplash tiles give this kitchen a little bit of glamour to this simple kitchen. A mix of modern and traditional finishes gives it a unique look people fell in love with.
10. This kitchen combines several traditional elements subtle enough to keep the space still looking fresh and current. Wood surfaces warm up the space, and readers loved the sage-green subway tile backsplash.
11. Houzz users were enchanted by the soothing gray and white tones in this kitchen — the intricately tiled backsplash immediately catches the eye. However, what our readers really loved was the open shelving above the sink. It's an easy solution for a little extra kitchen storage, and allows the kitchen to still feel open and light.
12. We saw a lot of beautiful butcher block islands this year, just like the one in this kitchen that made the top-20 list. Not only is this a functional countertop surface, but it'll wear wonderfully with age. We love how it warms up this space and contrasts with the white cabinetry and black counters.
13. Readers were loving industrial pendants in every style of kitchen this year. We saw photos of these pendants in modern, traditional, and contemporary kitchens all over the world. This modern kitchen in Canada used three of these pendants to illuminate the island's white countertop. A black-and-gray mosaic tiled backsplash adds a sense of pattern and texture to contrast with the streamlined cabinetry.
14. Here, a similar style of pendant is used in a classically designed white kitchen. Houzz readers loved the contrast of the white subway tile backsplash and white marble counters, as well as the handy island sink.
15. Many of the same details from the previous kitchen are integrated into this space, but with a much more traditional touch. The coffered ceilings were a huge hit with Houzz readers, as well as the custom wood hood and ornately carved mantle.
16. Here's another open kitchen that Houzz users loved. The modern style of this kitchen and built-in dining area is minimalistic, but still cozy. Houzz users loved the use of textiles int his space, and the warm wood grain.
17. This all-white kitchen has a classic look with a slightly feminine style people love. The combination of the paneled cabinetry, marble counters, and classic pendants create a tasteful and restrained look.
18. Sometimes modern kitchens can come across as cold, but readers love this warm twist on minimalistic modern style. A Carrara marble backsplash and counters are warmed up with chocolate brown cabinetry and rustic-looking iron and wood barstools.
19. The show-stopping light fixture in this space made it a must-see for Houzz users. The dramatic chandelier makes a bold statement, and stands out agains the clean, black cabinetry.
20. The exposed wood beams in this kitchen caught the eyes of Houzz users browsing for kitchen inspiration. The enormous 12-foot granite island is the ideal place for food prep, and has plenty of space for entertaining purposes.

Have your say: Which of these top kitchens is your favorite?

More: The Top Kitchens of 2010

See the all-time most popular kitchen photos on Houzz

Aug 26 / 9:40am

Realtor® Eric Sain of RAPB Selected for NAR Leadership Academy Class of 2012

Posted by email 

REALTORS® From Eleven States and Brazil Accepted Into Challenging Six-Month Program

 

CHICAGO (Date) – Seventeen REALTORS® who have demonstrated personal and professional success in their respective local markets recently were selected to participate in the 2012 class of the National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) Leadership Academy, an initiative designed to nurture and inspire new leaders in the real estate industry.

              The 2012 Leadership Academy class is comprised of REALTORS® from 11 states, and our first ever international participant from Southern Brazil. The participants will gain and expand upon existing leadership skills and abilities while learning more about NAR as the voice for real estate.

Academy participants, who had to undergo an application and interview process conducted by the Academy Advisory Board, will undergo a challenging series of team-building exercises and workshops scheduled over six months.

Since the Academy was formed in 2008, over 100 REALTORS® have graduated and many advance to serve in volunteer leadership positions within their respective state and local associations, as well as within NAR.

These REALTORS® were selected for the 2012 Class:

  • Eric Sain, GRI from Palm Beach, FL
  • Tray E. Bates, CCIM, SIOR,  from Corpus Christi, TX 
  • J. Russell Boyce, CRS, GRI, from White Plains, MD 
  • Nikki Jean Boyd, ABR, GRI, PMN, from Twin Falls, ID 
  • Jennifer Branchini, CRS, GRI, SRES, from Pleasanton, CA 
  • Brett C. Brown, ABR, CIPS, CRB, CRS,  GRI, RSPS, ePRO from Naples, FL 
  • Alexander R. Chaparro from Chicago, IL 
  • Brian Copeland, ABR, CRS from Nashville, TN 
  • Scott Lalli, CRS from Kaysville, UT 
  • Kaki Lybbert, CRS from Denton, TX 
  • Heather G. Ozur from La Quinta, CA 
  • Gary J. Reggish, CRS, SFR from Novi, MI 
  • Alessandro Ricardo Stüpp, Blumenau, Santa Catarina, Brazil  
  • Tamara Suminski from Redondo Beach, CA 
  • Linda J. Trevor, ABR, CRS, PMN, SFR, ePRO from Cary, NC
  • Duane “Dewey” Uhlir from Fargo, ND 
  • Karen Valentine-Pond from Laramie, WY 

 

 The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing more than 1.1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.

 

 

Aug 24 / 1:50pm

Notice to Realtors

Posted by email 

RAPB has received a letter from Twin Lakes South Condominium Association in Stuart, Florida concerning proper interviews for new residents and or/renters. Please be aware, that any client or customer preparing to buy or rent in Twin Lakes South, must go through the interview process before occupancy. If you should have any questions regarding this matter, please call Donna M. DeVries, President  of Twin Lake South Condominium Association at 772-283-6099


 

Jun 17 / 12:59pm

Timely, local real estate data trumps national reports | Inman News

Timely, local real estate data trumps national reports

Perspective: A call for more useful real estate statistics

By David Charron, Tuesday, June 14, 2011.

Inman News™

Broad housing market reports are a dime a dozen these days, and if you ask me, that's a good approximation of their worth. Markets are sliced and diced and compared across the board, drawing multiple -- and often conflicting -- conclusions with shaky, obsolete data. The market's up, or maybe it's down. It's good, it's bad, and it's confusing.

For most people, even with access to all this information the results are more inconsistent than ever, often dated and out of context. But they don't have to be.

Timely and accurate information, provided on a local level with a real-world perspective, is the real estate market's most important commodity -- and the ability of the public, government, financial institutions, investors and real estate professionals to make informed decisions on local housing markets is the cornerstone of an eventual housing recovery.

Isn't it time we stop trying to drive by, looking in the rear-view mirror, and insist on seeing just the facts, clearly, as they unfold?

Article continues below

Considering the critical role that real estate statistics play in just about every housing-related decision, it is time for our industry to rally around better data. We owe it to ourselves, our clients and our profession to insist on timeliness and clarity while delving into the motivations and methodologies of every metric we disseminate.

The most recent Case-Shiller Home Price Index of May 31 is a perfect example: It noted, of all the U.S. markets it tracks, the Washington, D.C., metro area as the only market to experience an increase in housing prices for the first quarter of 2011.

While this index may be useful for Wall Street, it hardly constitutes breaking news. Improving market conditions were reported three weeks earlier in an index produced by an MRIS subsidiary.

Metric discrepancies are about more than selling products or securing a reputation in the marketplace -- they go to the heart of how we think about information. The one real estate mantra that has remained unequivocally true through some of the most tumultuous years in the history of our profession is that all real estate is local.

By focusing on broad market-to-market comparisons instead of individual markets, we undercut our value as real estate professionals. Instead of chasing fleeting affirmations that change day in and day out, we should ensure that real estate professionals know how to read and apply local data.

Let's focus more on whether single-family homes or condos are more prevalent in a single area, the variance of seasonal market shifts, or the changes in sales activity that often precede major trends.

Let's talk about the facts as they stand today and refrain from basing decisions on reports that are already five to seven months behind the market when they hit newsstands.

We're never going to move forward as a profession by basing decisions on old data, and we'll never overcome paralysis if we compare our local markets to every other market in the country without considering the context of local driving forces.

Most people won't buy stocks today based solely on six-month-old research, nor will they decide what to wear today based on the average temperature in New York. Why don't the same principles apply to real estate?

David Charron is president and CEO of MRIS, the largest multiple listing service in the nation. MRIS facilitates more than $100 million a day in real estate transactions in the mid-Atlantic region.

Contact Inman News:
Email

Email

Letter to the Editor

Letter to the Editor

Copyright 2011 Inman News

All rights reserved. This content may not be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, in part or in whole, without written permission of Inman News. Use of this content without permission is a violation of federal copyright law.

The data David is referring to is exactly what RAPB offers our members. We have monthly statistics on sales/listings/foreclosures and other information, broken down by city. RAPB publishes this information monthly and you can find an archive of this data on our website at www.rapb.com.

Jul 13 / 9:24am

Congress’ flood insurance lapse strands residents, home sales

BOCA RATON, Fla. – June 28, 2010 – Real estate broker Jess Acevedo expected a good month in June with the first-time homebuyer credit about to expire, but now 14 deals he carefully shepherded to closing are on hold because Congress has failed to reauthorize the National Flood Insurance Program.

Among them is a Boca Raton couple with three children who were set to close Friday on a four-bedroom, two-story foreclosure. Now they are stuck in limbo, worried that their tax-credit window is closing, Acevedo said.

“They’re all frustrated,” he said.

With hurricane season upon us, it could not be a worse time of year for Floridians to be without flood insurance.

The National Association of Realtors estimates that for each day Congress delays, 1,400 sales are tied up. In Florida, it’s affecting about 175 deals a day.

The flood insurance program expired May 31. Since then, some lenders have been willing to accept binders, or promises, to write flood insurance policies as soon as Congress reauthorizes the program. But others are refusing to allow deals to go through without insurance.

U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch, D-Boca Raton, who voted to reauthorize the program, said Congress’ delay has brought an already weak real estate market to a “total standstill.”

“To say that Florida’s economy is in a fragile state would be an understatement,” he said. “In this uniquely perilous economy, if someone is prepared to buy a new home, they should be able to buy it.”

The halt in flood insurance isn’t affecting only homebuyers.

People living in flood zones whose insurance has expired also are beginning to panic.

“It’s hurricane season, and millions of people are going to be affected if there’s a big hurricane,” said Roger Bash of Palm Beach Gardens.

Bash paid to have his insurance renewed more than a month ago. Last week he got a letter from Allstate saying the company could not write a new policy. All he can think about are the Louisiana residents caught without flood insurance when Hurricane Katrina roared in.

He wonders how Congress could allow so many citizens to be at risk.

Between September 2003 and September 2004, when four hurricanes slammed the state, Florida residents filed 21,758 flood insurance claims.

The National Flood Insurance Program was jammed into a controversial $110 billion jobs package designed to extend unemployment benefits. House members stripped the insurance provision into a separate bill and passed it this week. But senators, who shot down the jobs bill, left for the weekend without taking up the insurance bill.

Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty has called Congress’ delay “irresponsible.”

Bill Richardson, president-elect of the Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches, is one of the lucky ones who said his business hasn’t slowed because of the lack of flood insurance. He’s seen plenty of commercial real estate deals go through with a binder.

About 1,000 deals slated to close in June in Palm Beach County will need flood insurance or a binder, Richardson said.

And if Congress doesn’t act soon, he expects more lenders could balk and refuse to accept binders.

“There are a lot of deals on the table,” he said.

Copyright © 2010 The Palm Beach Post, Fla., Laura Green. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.