Archives for June 2012

Keeping Your House Cool During the Warm Months

basset_hound_coolingThe weather is warming up, which means it’s time to ditch the old box-fan-in-the-window set up and find more energy-efficient ways to cool off. You don’t want to have to resort to turning on the air conditioner to cut out the swelter factor — not only is running the A/C costly, but it can also be environmentally unfriendly if the system is inefficient.

Still, you can’t ignore the inevitable much longer — hot weather is right around the corner. There are a few easy check-ups and inexpensive changes you can implement to make your place more summer-friendly and wallet-friendly.

Weatherstrip your windows and doors.

This is a simple and inexpensive way to keep your house at a comfortable temperature. Cool air escapes and warm air leeches in if you’ve got windows and doors that don’t close all the way. Put rubber weatherstripping on the inside of stubborn windowpanes or metal door jambs, where the door meets the floor. Your rooms will stay cooler and you’ll save the money you spent on the upgrade within one year.

Plant trees and shrubs close to the house.

Consider this part of nature’s insulation plan. If you plant leafy shrubbery around the foundation of your home, you’ll have a layer of protection between your home and the sun’s rays. Your foundation, as it heats up, can have a huge impact on the temperature inside your home. Additionally, if your home doesn’t currently have the benefit of sitting underneath tree cover, you’re losing the armor of shade. Plant trees near east- and west-facing windows to ensure your leafy canopy protects your home from both sunrise and sunset.

Practice natural ventilation.

Mother Nature is already doing all the work – you just need to harness it. Open up the windows and doors on opposite ends of the house, a maneuver that will create a natural vacuum of cooler breezes through your home. If you have a second floor, opening the windows upstairs will not only push out the warmest air, but it will pull in more air through the downstairs windows, as well.

Keep on top of your home maintenance.

The little things might mean big changes to your bottom line. If you do decide to run your air conditioner, change out the filter to ensure your A/C isn’t working overtime for minimal output. Change the direction of your ceiling fans from their clockwise winter settings, so they blow cool air downward. Check the surroundings of your thermostat to make sure there aren’t lights or TV sets close to it. The heat these electrical items omit can cause your thermostat to get an incorrect read, resulting in your A/C running when it’s not necessary.

Many of these activities can be done in a weekend, and after making some simple changes around your homestead, you might have years of energy efficiency ahead of you. At the very least, perhaps you’ll get in the habit of turning on the A/C less, and at the most, you might get a lifetime’s enjoyment out of the new trees planted outside your home. Either way, you’ll be freeing up money in your pocket.

via: Mint.com

First-Time Buyers Find Housing Market Tough

homedreamFirst-time home buyers are increasingly saying they are getting shut out of the market, losing out on bids on for-sale homes to investors who are willing to pay all cash or home buyers willing to pay larger down payments.

"I thought it was a buyer’s market ripe for the picking," says Washington, D.C., home buyer Jason Leggett, 25. Leggett says he lost out on six previous bidding wars for a home before finally snagging a home after beating out four other bidders.

More than 53 percent of first-time home buyers use Federal Housing Administration loans, which have a minimum down payment of 3.5 percent. But FHA loans can sometimes require home sellers to do home repairs, so sellers may be more tempted to consider other offers they receive than FHA offers, real estate professionals report. FHA loans also can take buyers longer to close than buyers coming with all-cash or conventional loans. 

Choosing A Home"FHA buyers are getting pushed to the bottom of the pile," Brian Cross with Keller Williams Realty in the Phoenix area, told USA Today. "It’s much different than a year ago."

First-time home buyers generally account for a big bulk of the market, about 40 to 45 percent, according to the National Association of REALTORS®. More recently, they’ve made up about 35 percent of home buyers. The tightening of credit by many banks continues to keep many out, says Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist.

Source: “Housing Isn’t a Buyer’s Market for Many First-Timers,” USA Today

Entering the Fourth Phase of the US Housing Recovery by Lennox Scott

real-estate-marketFive years ago, the U.S. government took unprecedented measures to end the subprime mortgage crisis. Since that time we have seen the rolling aftermath. Underwater home owners, short sales, and foreclosures cast a dark shadow over the market. The federal government and the real estate industry have been focused on three pressing issues since then:

· Helping distressed owners stay in their homes.

· Moving the housing recovery and US economy forward.

· Creating an environment for a sustainable housing market.

Many strategies have been attempted since the financial meltdown to turn real estate around. The creation of the FHFA (Federal Housing Finance Agency) and its conservatorship of government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ensured a flow of capital to the housing market. The home buyer tax credit, loan-modification refinancing reforms, and the efforts to streamline the short-sale process have given buyers and sellers the tools they need to navigate their way through the tumultuous market.

We are now on the road to not just a temporary recovery but a sustainable recovery. What follows is an explanation of how we got here and how to continue down a positive, sustainable path.

Phase 1, 2009 to Spring 2010: The Home Buyer Tax Credit

The home buyer tax credit worked. It helped bring buyers into the marketplace at a critical time, in particular first-time home buyers. This phase of the recovery helped slow the steadily declining US economy. By the fall of 2008, the Consumer Confidence Index had dropped from 117 (100 being a healthy number) to a staggering 25. We have since seen the Consumer Confidence Index return towards the 70s.

property-investmentPhase 2, Fall 2010 to Fall 2011: Residential Investors

Around November 2010, everything began to come together to create an opportunity for investors. The Federal Reserve purchased mortgage-backed securities to lower interest rates. This, combined with the lower adjusted prices, created a positive cash flow possibility for investors. They came out in force, snapping up a great deal of the glut of homes on the market with purchases of foreclosures and short sales. This helped to reduce inventory and stabilize values of homes below the median price-points in many areas.

Phase 3, Fall 2011 to Present: Surge of Local Home Buyers

Moving forward to November 2011, the backlog of local home buyers started coming forward to purchase homes, taking advantage of the historically low interest rates and lower adjusted prices. In particular, the low interest rates pushed the National Housing Affordability Index to the highest level since recording began.

This surge in local home buying caused a chain reaction of sales up through various price points, which also reduced inventory in the mid-price ranges. In certain markets with strong job growth, sales activity also increased in the upper end, supported by the rise of high-balance loan limit financing.

homedreamPhase 4, Creating a Sustainable Housing Market

In the coming years years, the residential housing market will be entering the fourth phase of its recovery — sustainability. The fourth phase will feature a return of the first-time home buyers. The group leading the charge in this sustainability phase will be the “echo boom” generation — also known as Millennials — who are now 17-31. A recently released Homebuyer Poll from TD Bank, reveals that the vast majority, 84 percent, of the Millennial generation intend to buy a home.

To help this generation of home buyers achieve the American Dream and create a sustainable housing market, we must create a healthy environment for them. This is a critical year for the future of housing. Several major decisions will be discussed and decided within the next year that will set the foundation for a sustainable housing market. Qualified residential mortgage (QRM) regulators have recommended, among other things, that a 20 percent down payment be required for a home purchase. This could devastate the market by excluding up to 30 percent of potential home buyers.

Reform and replace Fannie and Freddie with a transparent federal government support system necessary for keeping a secondary home finance securities market to attract world investors to purchase U.S. mortgage securities. The FHA’s 3.5 percent core down payment financing, USDA rural home financing, and high-balance loan limits for credit worthy home buyers are solid programs that should be continued and made permanent in order to have a sustainable housing market after the surge of backlogged local home buyers and residential investors pass through the market.

While the housing market continues to gain strength, we must maintain the solid programs and tax incentives we currently have in place in order to build a sustainable foundation for the future of housing.

BY:Lennox

Builder confidence levels at highest since May 2007

construction worker Builder confidence levels at highest since May 2007

Builders in the West and Midwest are feeling more confident, while the South and Northeast remain less sure, as their confidence levels dip.

Home builders’ confidence edges up slightly

According to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)’ Housing Market Index (HMI) report, builder confidence rose one point to 29 in the month of June, the highest level since May of 2007, well before the housing market took a nosedive. The NAHB notes that only when the index rises above 50 points to more builders view sales conditions as good than as poor.

“This month’s modest uptick in builder confidence comes on the heels of a four-point gain in May and is reflective of the continued, gradual improvement we are seeing in many individual housing markets as more buyers decide to take advantage of today’s low prices and interest rates,” said Barry Rutenberg, chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) and a home builder from Gainesville, Fla.

“While the June HMI is in keeping with our forecast for gradually improving single-family home sales this year, recent economic reports that have shown some weakening in the pace of recovery likely factored into the marginal gain,” said NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “In addition, builders across the country continue to report that overly tight lending conditions and inaccurate appraisals are major obstacles to completing sales at this time.”

Confidence measurements varied

Confidence regarding current sales conditions rose two points in June to 32, their highest level since April of 2007, while confidence in sales expectations for the next six months and traffic of prospective buyers held unchanged at 34 and 23, respectively.

Regionally, the HMI results were mixed in June, with two areas of the country posting gains and two posting declines. The Midwest registered a five-point gain to 31 and the West registered a four-point gain to 33, while the Northeast and South each posted two-point declines, to 29 and 26, respectively.

[via]

Pictograms that rock

beatles

Pictogram rock posters provide a visual summary of legendary music acts like The Beatles, Bob Dylan, and David Bowie. Viktor Hertz, the man behind the inventive prints, explains his work:

This is my most ambitious, and maybe also the best, personal work I’ve done so far. I decided to pick a few bands and artists from the rock genre and make pictogram posters for them. Instead of just putting one single pictogram in each poster, like in my previous ‘Pictogram music posters’, I made as many as I could possibly come up with for each artist, and jammed them into one single poster. There is a total of 234 song pictograms in these posters. I started this project Jan 15th 2012, so I’ve been working on this for about five months. I am really happy and proud to be able to present them now.

Full collection at Behance.

A world without the internet [infographic]

World without Internet
Via: OnlineEducation.net

The 21st Century Dad

FathersDayInfo

The Truth About Millennials

TheTruthAboutMillennials

Extraordinary Photo Collection Of Unusual Piano Designs

Widely used in classical and jazz music for solo performances, ensemble use, chamber music and accompaniment, piano is one of the most popular instruments in the world. Although not portable and often expensive, the piano’s versatility and ubiquity have made it one of the world’s most familiar musical instruments. The piano has evolved over the last few centuries. Today, one can find customized pianos and piano mods to suit every taste possible right from the aristocratic bureaucrat to the hardened geek. This collection represent you the most creative, stylish and definitely unusual pianos from all the world. These pianos were created by some famous design studios, sometimes in tandem with instrumental manufacturers. Some of them exist on one exemplar. Some of them are available in limited edition and many of them cost more than $100,000. Check them out.

Notice the hockey rink in the middle?

IMAGE SOURCES Copyright @ jungle magazine