Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Albemarle County Investigates A Community Land Trust





A Community Land Trust may be one strategy in the ongoing effort to provide affordable housing in a tight market.

Of course, it ought not be the only one.

Some Albemarle County residents have been investigating the possibility of starting a land trust here.

Only 200 such programs exist elsewhere - none in Virginia.

Under this concept, the trust - operating as a non-profit corporation - would sell housing at an affordable price to those who qualify.

Financial qualification, according to current thinking would be a family income of $39,900 to $53,200.

The trust would have a perpetual lease on the land.

Homeowners could resell their houses, but would have to sell back to the trust or to a private buyer at an affordable price.

The arrangement seeks to keep its housing at low cost by tackling a basic problem in markets such as Albemarle-Charlottesville’s.

By perpetually owning the land on which a home sits and pulling it from the housing market, the trust would ensure that the land would never be subject to rising prices based on scarcity and speculation.

Land for homebuilding is increasingly hard to come by. Scarcity alone drives up prices; but an added element is speculation, in which buyers with ready money enter the market with the intent to sell at a handsome profit in the future.

Such buyers can easily snap up real estate, while residents with lower incomes never have enough to get into the game.

The land trust mechanism would prevent buyers from making a maximum profit when they sell, but foregoing that future income might be an acceptable trade-off for them.

Many supports must be in place before the idea can work here.

Actually getting the trust up and running could take a while.

Meanwhile, existing affordable housing programs continue to deserve support.

Several non-profits already have carved out their niche here.

Alleviating the affordable housing shortage will continue to require a variety of strategies, of which the land trust would be only one.

One of Albemarle County’s strategies is to persuade developers to build affordable housing as part of their projects.

But at around $190,000, the general price of those units is still considered unaffordable by some.

Plus, the program has been criticized by many because the units need not remain at the “affordable” level but may jump to market prices on subsequent sales.

The ultimate affordable housing strategy would be for Albemarle - and to an extent Charlottesville - to make land more affordable and development less restrictive.

Especially in the county, government policies are considered by many as too limiting, and the red tape for development approval as too burdensome.

Land policies add to the cost of the land, and development restrictions add to the cost of building: The result, naturally, is higher housing costs.

A many-sided solution for affordable housing is clearly needed. That may include non-profits trusts - but it definitely demands wise government

Monday, October 8, 2007

Hunter Craig Buys More On The Corner...




Hunter just purchased the Chancellor Building, home to Corner landmarks including The White Spot, Freeman-Victorius frame shop and the Corner Market.

He already owns the Eljo's and former Jaberwoke ( now called Three) which he purchased in 2006.

What's going to happen to this area of UVA'S HISTORY?

Well, I have total faith in what he'll do. He's got a lot of UVA grads money behind him who only want the best for this area of Charlottesville.

I hope he cleans it up and brings in some fun new, hip stores like in Georgetown DC.

Right now the Corner is bloody boring!

Star Hill is going to reve up the music so let's hope Hunter does it right.

Hell, he's got so much on his plate with Biscut Run/ Fox Ridge I hope the rich old boy doesn't have a heart attack.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Charlottesville Homes Turn Green




As dwindling natural resources get more expensive and harder to find, builders of Charlottesville new homes are getting very GREEN!

One notable new product is a combination of thin steel and styrofoam know as " Thermasteel."

The energy savings in Thermasteel is amazing.

The house is like a styrofoam cooler.

When it snows, the snow doesn't even melt on your roof. That's because there's such little heat escaping.

90% of American homes are stick built.

We need to have structurally sound homes that are light on natural resources and heavy on energy savings, says Charlottesville realtor, Toby Beavers.

Only a few new Charlottesville homes offer this.

One new Charlottesville development, Belvedere, will be totally green.

New Bars In Belmont In Charlottesville

The great Mexican chef,Chef Alex Monteil of Cocina del Sol, has opened Brasserie Montiel & Cofee House. Adam Frazier is opening a new bar in Belmont called ? It's located at 824 Hinton Ave and joins these fabulous Belmont hangouts: Mas, Saxx, La Taza & Belmont BBQ. Who knows what it'll be... Here's a new video we made of Belmont in Charlottesville

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Fabulous new Charlottesville real estate





One of the most unique tracts of land in Albemarle county adjoining Farmington Country Club to the East & Ivy Creek to the West.


The property is truly a wildlife sanctuary with outstanding Blue Ridge Mountain views only five minutes from Charlottesville and the University of Virginia.


Road/trail system and extensive frontage on Ivy Creek.


The location says it all! Small compound with cottage, guest cottage with attached office/Studio. Live there while you build a Manor Home. Good pasture.


Additional acerage available.


Property subject to Conservation Easement with The Nature Conservancy.

UVA Museum 6th Century BC Italian Art Scandal



Problems for the University of Art Museum...

Two marble heads, three feet and three hands - called acroliths from the 6th century BC were apparently anonymously donated to the University with the condition "they not be publicized nor the identity of the donor revealed."

Now Sicily is saying they were illegally excavated in the late 1970s from Morgantina, an ancient Greek settlement in Sicily.
The heads are thought to be the goddesses Demeter and Persephone.

No one is sure if the acroliths are going back to Sicily as of Oct, 2007.






Wednesday, October 3, 2007

UVA Offers $5 To Behave When Drinking


Anheuser-Busch donated $2.5 million to UVA to establish the National Social Norms Institute.


And now UVA is giving $5 to students in bars who carry Blood Alcohol Concentartion cards to curb binge drinking.


I want mine!!

The Police are coming to Charlottesville November 6th.


John Paul Jones Arena



Housing sales in the Charlottesville real estate market fell 13.6% in July compared to a year ago.


Charlottesville is a buyers market!

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

The new rules of the credit crunch

Good-bye, easy money. Hello, credit squeeze.

If you haven't tried to borrow since the subprime chaos began, you'll find your friendly money bazaar a much more cautious place.

The lenders that in 2005 threw funds at anyone with a pulse have begun to insist on proof that borrowers have a prayer of paying them back.

Even if you have a high credit score and a flush bank account, you'll likely feel the difference. So you'd better get to know the new rules.

Mortgages

What's happening: Several species of exotic mortgages are headed for extinction, including the 2/28, the 3/27 and those requiring no proof of income, says Paul Haarman, vice president of Renaissance Mortgage Corp.

But the effects of the mess have extended beyond subprime.

According to the Federal Reserve, about one in seven banks has toughened home lending standards even for borrowers with good credit.

You'll find lenders stingier on appraisals, more persnickety on documentation and far less likely to finance 100 percent.

Also, at the high end, rates on the 30-year jumbo (over $417,000) jumped nearly a percentage point between June and September.

What to do: If you have an adjustable-rate mortgage, read your agreement to find out when your rate will reset, how high it will likely go and how high it could go.

If it's coming due and will end up above 7 percent, consider refinancing to a fixed rate. You'll need 10 percent equity and a credit score over 660.

Must buy? Get the best fixed rate you can (rates on a 30-year fixed are currently a sliver above 5/1 ARMs).

Obviously, this person isn't an investor or he would have given much better advice. I found this on the front pages of Yahoo.com around 10PM last night.

If this is the best they can come up with to help buyers find a house I only have one thing to say, "Yippee ki yeah Investors!"

Biscuit Run Development Approved

On Sep 13th, the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors approved developer Hunter Craig's 882 acre Biscuit Run Development.

A minimum of 3,100 new homes on the Albemarle property along Rt 20 South can be built.

Opponents called for more extensive environmental impact studies but the BOS voted unanimously to allow rezoning of the property.

But Craig's $41.15 million proffer offer ruled the day.

Albemarle BOS sees the develpment as a way to steer the thousands of people moving here into designated growth areas.

Albemarle County Family Tries To Build A 19,500 Sq Ft

Home on Turner Mountain in vy (where I live).

The neighbors heard the numerous chainsaws buzzing away and called the Albemarle County zoning inspectors & Piedmont Environmental Council.

A STOP WORK order was issued.

Turner Mountain allows homeowners a one time 1.7 acre clearage and since 1 acre was already cleared for the present house, the county said no.

Apparently the homeowners had prior approval but this was found to be a clerical error.

The average Turner Mountain home is cedar-sided, unobtrusive and back to nature.

The owners offered to throw a neighborhood party and asked that bygones be bygones.