New York Real Estate Blog: November 2007

Vincent, Is it too late or too early to "Winterize" my home?

 Absolutely NOT!!

When I first moved into my house I was oblivious to the fact that homes need to be winterized. As a result my first winter there was a very cold one and my heating cost went thru the roof. I was able to do a few things here and there but the major things could not be done as they require to be done on the outside of the house.

First thing is first. You should have a professional home inspection performed.

A home inspection will look at the systems that make up the building such as:

  • Structural elements, foundation, framing etc
  • Plumbing systems
  • Roofing
  • Electrical systems
  • Cosmetic condition, paint, siding etc.

If you are buying a home, you need to know exactly what you are getting. A home inspection, performed by a professional home inspector, will reveal any hidden problems with the home so that they may be addressed BEFORE the deal is closed.

If you are selling a home, you want to know about such potential hidden problems before your house goes on the market. Almost all contracts include the condition that the contract is contingent upon completion of a satisfactory inspection. And most buyers are going to insist that the inspection be a professional home inspection, usually by an inspector they hire.

Old Man Winter is settling in for a long chilly season.

Outside you'll want to:

  •  Look for deteriorating finishes. Minor problems can be patched to preserve the wood. Put bigger jobs, such as scraping and refinishing painted or stained areas, on the calendar for next spring or early summer.
  • Caulk joints and minor cracks on exterior walls and siding. (pic to the right)
  • Store or cover outdoor furniture, toys and grill.
  • Purchase rock salt for melting snow and a shovel or snow blower if you don't already have one. Make sure you have the right kind of gas and oil on hand for your snow blower in the case of an unexpected snowstorm.
  • Drain and shut off sprinkler systems and other exterior water lines to avoid frozen and broken pipes. Leave all taps slightly open.
  • Insulate exterior spigots and other pipes that are subject to freezing but can't be drained or shut off.
  • Rake and compost leaves and garden debris, or put out for yard-waste pickup.
  • Clean storm drains, gutters and other drain pipes.
  • Check the foundation for proper drainage. To do this, spray yard with a hose to see if water runs away from the house. A little shoveling to reshape the earth next to the house may make the water run away from the foundation.
  • Make sure dirt or piles of wood don't come into contact with or touch siding, inviting termites and carpenter ants into the house.
  • Seal driveway and walkway cracks, if needed, before ground freezes regularly.
  • Inspect the roof for loose, damaged or missing pieces.
  • Check attic vent openings for nests or other blockages.

Here's what you'll want to do inside:

  •  Have your furnace system serviced to ensure it's working efficiently and not emitting carbon monoxide. (pic to the right)
  • Clean permanent furnace filters and replace paper or disposable filters.
  • Replace the batteries in smoke and carbon monoxide detectors.
  • If you have a fireplace, have your chimney swept thoroughly. It should be cleaned before the soot build up reaches one-fourth inch thickness inside the chimney flue.
  • Check your hot water heater for leaks and maintain proper temperature setting (120 degrees recommended by Department of Energy). On older water heaters with less insulation, for every 10 degrees Fahrenheit you lower the temperature, you save 6 percent of your water heating energy.
  • Check the attic to see if insulation needs to be added or replaced. This is the most significant area of heat loss in many homes, so it is also important to see that it has proper ventilation. Inadequate ventilation could lead to premature deterioration of the insulation materials. You may also need to check insulation in exterior walls, crawl spaces and along foundation walls.
  • Check all windows and doors for air leaks. Install storm windows and putty, caulk or add weather stripping as needed.
  • Check basement and cellars for seal cracks or leaks in walls and floor.
  • Make sure all vents are clean and operating properly.
  • Clean and vacuum baseboard heaters, heating ducts and vents.
  • Remove or winterize air conditioning units.

Before the temperatures dip too far south, follow these simple guidelines to winterize your home and save money on utilities.

To find the value of your home with a FREE, over-the-net Highest Price Analysis, please visit: http://www.newyorkmarketvalue.com/

"Jazz King's" Home is Now Museum in Corona Queens

 Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong was born in one of New Orleans' poorest areas in 1901. At the age of 16 he left New Orleans and joined his first band in search of stardom. Since the 1920s, Queens has seen the arrival of many jazz artists, including Armstrong, Fats Waller, Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday . He is credited for starting an influx of historic jazz musicians into the borough - including Dizzy Gillespie - who lived around the corner from Armstrong. By 1937, he was a world-famous musician. Louis "Satchmo" Armstrong moved to his house in Corona in 1937 and resided there until his death on July 6, 1971. He left an enduring legacy in his adopted neighborhood of Corona. He could have lived anywhere he wanted, but he chose to live like a regular guy in Corona, Queens. He was elected to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (under the category Early Influence)and was a charter inductee of the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1978. More than 30 years after his passing, the house where he lived with his wife Lucille still provides a shrine for Armstrong's legacy.

The house, which is a national historic landmark, offers daily tours that showcase many objects, like his wife Lucille's favorite Emilio Pucci dresses with psychedelic purple, black and white print, and the gold-plated bathroom decorated with floor-to-ceiling mirrors, which was once sought after by the Italian magazine Vogue for a photo shoot, according to tour guides at the museum. One of Armstrong's lasting legacies is the originality of his home, Most items in the house, from the furniture to the silver wallpaper in the bedroom to the Torah that sits in the living room, were owned by the Armstrongs.

Armstrong is still remembered by his neighbors for waiting his turn in line at the barbershop around the corner, going over to friends' houses for dinner and handing out dollar bills to children.   Armstrong is also known by a host of other nicknames, the most famous being "Satchmo". Armstrong loved the new name so much that he had it inscribed on at least two of his trumpets and had it printed on his personal stationery. Armstrong also appeared in over 30 movies and wrote two autobiographies.

Embittered by the treatment of blacks in his hometown of New Orleans, he chose to be buried in New York City.

Satchmo's Movies:

  • A Rhapsody in Black and Blue (1932)
  • Pennies from Heaven (1936)
  • Every Day's a Holiday (1937) 
  • Artists and Models (1937) 
  • Doctor Rhythm aka Dr. Rhythm (1938) 
  • Going Places (1939) 
  • Cabin in the Sky (1943) 
  • Atlantic City (1944) 
  • Jam Session (1944) 
  • Pillow to Post (1945) 
  • New Orleans (1947) 
  • Cowboy Cavalier (1948)
  • Outlaw Brand (1948) 
  • A Song is Born (1948) 
  • Je Suis de la Revue aka I'm in the Revue (1951) 
  • Here Comes the Groom (1951) 
  • Glory Alley (1952) 
  • The Glenn Miller Story (1954) 
  • Ford Star Jubilee: You're the Top (1956) 
  • High Society (1956) 
  • The Edsel Show (1957) 
  • The Five Pennies (1959) 
  • Die Nacht Vor Der Premiere (1959) 
  • The Beat Generation aka This Rebel Age (1959) 
  • Paris Blues (1961) 
  • When the Boys Meet the Girls (1965) 
  • A Man Called Adam (1966) 
  • Louis Armstrong (documentary 1968)
  • Hello, Dolly! (1969) 
  • Kid Punch Miller: 'Til the Butcher Cuts Him Down (1971) 

 

Satchmo's Personal Quotes:

  • "I never tried to prove nothing, just wanted to give a good show. My life has always been my music, it's always come first, but the music ain't worth nothing if you can't lay it on the public. The main thing is to live for that audience, 'cause what you're there for is to please the people."
  • "All music is folk music. I ain't never heard no horse sing a song."
  • What is jazz? Man, if you have to ask you'll never know.
  • "There's some folks, that, if they don't know, you can't tell 'em."
  • "If it wasn't for jazz, there wouldn't be no rock and roll."
  • "It sure feels good to be up there with those Beatles." (On being asked about his new number 1 song "Hello Dolly".)

The Louis Armstrong House is located at 34-56 107th St. in Corona. This picture to the right is the Armstrong residense and the Armstrong Museum. The guided tours of the home are on average around 40 to 45 minutes long. The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs assumed ownership of the House (a request from Lucille Armstrong in her will), and provided for Queens College to administer it. 

Diehard fans wanting to learn more about "Satchmo" can check out the Louis Armstrong Archives, which is housed at Queens College in Flushing. The archive is open to the public to listen to home-recorded tapes, read personal manuscripts, study sheet music, and view videos and photographs. To learn more or to arrange a group tour, call (718) 478-8274.

If you've got the time OR you're in the neighborhood... Check it out!!

Born: Aug 4, 1901 - New Orleans, LA
Died: Jul 6, 1971 - Queens, New York City, NY

 

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Queens Top (10) Ten Recommended Restaurants

 The diversity of the people of Queens is more evident in the borough's restaurants than anywhere else in Queens. We have some of the best cuisine in the city - just ask Zagat, the award-winning international guide to dining. Though some 93 restaurants from Queens are listed in the Zagat guide, these are the Top 10 for Queens, in terms of clicks on Zagat's Web site.

I hope you get a chance to find out why these restaurants are considered the "Best Cuisine in Queens".

Prudential Network of Homes will be celebrating our annual Christmas party at the Water's Edge on Saturday December 22nd, 2007. Great food, music, and dancing.

 

  1. Water's Edge
    44th Dr. & East River
    (Vernon Blvd.)
    (718) 482-0033
  2. Agnanti
    19-06 Ditmars Blvd.
    (19th St.)
    (718) 545-4554
  3. Trattoria L'incontro
    21-76 31st St.
    (Ditmars Blvd.)
    (718) 721-3532
  4. Sripraphai
    64-13 39th Ave.
    (bet. 64th & 65th Sts.)
    (718) 899-9599
  5. Malagueta
    25-35 36th Ave.
    (28th St.)
    (718) 937-4821
  6. Piccola Venezia
    42-01 28th Ave.
    (42nd St.)
    (718) 721-8470
  7. Island
    35-15 36th St.
    (bet. 35th & 36th Aves.)
    718-433-0690
  8. Sapori D'Ischia
    55-15 37th Ave.
    (56th St.)
    (718) 446-1500
  9. Ammos
    20-30 Steinway St.
    (bet. 20th Ave. & 20th Rd.)
    718-726-7900
  10. Demetris
    32-11 Broadway
    (bet. 32nd & 33rd Sts.)
    718-278-1877

To find the value of your home with a FREE, over-the-net home eval, please visit: http://www.newyorkmarketvalue.com/

SEARCH over 50,000 homes online for FREE and be the first to know about HOT NEW LISTINGS before other buyers do, please visit http://www.allnylistings.com/

"Respect at last" for Kew Gardens Movie Star

 Rodney Dangerfield attended and graduated from Richmond Hill H.S. in 1939 and lived in Kew Gardens on Austin St. and Lefferts Blvd. above the Old Bailey's Bar now the Austin Ale House which at one time was part of Richmond Hill.

Rodney "No Respect" Dangerfield began his career at the age of 15 when he started writing jokes. At 17 he started performing at amateur nights and at 19 he had two jobs, one as a comic who couldn't make a living, and the other as a singing waiter. Rodney would sing and people threw money at him. :-) 

He traveled the comedy circuit for ten years but reluctantly gave up showbiz for a more stable income. It wasn't until the age of 40 that Dangerfield made the decision to relaunch his career as a performer and comedy writer for the second time. He spent his days in a business office and his nights working in New York clubs. Not satisfied, Rodney opened his own club, the now famous Dangerfield's on First Avenue in Manhattan. The club was a huge success and so was Rodney. Even Richmond Hill H.S. Senior Proms were celebrated at his club. 
Rodney introduced many of today's comedy stars to television for the first time on his HBO shows which emanated from Dangerfield's, such as Tim Allen, Roseanne Barr, Jim Carrey, Jeff Foxworthy, Sam 
Kinison, Bob Saget, Jerry Seinfeld, Rita Rudner, Robert Townsend, Louie Anderson and others. 

Rodney Dangerfield's feature film credits include CADDYSHACK, EASY MONEY which he co-wrote, BACK TO SCHOOL (one of the first comedys to gross over $100 million), and Paramount's LADYBUGS. In contrast to his comedy roles, Rodney accepted a dramatic role offered to him by Oliver Stone for NATURAL BORN KILLERS. Critics praised his realistic portrayal as the "Father From Hell." 

Here's a list of the movies he was in:

  • The Projectionist (1970)
  • Caddyshack (1980)
  • Easy Money (1983)
  • Back To School (1986)
  • Ladybugs (1992)
  • Natural Born Killers (1994)
  • Meet Wally Sparks (1997)
  • The Godson (1998)
  • My 5 Wives (2000)
  • The 4th Tenor (2002)
  • Back By Midnight (2002)

Dangerfield also produced the animated feature musical ROVER DANGERFIELD for Warner Bros. Rodney not only provided the voice for Rover, but he also wrote the screenplay, co-composed the songs and served as Executive Producer. 

Dangerfield stars and co-wrote his latest film MEET WALLY SPARKS, a comedy released earlier in 1998 featuring Cindy Williams, Burt Reynolds, David Ogden Stiers, Michael Bolton, Tony Danza and others. 

Dangerfield's contributions to the world of comedy have not been overlooked. In 1981, Dangerfield won a Grammy Award for his comedy album named No Respect and was the recipient of the Lifetime Creative Achievement Award from the 1994 American Comedy Awards. Rodney's famous trademark white shirt and red tie are on permanent display at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C. Aaahhh....respect at last! 

Besides being a Las Vegas headliner for over 20 years, Dangerfield has also made countless appearances on talk and television variety shows. 

His first big break was The Ed Sullivan Show which he did 16 times. Rodney also appeared on This Is Your Life, What's My Line, The Dean Martin Show, Saturday Night Live, and a record 70 times on the Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Recently, Rodney has appeared on Mad T.V., Suddenly  Susan, LateNight with Conan O' Brien, The Single Guy and the Tonight Show with Jay Leno. 

Born on November 22, 1921-  
Died October 5, 2004

Real Name Jacob Cohen 

To find the value of your home with a FREE, over-the-net home eval, please visit: http://www.newyorkmarketvalue.com/

Queens Homeowner - Winter Checklist (Winterize your home NOW)

New York winters can be very harsh. It pays to be prepared for the inevitable. Remember all of my Queens, New York homeowners... an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of the cure!!

I've compiled this winter checklist JUST FOR YOU.

Inside you'll want to:

  • Check furnace air filters each month during the heating season. Clean or replace as necessary.
  • Consult your owner's manual for your hot water heater.  Most recommend draining a dishpan full of water from the clean-out valve at the bottom of your hot water tank to control sediment build-up to maintain its efficiency.
  • Check all fire extinguishers. Recharge or replace as necessary.
  • Review family's escape and preparedness plans for fire and natural disaster. 
  • Check locks on doors and windows to ensure they are functioning properly.
  • Make sure the basement floor drain's trap contains water.  Refill as necessary.
  • Throughout the winter, watch for excessive moisture build-up.  Take necessary action whenever excessive build-up exists to prevent future maintenance and health problems. 
  • Test all faucets and monitor for signs of dripping.  Change washers as needed. 
  • Check and clean drains in sinks, bathtubs, shower stalls and dishwasher.
  • Test all plumbing shut-off valves to ensure they are in proper working order.
  • Monitor windows and doors for cold air leaks or ice accumulation. Note any problems for  repair or replacement in the spring.
  • Check attic for frost accumulation.  If there is excessive accumulation, it may require repair. 
  • Before installing indoor or outdoor seasonal lights, check all electrical cords, plugs and outlets for signs of wear.  Test cords and plugs, if they feel warm to the touch or show any signs of wear, replace immediately.

Outside you'll want to:

  • Test all outside lights and timers to make sure they are functioning properly.
  • Before installing indoor or outdoor seasonal lights, check all electrical cords, plugs and outlets for signs of wear.  Test cords and plugs, if they feel warm to the touch or show any signs of wear, replace immediately.
  • Check roof for ice dams or icicles.  If there is excessive staining or frost on the roof's underside or excessive ice accumulation on the roof itself, it may require repair. 

I hope this list has been of value to you and will help you to keep warmer during the months ahead.

To find the value of your home with a FREE, over-the-net home eval, please visit: http://www.newyorkmarketvalue.com/

Vincent, Should I re-tile the bathroom before showing it to your buyers?

First off they're not my buyers, they're your buyers. While I agree that tile isn't cheap, there may be a way it that showroom shine and add some money to your bottom line.

Whether you're working on your home's seasonal deep clean, or planning to entertain guests, you know the amount of time that goes into cleaning your bathroom.  And if you have a tile bathroom, you know how much elbow grease and time go into scrubbing and polishing.

But why spend all that time and back breaking effort if it can be easier?  Here are a few tips that can help make your scrub down much less painful, and truly showcase the elegance of your bathroom tile.

  1. Steam can loosen up even the most stubborn dirt and grime.  Try running a hot shower for a few minutes before tackling the tile.  Good old elbow grease can get any job done, but there's no reason to work yourself to the bone.
  2. Ammonia is your comrade in the war on mold, mildew, and bacteria.  Adding a little bit to some soap and water will help knock their foul presence out of the picture and keep them out, while giving your tile a nice polished look.
  3. After a good scrub down, a little bit of wax and a quick buff with a hand towel will have your tile glistening, and will also shield it from future scuffs and mucky buildup.

Tile isn't cheap, and isn't always the easiest to maintain.  These tips can help you protect your investment and turn your bathroom into a work of art.  Try them out next time you tackle your tile, and see what a difference they make!

So just remember all of my Queens, NY homeowners... You'll never get a second chance to make a first impression. So let's make every showing count!!

To find the value of your home with a FREE, over-the-net home eval, please visit: http://www.newyorkmarketvalue.com/