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Showing posts from January, 2019

NEW LISTING! 120 Marview Way, San Francisco - Contemporary 4BD/4BA Luxurious Renovated Detached Home in MidTerrace

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Contemporary Four Bedroom Four Bath Luxurious Renovated Detached Home in Midtown Terrace. This meticulously reimagined home offers a bright open Chef’s kitchen, a large quartz island, Bertazonni stove, Grohe fixtures and wood burning fireplace. Stylish design & finishes complete with hardwood floors, LED recessed lights, skylights, glass railing & double pane windows. A highly desirable layout consists of a spacious master bedroom overlooking beautiful greenery, a large walk-in closet and master bath offers marble, double sink vanity, TOTO toilet, separate shower and tub. The lower floor features Two Bedroom Two Bath & family room with sliding doors to the garden. New systems include copper pipes, electrical, tankless water heater, furnace & garage door. 1 car garage. Close to Mollie Stone’s Supermarket, Starbucks, Twin Peaks, Midtown Terrace Playground and restaurants. Modern Living At Its Finest!  For More INFO Click Here

What People Were Talking About In Bay Area CRE In 2018

 This year in Bay Area commercial real estate, the hot topics ranged from a continued housing crisis to the specter of rent control to cracks that shut down the new transit center. Here are some of the stories we were following in 2018: Continued Housing Crisis Throughout California, the housing crisis was a leading topic of conversation this year. Some people continued to move to the Bay Area, particularly for high-paying jobs such as those in the tech industry. But with high rents, high home prices and a high cost of living, some people left. Many of those leaving the area were workers with lower incomes who could not afford the cost of housing and could not find adequate workforce housing. The housing crisis has affected all sectors, from how much affordable housing is demanded of multifamily developers to the looming affordable housing crisis for seniors. Residents who have been displaced and are now homeless create new issues on the streets of San Francisco and Oakland, steer

Why S.F. rents are likely to remain the highest in the nation?

San Francisco rents are down slightly in   2018,   but are still the highest in the nation, and likely to remain there according to research from Zumper. In its annual wrap-up report, the rental site showed that, once again, San Francisco had the highest median rents in the country, with a median of $3,560 for a one-bedroom apartment and a two-bedroom median of $4,720. While those numbers are down slightly and flat, respectively, year-over-year, Zumper Data Analyst Crystal Chen explained why no other city was able to catch up.”Though San Francisco had flattening rents this past year, many of the top 10 markets experienced a similar trend as well,” she said. “Since there wasn’t a ton of movement in these cities throughout 2018, I’m not surprised San Francisco remained on top. Boston, Oakland, and LA rents had large one-bedroom year-over-year growth rates, all above 9 percent, but San Francisco was still around $1K-plus more expensive than these cities and I doubt any of them would