sally's Profile
Author's Posts
October 27, 2009
French Drain, etc.
Can anyone out there recommend a company you used to install a sump pump and a french drain and in general advised you correctly about completely waterproofing your basement? Thanks!
August 15, 2009
"Brownstone" Paint
Does anybody know a specific color name of a paint that is used to match the color and "feeling" of brownstone? I cannot afford to restore my stoop yet, so until then I would at least like it to look tidy and natural. Maybe the best route would be to remove existing peeling "brown" paint and leave it alone. Any thoughts?
June 29, 2009
Bathtub
Does anyone need a small bathtub? I am asking $100 or another suggested price. It is missing one handle. It is 47" x 29" and 17" deep. salross@verizon.net
June 8, 2009
upload help
Every time I try to upload a jpeg onto the forum, the same thing happens: the screen says "please wait a moment for your post to appear" and then the brownstoner page goes completely blank, white, and my post never posts.
When I don`t try to upload an image, everything works. What am I doing wrong?
May 26, 2009
Getting Rid of Stuff
Hi all, I need to get rid of some things and I thought somebody out there may be interested. I have a barely-been-used, like new Magic Chef wine cooler(30 bottles) model #MCWC30MCG. $100 or best offer. Also I have a small clawfoot tub that I could picture being used in a child`s bathroom. It`s VERY cute but it`s not a real old one, it`s a replica and is very clean and white and is not enameled iron, but some sort of composit. $50 or best offer. Also I have a glass tank aquarium in good condition. all accoutraments included(lights, warming rock, stones, etc. Free, just please get it out of my apartment...
March 18, 2009
Garage Door Repair
Hi, can anyone recommend a garage door repairman? I have two odd sized old-school doors that need new springs installed. Nothing fancy, just a reasonable and reliable Brooklyn garage guy. Thanks, Sally
January 20, 2009
Need Recommendation
Hi, has anyone ever worked with expediter Dexter Newman of Acme Building Consulting? Any input on experience would help. Thanks.
January 16, 2009
expediter needed
Does anybody know of a good expediter? I mean one who actually returns phone calls. If you`ve worked with somebody who you felt was very professional, could you provide some recs? Thanks!
January 14, 2009
mixed use financing
Recently, Onefineday posted asking for tips on getting financing for a mixed use property. I`ve been trying to do this to no avail and I`ve already got 100% down. None of my property is being used commercially.
It`s a 2fam townhouse with a detatched garage. The commercial C of O is on the detatched garage, which was once used as an autobody shop many years ago. Wells Fargo says there`s a $3m minimum for a commercial mortgage and to do a residential mortgage, the commercial element must be less than 25% of the total square footage.Does anybody know of a bank who could finance mixed use? Speculation won`t help me- I need a phone number. Thanks!
July 9, 2008
mixed-use loan
Hi, I own a mixed-use income property in Brooklyn. There are no loans or mortgages on the property and I have good credit. The property consists of a two family townhouse and a carriage house with a commercial C of O. Has anyone had any experience with a broker who could work with me on getting a mortgage for this type of property? Thanks for any info.
Author's Comments
I bought a 2 family with an illegal basement apartment. I easily turned the kitchen into a laundry room, removed the illegal shower and it became a duplex with the groundfloor apartment, enabling me to get as much rent or almost.
Posted by: sally at September 3, 2009 11:28 AM in response to Mortgage Contingencies
Thank you, Redoxalis!
Posted by: sally at August 15, 2009 12:15 PM in response to "Brownstone" Paint
rob, don`t be such a weedy snatch-brute. who do you think is going to be paying for your s.s. in the future, and holding the door for you with your walker/iron lung?
Posted by: sally at June 18, 2009 1:17 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
I have a herb garden.
Posted by: sally at June 15, 2009 5:35 PM in response to Quote of the Day
Had the same thing happened to me last spring. It was a honeysuckle. I think it`s got to be a van pulls up, to block the view from the neighbors.Everybody on my block has plants in their front yard but me. I am going to just plant ivy and things I can propagate from my back garden so I don`t feel like I`m throwing money in the garbage. I still fantasize about implanting tracking chips into plants, and then the police raiding the nursery they end up in.
Posted by: sally at June 7, 2009 2:47 PM in response to Stolen Plants
Muffin, I had to do this once too. You need a handyman/contractor to pull out the tub first.
Or, do it yourself with a strong person to help. Turn off the water line, then you cave in the old tub with a sledge so that you can remove it. Have you tried googling "japanese soaking tub"? They are small and deep.
Posted by: sally at June 5, 2009 12:42 PM in response to Where to find small bathtub?
Muffin, I have a tub that is 48" long and 28" wide and 17" deep. It is free standing and I would sell it for $100. It`s a very good looking tub.I just tried to upload a photo on the Forum but so far it`s not working.
I could email you a nice photo if you are interested. salross@verizon.net
Posted by: sally at June 5, 2009 12:22 PM in response to Where to find small bathtub?
Bobjohn, my tenants left a brand new, barely-been-used Magic Chef 30 bottle wine cooler. It is in my garage and sells for between $220-$300. I would like to sell it for $100 or another suggested price. If you would like to take it please email me at : salross@verizon.net
Posted by: sally at June 2, 2009 10:32 AM in response to Storing Wine in Brownstone
OP`s email: salross@verizon.net
Posted by: sally at May 26, 2009 12:08 PM in response to Getting Rid of Stuff
I had a similar situation. I bought a house and there was just all this dirt in various places that was full of rocks, glass, bits of brick, etc. I felt like it was just too much to toss it out, so I stacked up some cinderblocks in a u shape and spread some wire mesh over that and started shoveling all the dirt on top. Then I scraped the dirt through the holes with a garden spade. Then whatever was left on top, I pushed into contractor buckets. For some reason this was highly enjoyable. In the end, I had several buckets of gravely material and a huge pile of sifted, "dead" dirt. With a shovel I mixed in composted manure, peat moss, pearlite and sand, creating really good garden soil. The gravel stuff I used to make drainage layers in the bottoms of all my plant containers. I`m sure there was some waste, but I really can`t remember any big deal, like maybe one bag. It was just a lot of work but I really liked it.
Posted by: sally at April 14, 2009 4:43 PM in response to Backyard Soil Clean-up
I love this stuff too and wanted to install it at one point and ran into the same problem. I know that the corrugated metal is now square as opposed to the really great vintage wavey
style. I think it really works in a residential context especially with 19th century architecture. A great example of this is on Crosby St. between Grand and Spring on the west side of the street. Its painted black and has Ivy growing on it. I think it`s just called corrugated steel and it is simply screwed onto steel fenceposts in 4 X 8 sheets. This with blond pea gravel would be a great setting for outdoor sculpture in my opinion.
Posted by: sally at April 1, 2009 10:31 AM in response to question about fencing
When having our loft appraised, our "Kosher" household slid by with two kitchens.
Posted by: sally at March 24, 2009 12:26 PM in response to Two kitchens
I thought there was only one guy who ever did this in NYC, in Tribeca, on Reade St. off Greenwich, north side of the street in the only super modernist building on that block. Although he died, there is still his architectural firm in that building. Try researching the archive of the Tribeca Trib, the local neighborhood paper.I think he also did the neighbor`s house nextdoor. I remember reading that in order to drill so deep into the bedrock he needed to obtain an oil drilling permit. Hope this helps. -Sally
Posted by: sally at March 17, 2009 9:31 AM in response to going green with geothermal
What is this set of books? I just finished reading "Stalking the Wild Asparagus" an edible wild plant classic. It really challenged my concept of food and the consumer capitalist relationship to food. The book also gets into the history of these edibles that goes back to the middle ages in documentation.
Posted by: sally at February 26, 2009 8:56 AM in response to Forest Gardening
Perhaps you and some other tenants can buy the building from the bank.
Posted by: sally at February 26, 2009 8:47 AM in response to Rocket Factory foreclosure.
I`ll have what The What`s having.
Posted by: sally at February 25, 2009 10:29 AM in response to Open Thread
I think that it would be cheaper, labor-wise, to sheetrock than to clean this stuff off and attempt to smooth it out.
Posted by: sally at February 11, 2009 10:13 AM in response to What to do about basement walls
It all depends on what`s under there. Is it a stone wall or are those cinderblocks?
Posted by: sally at February 11, 2009 9:11 AM in response to What to do about basement walls
I can`t believe this. Get hold of yourself, Man! You`ve got kids. Give four, five months tops notice that the rent is going to one hundred bucks below market rate (one has to stay competitive) take it or leave it. That money you`ve been leaving on the table should be going to your kids education fund. Have some balls and pick up the phone.
Posted by: sally at January 8, 2009 1:13 PM in response to Raising Rent, Followup
I had this problem a few years ago. Except that I had the annoying benefit of having a good reason to get rid of the tenant. So I gave four months notice that the rent was increasing $500 take it or leave it. This increase still made it $500 below market rate. The timing was such that if the tenant decided to leave it would be May which is a good month to find new people. The tenant moved to BK and is probably reading this right now. A new tenant was found in one month at market rate.
Posted by: sally at January 8, 2009 12:03 PM in response to Raising the Rent
I did this last year, near to where this house is but on the Bushwick side of the border. Our house is similar, 2 fam. all original details including kitchen and bath (these however were probably added after the turn of the cen. since they didn`t have that kind of plumbing in 1870), and I say go for it. It is so much more valuble, if you are into antique stuff, to go through this process than to just get something else to save a little money. But it is not only stressful, it can be traumatic. The more realistic you are the less it will overwhelm you, so for starters, it`s going to take longer than one month. Concentrate on the rental apartment first. Work from the top of the house down if you can. What about the roof?Also, I can`t imagine that the amps in this place have been upgraded so there`s another couple of thousand right there. This house sounds rare, and if you feel that you really should save it and you feel a personal connection to it than you probably will make good decisions and have the satisfaction of enjoying it every day. If I can do anything to help, or if you want to see what I did to renovate my house, let me know.
Posted by: sally at December 19, 2008 9:02 AM in response to Crazy talk?
I`m a landlord and I don`t just approve of these machines, I bought and installed them in two apartments prior to renting. If the tenent understands the way to use the machine, I think they are great: very energy efficient, cheap to run, low water usage. In order for the machine to be useful, you have to wash only small amounts of like items, i.e. two pairs of jeans, a bunch of t-shirts, or some underwear and socks, at a time. You put them in before leaving for work in the morning -when you return in the evening, the load is washed and dried. It`s not meant to be something you use if you want clean dry clothes fast. In another apartment I installed regular fast high energy American style machines. They waste energy and water and unless you have a family with kids- they seem overkill, like an SUV or something.
Posted by: sally at October 30, 2008 7:41 AM in response to Tenant Wants to Install Own W/D
Responses to Author's Forum Comments
I can provide some inside on the schools in Greenpoint, just on the other side of the park.
Catholic: St. Stanislaus Kostka is excellent.
Public: PS 31 and 34 are excellent. JHS 126 - stay away at all costs.
Posted by: Northie at June 18, 2009 1:20 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
I forgot to post the link to the article I mentioned:
http://nymag.com/news/features/56942/
Posted by: christopher at June 18, 2009 1:28 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
The Greenpoint schools are generally very good (see Northie's post, above), although also very traditional in pedagogy. PS 132 is on Manhattan and Conselyea/Metropolitan, and is a more progressive school - its also very good, and a result very popular with many newer, younger residents. 132 is very crowded too; Greenpoint schools seem to be pretty full but not oversubscribed. PS 17 and PS 84 are undersubscribed, and many parents (from all walks) try to send their kids elsewhere (either parochial schools, private schools or by "moving" to another zone). There has been talk of putting a charter in 84, but nothing is planned at the moment. PS 17 seems to show the most hope of improving, but both 84 and 17 have a long way to go.
Northside Preschool is expanding into early elementary grades next year. It is a really good school (at the preschool level), albeit expensive. On the other hand, the Brooklyn diocese is closing and consolidating parochial schools.
None of the public schools in north Brooklyn compare with the best schools elsewhere in the boro, either in performance, facilities or resources. But the Greenpoint schools and 132 are very good, solid neighborhood schools. There is a new charter school in the eastern area of the district (almost into Bed-Stuy, I think). And there is also the East Village, where a lot of people have been sending their kids for years, but which is now oversubscribed and hard to back into.
And yes, development and SCA/DOE planning are completely separate. DOE was talking about closing schools at the same time that the City was talking about adding tens of thousands of new residents to the area.
Posted by: WBer at June 18, 2009 2:54 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
"None of the public schools in north Brooklyn compare with the best schools elsewhere in the boro, either in performance, facilities or resources"
WBer, PS34 consistently ranks near the top in boro-wide surveys. Its parents don't crow about it though, so perhaps thats why you mistakenly think it doesn't compare. As for facilities and resources you are correct, they are basic. You're also spot on with the "traditional in pedagogy". Which many parents see as a plus, and a good reason to avoid PS132. It is also traditional on discipline too, so parents might see that as a reason for their sprogs to avoid it or attend it.
I'd add: avoid Northside Catholic Academy if you can.
Posted by: dittoburg at June 18, 2009 3:06 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
insideschools.org (which may fold from lack of funding) is the place for all public school info
Posted by: eman1234 at June 18, 2009 9:49 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
PS34 ranks well in test scores, and most parents are very happy there, but a lot of people (myself included) think that facilities and resources matter too. I think 34 is a very good neighborhood school, and would be happy to send my kid there if I lived there. People move to some neighborhoods just for the schools, but Greenpoint is not one of those neighborhoods - that's what I meant by not comparing with the best in Brooklyn.
PS132 is also a very good neighborhood school, with a very different philosophy (and it also lacks in facilities and resources). Personally, I prefer a more progressive pedagogy, but I also think its much more important that a school work - and both 34 and 132 do.
Regarding Northside Catholic Academy, that is different than Williamsburg Northside Preschool, which is what I was talking about. WNP is very good - don't know Northside Catholic, but I'll take your word on it.
Posted by: WBer at June 18, 2009 10:05 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
Rob, why does a childless hipster hating homo like yourself even read (nevermind comment) on a thread about Williamsburg elementary schools?
Posted by: Art Salt at June 18, 2009 11:57 PM in response to Williamsburg Northside Schools
After someone graffitied our painted brownstone we went to Pinchik to get a paint match. Although I had selected something from Benjamin Moore, Pinchik had a more perfect color already available. They just grabbed it off a shelf behind the counter. Now you can hardly tell where we had to repaint. If you paint the treads of the stair, make sure to mix some sand in the paint for traction.
Posted by: bessie2 at August 17, 2009 11:00 AM in response to "Brownstone" Paint
We are in the process of buying a 3-family in Brooklyn. We were supposed to close on June 6th and still don't have closing date partly because there was a prior illegal basement conversion that doesn't even exist anymore but is still on record with the DOB. I am a first-time buyer so I don't know what the lending climate used to be back in the good ole days, but our lender will absolutely not let us close if there are any outstanding violations or complaints related to the property.
Problem with the original complaint is that once the DOB gets in to inspect to see that work has been done, there seems to be no limit to the amount of issues they can find that will lead to interminable delays. One inspector (same guy each time!) has been there 4 times now and each time he finds something new. The first time, he discovered the fire-escape was not on center and needed to be moved 6 inches to the left. The second time he noticed there was a safety sign missing from the common hallway. The third time he realized that the new boilers the seller had installed did not have inspection permits on file. This last time he noticed that a vent was the wrong size.
At first I didn't mind the delays, because I figured it was good that they were finding all this stuff now and that the seller was having to fix it and not me later on down the road. But now I am starting to wonder if we will ever close. These inspectors should have some kind of a limit imposed: like if you don't find it on the first two visits and it is not a serious safety issue...too bad!
What a racket.
Posted by: landofenchantment at September 3, 2009 12:24 PM in response to Mortgage Contingencies
I agree with Slopefarm on item #2--find out what the bank means by removing the kitchen. I remember hearing that a kitchen is sometimes defined by the presence of a stove etc. so with out certain appliances you could possibly have a rec room.
Posted by: BHS at September 3, 2009 2:31 PM in response to Mortgage Contingencies

I think you are confusing "zoning" with "certificate of occupancy".
Posted by: sally at September 3, 2009 8:08 PM in response to Changing Commercial Zoned Floor