postcard
According to a marketing postcard from Fillmore, the brokerage’s “Red Hook Team” of Nicole Gallucio and Marsha Yarde just set a record for the booming nabe when they sold a two-family house at 105 Pioneer Street for $1.065 million. This doesn’t sound so surprising to us but maybe it is a first. Thoughts?
Gallucio’s Sold Listings [Fillmore] GMAP P*Shark
More Evidence of Fairway’s Effect on RH [Curbed]


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

  1. I have read the comments about ‘fancy folks…’ and the funny thing is, that by all standards- we are so totally middle class that it makes me laugh that someone could willingly write ‘fancy’ in the same paragraph (We don’t even own a car yet) that describes absolutely middle of the road people moving to places that may be up-and-coming. In the mid to late 90’s I made a good investment in the East Village… to the horror of my family I was investing my entire nest egg in a community I believed in that not many could understand would eventually turn in to the bigger nest egg we used to finance our little house in Red Hook. I can’t wait… I’m excited to be here now… We’re not here for the ‘hipness’, we’re here for our family… time for more space, time to settle down. The EV was nice, but I don’t need the constant nightlife.. what I need is a big house. So for that amount of money, I get to stay close to the city I love, I get to move in to a fabulous place, and I hope I get to add my amazing child to a community that he will thrive in.

  2. Regarding questions of community – when we first started looking at Red Hook 5 years ago we wondered where all the people were. Back then, driving through Red Hook on a Sunday, you could get the impression the place was pretty much deserted. Only after living here, as we have for 4 years, do you get a very real idea of what sort of community exists down here. People are very engaged – by necessity – with the garbage dump proposal, and more recently the Ikea, Fairway, Cruise Terminal developments and their inherent issues, people have had to get involved. Of course people are concerned and actively working towards improving traffic and transportation issues – but more than anything else people are wanting to keep the wonderful community we have down here. On Pioneer Street parents sit on the stoops and chat. Children play on the sidewalk, or alternate playing at each others houses, or meet with their families for a picnic at Coffey Park or Valentino Pier. It’s a real community. People know each other and look out for each other. Having met some of the so called “fancy folks” moving in, all I can say is that’s what they say they see in Red Hook, and that’s the attraction.

  3. …totally agreeing with “bkreguy” here:

    1.) Real Estate cannot be measured by the same yardstick as the stock market – for the love of God, most of the time they swing in OPPOSITE directions. Jeez.

    2.) Real Estate DOES always go up in value, long-term. And always WILL.

    Want to know why?

    It’s simple.

    Companies and securities can be created and destroyed. Precious metals and gems can be mined and/or synthesized. And so on.

    However… and I want you to read the next sentence VERY carefully:

    LAND CANNOT BE CREATED.

    (Well, ok, with the exception of landfill-based airport extensions & such, but that is not permanent enough for long-term development).

    Most of the value of R.E., especially in developed, over-populated cities, derives from the value of LAND, not the buildings. Anyone who disagrees – check out the price of a Manhattan townhouse VS the price of an identical townhouse in the far end of Queens, or other-than-Downtown-Brooklyn for that matter. Same building, what’s so different?

    *L*A*N*D*

    (Yeah, it’s the same “Location, location, location” speech. Again. Get used to it.)

    You can build on it, you can improve it, develop it, whatever. You can’t MAKE more of it.

    Fixed supply + increasing demand = ?

    That’s right. Economics 101. Increasing prices.

    The market may rise, the market may fall. But if you look at the LONG-term price changes (from 1975 to 2005, fer-instance), you’ll see that damn near everyone who invested in R.E. and played the game to the end made out like a bandit.

    Example: 1976 – $ 24,000 for a 4-story brownstone in Park Slope. Even a FIFTY PERCENT drop in the market value (i.e. the $2M ‘stone will drop to $1M… boohoo) will STILL yield the better part of a MILLION BUCKS as pure profit.

    So, in conclusion: don’t call anyone who invests in NYC real estate a “fool”. Jealousy, my friend, is NOT a positive emotion 😉

  4. to “djr” I have to politely disagree with your statement: “Whether the buyer will feel like a fool or a savvy investor will depend on how the market does in the near future.”

    That is the problem with all these, great, savvy, hipster real estate investors – they think real estate is stock…. your statement, “the near future” is absolutely wrong.

    REAL ESTATE IS A LONG TERM INVESTMENT, only in the last 5 years have people jumped into it thinking of it as a short term investment. Those who made the real money in real estate the last 5 years, bought 15-20 years ago…sure you sorry “investors” doubled up in the last 5 years – congrats on your half-mill pittance of profit… had you bought 10-15 years ago you would have made a clear mill or more….

    their investment will pan out, real estate – in long term – has – GET READY – NEVER gone down… yes in small 10 year windows it may drop – think 80’s – but it is cyclical and always rises to greater heights – because it is a limited commodity.

    sorry for the rant i just hate when I hear “stock talk” in relation to real estate.

  5. No it’s not to make the buyers feel like fools man, this is a normal marketing thing done by brokers when they break pricepoints for property types in areas. It is validation that the area is truly becoming a commodity when prices break the million mark for a brick attached two-family. Haven’t you seen the posts about brownstones breaking 2Million marks etc, in other areas? don’t be jealous – fool. lol.

1 2