You Have $140K Down, Where Do You Buy?
Competition is heating up amongst developers as all the new towers started during the boom years are beginning to come on the market. Unfortunately for developers, an inconvenient thing happened with the mortgage industry — it crashed. The time when buyers could put as little as nothing down on their mortgage is over; now they…

Competition is heating up amongst developers as all the new towers started during the boom years are beginning to come on the market. Unfortunately for developers, an inconvenient thing happened with the mortgage industry — it crashed. The time when buyers could put as little as nothing down on their mortgage is over; now they are expected to come up with 20 percent. “Developers better have a good product if they want to sell,” commented Halstead Director Bill Ross. First-time home buyers, without the equity from the sale of their previous property, will have the toughest time meeting the new requirements, he said. In some places, prices will have to drop. We decided to play a game of comparison shopping for two bedrooms, and a few other options with more space, all priced between $600K and $700K. Pretend you’ve got $140,000 burning a hole in your savings account. Scores of new condos are on the market all vying for your attention; the borough is your oyster. Which one do you choose…
The first choice is a four-room condo at The Crest in Park Slope along burgeoning Fourth Avenue, quick walking distance from transportation and two of the borough’s best retail and restaurant strips. This sprawling duplex in Bushwick (er, East Williamsburg) has two floors, a private garden and a working fireplace. Or you could give up some space to live in the real Williamsburg and have everything you could possibly want at your doorstep. This even smaller condo in Downtown Brooklyn’s BridgeView Tower is literally right next to the bridges into Manhattan, saving you money on cab fare, has SubZero appliances and a “cascading waterfall” in the lobby. Or you could snag an extra bedroom at the lofty Washington Condos in Prospect Heights, an up-and-coming neighborhood and right near Atlantic Yards. And then there’s always the fuhgeddabout-Brooklyn option, this two-family home with an above-ground pool and double curb cut in Lodi, New Jersey. Which one is it?
David Leonhardt of The New York Times advised in a column Monday that you answer none of the above. While he chose to finally buy a place in Washington, he said New Yorkers should invest their down payment for now until the rent ratio (see link, it involves math) decreases. His philosophy as “an evangelist for renting” has been that once you add in the closing costs, repairs, property taxes, mortgage principal, mortgage interest, and other monthly bills if you own a condo or co-op, you might be earning more on your $140,000 down payment if it were invested in something besides real estate.
As Home Prices Drop, Committed Renter Buys (in Washington) [NY Times]
Brownstoner please read the NYTimes article before posting.
David Leonhardt purchased a place in DC and NOT Washington State!
10.25 – Columbia county is a three hour drive. With the prices there you can “maintain a large country house” with a $30k salary.
On the subject of Columbia county, does anyone know why the city of Hudson has so many really old buildings left standing, including federal brick and early victorian? Really great old houses with cupolas, walled gardens and the like, including the very old ones at the bottom of the hill. Unfortunately, some genius built projects down there too so its got a very weird vibe, and the houses will just fall away and disintergrate in the end I’m sure.
Sarah, indeed. That became clear when I read the first guest post making a serious comment on it. Must be a rookie…
According to StreetEasy:
Park Slope (The Crest) property has been on the market at the same price for almost one year (June 07);
Prospect Heights (Washington Condos) apt is in contract after 335 days on market and listing price reduced from 739K to 669K;
Bushwick has been on the market for 105 days with 20K price reduction on 2/15;
Williamsburg appears to have just sold after 246 days on market and reduction from 710K to 689K;
Bridge Street has been on the market for 119 days.
These data make one wonder if now is time to jump in or if prices will continue to decline.
Eh Sarah, how are you doing? Fine I hope (Must… not… curse…)! Why are you profiling house in my neighborhood? Lodi NJ is still cheap and we don’t want a run-on by Asshats. We like our piece of the world…
The What
Someday this war is gonna end…
I think Sarah put the Lodi house up as an expample of “The What”‘s dream house in his ideal neighborhood. Maybe one of those lottery tickets will pay off for him.
Think he was moving to DC, not washington state, but that article was so dull, I’m not going to read it again.
10:14 post again once you’ve sold.
Bridgeview?? Agree that Downtown Brooklyn is a good neighbourhood (more because of the potential than what it is at the moment), but why Bridgeview? There’s a ton of apartments that are better located and better priced. Oro, Toren… why the hell Bridgeview??
Of the developments coming up, looks like Toren gives the most bang for buck, though Oro has the advantage of being almost ready for move in.