1423 King Court

 

 
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Brian Jannone
Prudential New Jersey Properties
732-469-7470
brian@jannoneteam.com
MLS#: 2908865
 
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1423 King Court
Green Brook, NJ
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$ Click for current price
2 BEDROOMS
2 BATHROOMS (2 full)

Move in end unit with beautiful views. First floor with no stairs. Each bedroom has its own bath. Living room, dining room, kitchen, laundry room. Crown moldings, newer carpet & paint. Will not dissapoint.

L2L Property Websites WP

 

Live well on less cash

 

I came across something interesting and wanted to share this with everyone

Book Review: ‘Money Secrets of the Amish’

BY TARA-NICHOLLE NELSON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2011.

Inman News™

Title: “Money Secrets of the Amish: Finding True Abundance in Simplicity, Sharing and Saving”

Author: Lorilee Craker

Publisher: Thomas Nelson, 2011; 240 pages; $15.99

Elizabeth Warren, Harvard law professor and special adviser to the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, has used her sophisticated smarts and legal skill to argue for something very basic: financial simplicity.

Her position is that the recession might have been avoided had banks and consumers alike been committed to “plain vanilla” lending instruments, rather than mortgages with the resetting, adjusting, negatively amortizing, interest-only and other complicated features that were popular in the subprime era.

Not only were these features difficult for many consumers to understand, the tricky features made it possible for banks to argue and consumers to be complicit in creating mortgage obligations that, had they been structured more simply, would have been very obvious in their unsustainability. 

Warren, a Sunday school teacher in her off time, apparently has divine inspiration for her value of financial simplicity — and fellowship, in the form of the Amish, whose simple values, also divinely inspired, empowered them to prosper throughout the recession.

The above-market-to-the-nth-power performance of Amish banks and communities during the hardest, longest recession America has ever seen inspired Lorilee Craker’s latest book: “Money Secrets of the Amish: Finding True Abundance in Simplicity, Sharing and Saving.”

Craker, herself a Mennonite, interviewed Amish bankers, bishops and families to compile a comprehensive look at the financial values, practices and principles that have caused the Amish community to thrive for many generations.

These are the principles that most notably allowed one all-Amish bank to have its best year ever in 2008 — the same year in which we saw another banking industry record: the largest bank failure in American history (Washington Mutual). And, not surprisingly, there’s no tricky math or complicated investment schemes underlying the Amish way with money.

Instead, there are a handful of sweeping principles and rules of thumb on which money mavens from Elizabeth Warren to Amos Miller, one of Craker’s interviewees — a farmer in his 40s with 14 kids who has managed to sock away more than $400,000 in cash — all agree.

But these Amish money values don’t agree with the way the average American lives his or her financial life — in fact, Craker deems Amish money management to be essentially “upside down,” the diametrical opposite of the way most Americans handle their money matters.

From having zero tolerance for waste and credit, to a high value on thrift, reuse and obtaining pleasure from time spent with their families rather than from things purchased, Craker found the Amish inclined to save lots of cash, while living very rich lives, without a thought or struggle around the matter.

“Money Secrets of the Amish” offers these simplistic principles in a fittingly simple manner. You won’t find any tricky charts or online calculators in here! What you will find are easy mnemonics like “UWMW” — Amish code (if such a thing exists) for use it up, wear it out, make do, or do without; and charming, relatable anecdotes of Craker’s own family’s recession-era financial frustration and the Amish-inspired solutions and savings she was able to achieve in the course of doing the groundwork for the book.

Craker makes a pointed effort to extrapolate from the extremely frugal ways of the Amish to concrete action steps and examples of ways everyday Americans can realistically live the same financial values, from repairing (rather than replacing) to rethinking the way they give gifts.

Craker has written extensively for parenting magazines, and it shows; parents trying to cut costs and uplevel their finances in order to allow one parent to stay at home, to pay for tuition or simply make ends meet, will find Craker’s personal experiments in implementing Amish financial values to be relatable and useful for their own families.

Tara-Nicholle Nelson is author of “The Savvy Woman’s Homebuying Handbook” and “Trillion Dollar Women: Use Your Power to Make Buying and Remodeling Decisions.”Tarais also the Consumer Ambassador and Educator for real estate listings search site Trulia.com. Ask her a real estate question online or visit her website, www.rethinkrealestate.com.

 

 

Keys to selling your home in a slower market

Home sellers are finding that selling their home is more and more challenging everyday as they are in steep competition with new home foreclosures. So how do you get your home off the market and into contract? Here are five tips to getting your home sold quickly and the price you’re looking for:

  1. Find The Right Agent. Your first plan of action should be to locate an agent with proven results with sales. Keep in mind you should also work with someone that you feel comfortable and confident with.at has a good track record with sales in your market range and neighborhood. Good sales stats in your price bracket demonstrate that the realtor knows what buyers are looking for and how to move property similar to yours. A great agent can help you move your home, even in a tough market.
  2. Know your market. Understanding the ‘comps’ in your area will help you reach a realistic asking price and get a better handle on the competition. Ask your realtor to provide this information and also take opportunities to visit open houses for homes that are comparable to yours. 
  3. Keep up with repairs and maintenance. Don’t hesitate to make necessary repairs and maintenance to your home when you are ready to sell. You don’t have to undergo major remodeling or expense. Simple updates like fixing broken steps, touch up painting and keeping your lawn-mowed and flower beds cleaned out will really go a long way in making your home look move-in ready.
  4. Be flexible.From having your home ready to show at a moment’s notice to your willingness to negotiate, the key to selling your home in a slow market is flexibility and responsiveness. Going the extra mile for prospective buyers can really make a difference in getting more people through the door ready to make an offer.
  5. Add value. Remember that you are competing with short sales and foreclosures, so any extra value you can add to your home can make it more attractive. Whether it’s an appliance, patio furniture or a simple cost concession, small items can add up to big pluses when prospects are evaluating the total value of your home.

Hillsborough NJ Market Statistics

 
 
Hillsborough, NJ August 1, 2011 – Hillsborough’s home resale inventories stayed the same, with a 0 percent change since July 2011. Distressed properties such as foreclosures and short sales increased as a percentage of the total market in August. The median listing price in Hillsborough went down from July to August. There were a total of 1 price increases and 60 price decreases.
 

Hillsborough, NJ Market Snapshots  

  Today 1 Month Ago 6 Months Ago 1 Year Ago 2 Years Ago
Total Inventory 310 311 232 -25% 248 -20% -
Median List Price $350,000 $369,000 5% $399,900 14% $395,000 13% -
  % Distressed 
 
 
5% 3% 2% 1% -
Median Days
on Market
91 83 -9% 101 11% 83 -9% -
Median House Size 3114 3114 3017 -3% 3452 11% -
Median Price
Per Sq. Ft.
$197 $199 1% $196 -1% $197 -
  Today 1 Month Ago 6 Months Ago 1 Year Ago 2 Years Ago
Total Inventory 184 196 7% 148 -20% 153 -17% -
Median List Price $499,900 $479,900 -4% $549,000 10% $519,900 4% -
  % Distressed 
 
 
1% - - 1% -
Median Days
on Market
94 84 -11% 116 23% 85 -10% -
Median House Size 3258 3350 3% 3258 3615 11% -
Median Price
Per Sq. Ft.
$197 $199 1% $196 -1% $198 1% -
  Today 1 Month Ago 6 Months Ago 1 Year Ago 2 Years Ago
Total Inventory 126 115 -9% 84 -33% 95 -25% -
Median List Price $234,900 $239,500 2% $239,900 2% $249,900 6% -
  % Distressed 
 
 
11% 8% 5% 1% -
Median Days
on Market
85 83 -2% 63 -26% 68 -20% -
Median House Size 1580 1515 -4% 1376 -13% 1400 -11% -
Median Price
Per Sq. Ft.
$201 $177 -12% $203 1% $190 -5% -
 *** Source Movoto
 

WHAT SELLERS SHOULD DO AND WHAT THEY SHOULD DO TO GET THEIR HOME SOLD IN AN OPEN HOUSE

WHAT SELLERS SHOULD DO AND WHAT THEY SHOULD DO TO GET THEIR HOME SOLD IN AN OPEN HOUSE! 

Do:  Use Open Houses as a convenient time for touring homes with your agent.  I’m sometimes surprised by how many buyers write in to ask whether it’s appropriate to meet up with their agent at an open house, as though they’re concerned that it might be offensive to the listing agent or agent who is holding the home open.  Well over 80 percent of serious buyers – people who are actually qualified to buy a home – are represented by agents, and listing agents know this!

Given that very few unrepresented buyers walk into an Open House off the street and buy that house, I submit that using the few weekly open house hours as a regular time to meet up with your agent and tour homes that are being held open is a very efficient way to see homes you’re interested in, without having to make scattershot appointments with individual sellers – and that savvy listing agents will welcome your attendance as a represented, qualified buyer and their agent at their Open House.

Do:  Open every door.  If you’re seriously interested in a home you’re touring at an Open House, make sure you open every door – even doors that look like they might just be hall closets.  I’ve had buyers come back and realized that all the closets were a couple inches deep, or that the home had multiple walk-in closets they weren’t even aware of.  Once, I even had a buyer miss an entire little room, because we all thought the narrow door was just another closet.  Since storage is such an elemental consideration when you’re homebuying, it’s important to know what’s behind every door.

Don’t: Open every drawer.  I’m specifically talking about drawers to furniture, rather than kitchen drawers and other drawers that are built into the property itself.  Why do you need to see what’s inside someone’s bureaus to decide whether or not you like the home?  You don’t – I know that some people find the voyeuristic aspect of Open House hunting (i.e., seeing how others live) to be fun and compelling, but there’s certainly a line beyond which it’s rude to cross. 

Opening the owners’ underwear drawers is definitely on the wrong side of that line.

Do:  Offer hospitality to buyers. If you want prospective buyers to attend and enjoy your Open House, it’s critical that you remove all the friction involved with attending it. It should be very clear and simple for visitors to discover that your home is being held open, then to navigate to, park at and access your home.  If your home – or even your front door – is hard to find, make sure signs clearly point the way.  If your neighbors park in front of your house or you normally park your cars in the driveway, ask them to move, and move your own cars, too.

Don’t: Overdo the hospitality. Unless the property is Candy’ Spellings $150 million listing (which sold at the low, low price of something like $85 million, according to reports) there’s really no reason to have an espresso bar with baristas, a catered lunch with waiters passing hors d’oeuvres, or chair massages – all of which I have actually seen at Open Houses. Here’s the problem, no one will complain. People will take the shrimp balls, order their dirty chai lattes and get their deep tissue neck rubs.  What they won’t do is pay attention to your house!  Have a plate of cookies and some cool bottles of water – that’s just nice manners, especially on a hot day.  But when you overdo the perks, you distract the buyers from the real matter at hand.  Even if they like your home, they’re much more likely to recall the cute waiter or the dim sum than your upgraded kitchen and the dining room.  

Note: I’d say there’s an exception for brokers’ open houses – sometimes the excessive hospitality works just to get brokers to attend, which is huge; many a broker has had an a-ha/light bulb moment standing in a house they only went to for the champagne, when they realized which of their clients (or their colleagues’ clients) would love this place.

Do:  Intensively clean and de-odorize the place.  Start way in advance, and either clean or hire someone to clean your home so that the word “immaculate” applies.  This is not the time to cut corners.  And understand that at an Open House, people – including the most serious buyers – will open doors, drawers, cupboards, explore your garage, open the garden shed – so there’s really no place to shove and hide a messy pile of clothes or dishes. Heck, there are some who’ll scope out your dog house, if they want their own precious pooch to park there.

This is your opportunity to start eliminating things you don’t need and packing things you’ll want to move that are excess to the neat-and-clean version of your home’s space you want to showcase at the open house.

Don’t: Overdo the sensory staging.  Some people are highly sensitive, even allergic, to fragrances or scented oils – these types can run screaming from an overly “air freshened” open house. Music on low is fine, but it should be a very neutral, non-objectionable type – and you’d be surprised what some folks object to.  Also, skeptical buyers might suspect you’re trying to cover something up with aggressive air fresheners, cookies in the oven, music on the stereo and white noise playing in every room. 

Look to your agent and your home’s stager (if you have one) for direction here, and don’t overdo it.  Serious buyers will want to see, smell and hear what the experience of the home is actually like, without all that artifice.

Don’t:  Underdo the home prep/curb appeal, landscaping, exterior prep. I cannot tell you how many times, when I was selling homes, I would pull up to an Open House with my buyer clients and see them roll their eyes, sigh or even veto the visit once they saw the state of the home’s exterior.  And on the flip side, I can’t express the number of times I witnessed buyers minimize or overlook wonky rooms or funky annoyances on the inside of a home (for better or for worse) because the place had overwhelmingly charming or breathtakingly chic appeal from the curb.

Before you host an Open House, it’s equally – maybe even more – imperative that you make sure your landscaping, sidewalks, front doors and exterior paint are immaculate and maxed out on their attractiveness as it is to make sure the inside is pristine.
 
Do:  Make sure there are smart print-outs and flyers for buyers to take away, and basic documentation buyers will want to see. Check in with your agent in advance about what handouts will be available for prospective buyers that visit your home.  At the very least, there should be a property flyer listing out the home’s basic characteristic, offering a few color photos and providing the agent’s contact information; if you’re offering any incentives like closing costs or paying a year’s worth of the buyer’s HOA dues.  Additionally, it can be helpful to have a friendly mortgage broker prepare some financing scenario flyers.

If you’ve had home or pest or roof inspections, or your home favorably compares to recently sold nearby properties, make sure those inspection reports and comparables are out at the Open House.

Do:  Take the take-aways. Buyers, hanging on to the property flyers of the homes you’ve seen (and using them to note your reactions to them) can up your house hunting and offer-making game significantly. If your agent isn’t with you, it makes for easy communication about what you saw and how you felt about it, which can minimize the number of homes you don’t like that your agent shows you going forward. Also, a home that you think you’ll pass on while you’re in it might grow on you, or might even become the comparable for another property you’re interested in in the future. 

If you’re in active house hunting mode, it can only help you to have a collection of flyers from the properties you’ve seen. Compliments from Trulia.

Summer Gardening Tips: Important Tasks for the Whole Season

Watering
Watering is a chore that needs to be carried out throughout the summer season, but remember to use water wisely and, rather than drenching your entire garden regularly, concentrate your efforts on the following:

  • Plants growing in pots, containers and hanging baskets as these can dry out very quickly, often in the course of a few hours.
  • Newly planted trees and shrubs as these are very vulnerable to drought stress. As a guideline any specimen planted within the last four to five years falls into this category.
  • Any freshly sown or newly planted parts of your garden.
  • Herbaceous perennials which can suffer during sustained dry spells.
  • In the kitchen garden leafy vegetables such as lettuce and spinach should never be allowed to dry out. Other crops should be kept watered on sowing and transplanting and then later as the part that you eat, whether fruit, root or tuber, is developing.
  • Lawns can swallow up prodigious amounts of water which can be extremely wasteful, so, unless you have a high quality lawn, resolve to reduce or stop watering altogether. Instead, make sure that your lawn has been fed, and mow less often with the blades on a higher setting during dry periods. You will find that dry brownish patches will develop but these should disappear with the damper conditions of autumn.

Weeding
If you got on top of the weeding in spring and then managed to apply a weed suppressing mulch, you should have much less weeding to do now but do take the trouble to remove any weeds that are now ready to seed – remember the saying ‘a stitch in time saves nine’…?

Whisking out the weeds before the seedheads develop will save you any amount of work in the future. The best time to do it is just after light rainfall when the weeds can be pulled out very easily.

Weeding is particularly important in the kitchen garden as any weeds will compete with your crops for essential moisture and nutrients.

Feeding
There is always a temptation to overfeed our gardens but this just results in lush sappy growth that is vulnerable to pests and diseases. So why waste money on unneccessary fertilizers? Instead, follow these guidelines to get the best results:

  • Plants in pots, containers and hanging baskets will suffer if you don’t supplement the nutrients in the compost throughout the growing season. Either incorporate a slow release fertilizer at planting time or use a water soluble feed every week to ten days through the summer. Use a high nitrogen feed, such as Miracle Gro, until midsummer, then switch to a high potassium feed, such as one of the liquid tomato feeds.
  • If you prepared the ground well before planting, most vegetables won’t need any additional feeding. The main exceptions are fruiting vegetables such as tomatoes, peppers and aubergines, which definitely need extra feeding, following the instructions on the product, in order to crop well.

 

Summer Gardening Tips: Early Summer

The ornamental garden
By early summer all danger of late frosts should have passed and it’s safe to plant out tender summer bedding and to position summer containers and hanging baskets outside.

This is your last chance to stake or support plants before it is too late – once they’ve flopped it’s very hard to rectify the situation! Use ready made plant supports from the garden centre or construct your own using canes and plastic coated wire, or, if you prefer, twiggy sticks pushed into the soil around the plants.

If there are any gaps in your ornamental borders, fill them with annual bedding plants or pick up some potted lilies or other summer flowering bulbs from the garden centre and plunge the pots into the soil.

Many spring flowering shrubs will benefit from pruning in early summer as this will give them time to make the new growth necessary for next year’s flowers before the end of the season.

The vegetable garden
In the vegetable garden pinch out side shoots on tomatoes and enjoy harvesting and eating the first early potatoes – delicious!

Lettuce, radishes and other salad crops should also be ready now – don’t forget to make repeat sowings at two or three week intervals so that you can enjoy these crops all summer long.

Lawns
Lawns will need mowing at least once a week by now. It’s always best to mow little and often so make sure that the blades aren’t set too low for the type of lawn.

 

Summer Gardening Tips: Mid to Late Summer

House plants
It should now be warm enough for your house and conservatory plants to come out into the garden for a summer holiday which they will really appreciate.

The ornamental garden
Try to make the time to deadhead your bedding and repeat flowering plants to keep them producing blooms over a long period. This is a pleasant task for a summer’s evening so get into the habit of taking a stroll around your garden at the end of the day and snipping or pinching off the spent blooms. If you do it little and often it really isn’t a lot of trouble.

The vegetable garden
In the vegetable garden harvest your vegetables as soon as they are ready to eat – that way you will enjoy them at their peak of sweetness and flavour. Harvest courgettes and other continuous producers regularly to encourage more fruits to develop.

Lawns
If you didn’t get around to feeding your lawn in the spring, you can still apply a fast acting lawn feed now – you will really notice the results.

Garden ponds
Clear algae and blanket weed from your garden pond and keep it topped up – preferably with rainwater.

Holidays
Prepare for your holidays by making arrangement for friends or neighbours to pop round and water any containers, hanging baskets, and crops growing in your greenhouse.

Forward planning
As you will be out in your garden much more during the summer months, take the opportunity to assess your garden and make a note of any changes you would like to make – it always helps to take some photos to remind you what your borders looked like at various points in the season.

This is also a good time to order some bulb cataloques and plan the purchase of your spring flowering bulbs – this is a very enjoyable activity and one that can be carried out from the comfort of your deck chair!

 

Buying a home in the summer months?

The question of whether or not it’s smart to buy a house in the summer is one that has to be answered on an individual basis. It might depend upon the house and the price. If the house is up for sale and the price is really good, then it would make sense to purchase the house, regardless of whether it is spring, summer, fall or winter.

Price

  • While there is no actual best season to either buy or sell a home, prices contract during the late summer and late winter months. This is because most of the homes that are on the market go on with spring contracts and those contracts are up by the end of summer. When this happens, it becomes a buyer’s market.

Economy

  • A buyer’s market takes place when the number of sellers is greater than the number of buyers. In economic down cycles, housing usually becomes a buyer’s market. This is because when the economy hits a slump, new homes don’t get built as quickly. A buyer with a solid credit history who can afford a house is in a very good position, regardless of the season.

Winter Wonderland

  • Some Realtors believe that winter sellers tend to be more motivated to sell than summer sellers. One reason might be that winter sales tend to be on the low end, since people don’t like the idea of trying to sell a house in winter. Therefore, houses for sale in the winter usually have very motivated sellers. Of course, the tradeoff for house hunting in the winter is that while the bargains might be greater, the selection might be fewer.

Spring

  • Most houses put on the market are listed in the spring. This is because most homes are sold in the spring and early summer, due to a combination of factors. After the winter months, spring renewal can highlight such features as landscaping. This might make the home more attractive to a potential buyer. In addition, income tax rebates typically come out in the spring and can be used to help purchase a home.

 

 

Summertime Energy Saving Tips

SUMMERTIME ENERGY-SAVING TIPS

FAST AND FREE

Be a speedy chef

  • Nothing is more energy efficient for cooking than your microwave. It uses two-thirds less energy than your stove.

 

Push a button to wash your dishes

  • Surprise! Your dishwasher uses less water than washing dishes by hand. Then let dishes air-dry to save even more!

 

Fill up the fridge

  • Having lots of food in your fridge keeps it from warming up too fast when the door is open. So your fridge doesn’t have to work as hard to stay cool. 

Cutting back unnecessary energy use is an easy way to reduce energy consumption while saving money. Here are some additional suggestions you can do at home, at absolutely no cost to you.

Turn up your thermostat

Set your thermostat to 78 degrees when you are home and 85 degrees or off when you are away. Using ceiling or room fans allows you to set the thermostat higher because the air movement will cool the room. Always take into account health considerations and be sure to drink plenty of fluids in warm weather. 

Use your appliances wisely

To help prevent electricity outages, avoid running your appliances during peak hours, — from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. — or anytime an electricity emergency is declared.

  • Do your laundry efficiently by using the warm or cold water setting for washing your clothes. Always use cold water to rinse clothes. 
  • Line dry clothes whenever you can. 
  • When you need to use the dryer, run full loads, use the moisture-sensing setting, and clean the clothes dryer lint trap after each use.
  • Conserve energy by running your dishwasher only when it is fully loaded, and turn off the dry cycle and air dry dishes instead.

Operating swimming pool filters and cleaning sweeps efficiently

  • Reduce the operating time of your pool filter and automatic cleaning sweep to fourto five hours, and only during off-peak time.
  • Eliminate wasted energy
  • Turn off appliances, lights and equipment when not in use.
  • Unplug electronic devices and chargers when they aren’t in use-most new electronics use electricity even when switched “off.” Turn computers and printers off at the power strip.
  • Unplug or recycle that spare refrigerator in the garage if you don’t really need it. This will save you up to $150 per year!

 

INEXPENSIVE ENERGY SOLUTIONS

Make a quick trip to your local hardware store to purchase inexpensive energy-saving tools and equipment.

Replace air conditioner filters

Dirty filters restrict airflow and can cause the system to run longer, increasing energy use. Replace filters monthly for maximum benefit.

Plug your home’s leaks

Weather-strip, seal, and caulk leaky doors and windows and install foam gaskets behind outlet covers.

ENERGY SAVING INVESTMENTS

Planning to do some remodeling soon? Time to replace old appliances? Consider these energy efficiency suggestions when you make purchases.

Install a whole house fan

A whole house fan is permanently installed in your attic and draws cool air into your home through the windows while forcing hot air out through your attic vents. Use after sundown when the outside temperature drops below 80 degrees, and in the early morning to cool your house and help reduce your air conditioning use.

Install window shading

Install patio covers, awnings, and solar window screens to shade your home from the sun. For additional future savings, use strategically planted trees, shrubs and vines to shade your home.

Solar control window films applied to existing glass in windows and doors is an effective method to reduce peak demand during hot months and conserve energy anytime air conditioning might be required. In addition to the energy management benefits, the use of these films can also reduce exposure to ultraviolet radiation and reduce glare.

Invest in a new air-conditioning unit

If your air conditioner is on the way out, buy an ENERGY STAR® air conditioner.

Seal your ducts

Leaking ductwork accounts for 25 percent of cooling costs in an average home, so have your ducts tested and have any leaks or restrictions repaired by a qualified contractor. Note: duct cleaning is not the same as duct sealing.

Spotlight On Country Classics , Hillsborough, NJ

Hillsborough homes -  Premier living at Country Classics

Country Classics represents a 500+ acre community of distinct, custom colonial homes in Hillsborough, New Jersey, just off of Amwell Road near Belle Mead.

While Country Classics is located within Hillsborough Township – ranked as one of the Best Places to Live by Money Magazine over the past years, thanks to its consistently blue-ribbon school system and location equidistant to Philadelphia and New York City, and minutes from New Brunswick and Princeton – Country Classics represents a community within itself and offers the perfect combination of a scenic, calm community while still being within short distance to local shopping centers, major roadways and attractions.

Country Classics has been under constant improvement and expansion since its introduction in 1988. Almost every home, developed by a builder that gives the community its name, follows the same style –estate-like, two-story colonials on large, green lots. The homes follow one of seven general floor plans, with additions such as skylights and sunrooms available on some homes:

  • Arlington – Country Classics most affordable model, starting at $649,900. Includes features such as a master bedroom with sitting area, great room with fireplace, and gourmet kitchen with island.
  • Brentwood – The Brentwood model offers five variations for maximum customization, starting at $699,900. All models feature his and her walk-in closets, a two-story foyer and sunken family room
  • Carney – The brick-front Carney model offers three variations, starting at $759,900. All models feature a study on the first floor, a two-story foyer, and abundant options such as extra baths, a 3-car garage, and loft.
  • Castleton – Starting at $678,900, the partial-brick front Castleton is perfect for entertaining, featuring a large living room and sunken family room, as well as an expansive walk-in closet.
  • Classic Doulton – Starting at $750,990, the Classic Doulton offers three farmhouse style homes, all including a wrap-around porch. Options include a 5th bedroom on the second floor, an expanded princess suite, and a 1st floor bath with shower.
  • Classic Carney – Starting at $769,900, the Classic Carney expands the brick-front Carney with additional square footage.Inviting and open, with a two-story foyer and second-floor open hall looking out over the foyer, this spacious model is a great place to call home.
  • Havill and– Starting at $767,900, the brick-front Havill and features a magnificent circular oak staircase, and an expansive first floor.

All prices listed are for new construction as of June 1st, 2011.

Existing homes in the community range in size, and amenities. Some homes, in subsections known as The Paddocks and The Estates, typically have these larger homes on two-acre lots, with sunrooms or conservatories. Older resales may be purchased from around $500,000 for standard models, and more for those with extensive upgrades.

The neighborhood consists of walkways, green spaces, a park area with tennis courts, and an elementary school. Lots are both open and wooded, many of which are professionally landscaped, with some offering pools,and others sloping with walkout lower levels. A premier community with winding streets and cul-de-sac, ideal for privacy and family living.

Great things to do in New Jersey this summer

We Love New Jersey!!!

Are you looking for weekend activities or things to do with the kids or for adults? When we find valuable information we like to share it. I recently found a Web Site that is a great source  http://www.funnewjersey.com/

For The Adults:

 For The Kids:

 

*****Information obtained from funnewjersey.com

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