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Irl Dixon
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    Years of Experience: 22

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Direct: 704-616-0307



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Posts Tagged ‘Stowe Pointe Belmont NC’

Belmont NC Real Estate Report for November 6-13

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

Here’s a brief report on Belmont Real Estate for the week of November 6-13, 2011.  I will try to do this each week.  The information is what has been reported to the Carolina MLS during the last week and is only for homes inside the Belmont City limits.

There were only 6 homes listed in Belmont last week.. The prices ranged from $129-234,000.  One of the 6 was a foreclosure and 3 were new construction in the South Point Village community. 

Two homes were shown as going under contract.  One was a resell home of less than $90,000 and the other was new construction.

Two homes closed in Belmont during the week.  The first was a new home in Stowe Pointe which sold for $212,000 and the other was also a new home in South Point Village.  That home closed for $225,000.

If you own Belmont Real Estate and need to sell your home, it’s still a good time.  Give me a call.   Irl Dixon

Belmont Real Estate Sales for October

Thursday, November 3rd, 2011

Sales were way down for Belmont Real Estate in the month of October.  According to sales reported to the Carolina Multiple Listing Service, only 3 single family homes closed during the month inside the city limits.  On the other hand, there are currently 22 homes reported as Under Contract that have not closed yet.  Ten of these Pending homes are new construction—7 in the new South Point Village subdivision beside South Point High School and 3 in nearby Stowe Pointe Subdivision.  There were only 10 new listings reported for the month.  One of those 10 was a foreclosure and 4 were new construction.

Two townhomes were reported as closed with 3 under contract.  There were no new townhomes listed for the month.

These figures do not include homes outside the Belmont city limits but with Belmont addresses.  They also do not include sales on new construction homes that may not have been reported to the MLS.  Irl Dixon

2198 Southridge Drive Belmont NC Video Tour

Monday, June 6th, 2011

Hey guys,

Take a look at this great home in the South Point Ridge Subdivision in Belmont.  The neighborhood is located behind South Point High School on a fabulous corner lot and has been a past Belmont Yard of the Month!  If you know someone who wants a great house, send them to this site for a look.  You can learn more about this property by clicking on the house under the Featured Listings on the right hand side of this blog.  I’ll be posting the South Point Ridge Restrictions soon.  If you know someone thinking about selling their home, have them give me a call.  I have some great marketing ideas.  There’s plenty of great Belmont real estate for sale right now at great prices.  Irl Dixon

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Belmont Residents Get New Trash Service

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

Belmont has awarded the new contract for its trash pickup service to a company named Waste Pro.  The green roll out cans and the smaller recyclable bin that were provided by the former contractor will be a thing of the past.  According to Belmont’s City Manager, Barry Webb, the new service will provide 2 gray roll out  trash cans.  One will be for normal trash and will be picked up once a week.  The second roll out will be for recyclables and will be picked up every two weeks.  So, get ready.  Belmont residents will now need to make space for 2 large trash cans instead of one.  I will try to post the pickup schedule for Belmont neighborhoods if it is changed from the current one.

  Irl Dixon

Solar Rights And Your Property

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

Here’s my second article for the month on fencing issues.  When you read this, you may be glad you live in the south in a place like Belmont and not in the far west where fencing and building restrictions are far more stringent.  Of course Belmont does have fencing and building regulations that I will share with you in a later article.  I guess the issue is where do we draw the line between one person’s privacy and another’s right to completely enjoy their property. This article is courtesy of the National Association of Realtors and HouseLogic.com.  Irl Dixon

 

Solar Access Rights Help You Catch Some Rays

By: Ann Cochran 

Published: March 23, 2011 

Most states protect your current solar access for light and energy. If your state doesn’t, local height restrictions may save your sunshine. 

Regulating light and air

Here are some examples of existing regulations. 

  • In Ashland, Ore., the Solar Access Ordinance–one of the first citywide solar ordinances–prohibits new structures to cast a shadow bigger than the shadow cast by a 6-foot fence. The city calculates solar setbacks with a formula using the 24-degree angle of the sun at noon on the winter solstice.
  • In California, no plants may be placed or allowed to grow if they shade more than 10% of a neighbor’s sun collector between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
  • In New Mexico, home owners can obtain solar easements that prevent neighbors from building structures or planting new trees that would block the sun. These easements attach to the property forever and, when the home is sold, the easements are sold along with it.

Grandfathering solar access

Structures and natural landscape features established before the dawn of solar laws may remain.

But, in some places, home owners are being forced to cut down trees that block their neighbor’s new solar panels. In 2008, a Santa Clara, Calif. judge ordered a household to cut down two 4-year-old trees that blocked a neighbor’s new panels. Later that year, Calif. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger exempted pre-existing trees from the California Solar Shade Control Act

How to get a little sun

  • Research zoning regulations: If your state or city does not expressly protect your solar access rights, its zoning regulations might. Check your state or municipality’s official website. Maximum building height restrictions, which apply to fences, trees that form a hedge, and other building structures, exist in every community. Setback rules aid sun seekers, as well. If a tall structure is closer than it should be to your property, it could be blocking sunlight and violating the law.
  • Get an injunction: If a neighbor’s new addition exceeds local height restrictions and blocks your sun, seek an injunction to stop construction.
  • Trim a tree: You may trim trees that get between you and the sun, but only if they extend over your property line.

New HOA trends

Once, home owners associations could prevent you from installing solar panels because they wrecked uniformity or were eyesores. HOAs in states with solar access law, however, may not prohibit–directly or effectively–residents’ solar energy systems.

HOAs in many new communities are prohibiting buildings that block solar collectors.

Ann Cochran has written about home improvement and design trends for Washingtonian, Home Improvement and Bethesda Magazine. 

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

Friday Night Live Concerts in Belmont

Tuesday, May 3rd, 2011

Once again the Belmont Merchant’s Association is presenting their Friday Night Live Concert Series in downtown Belmont.  Below is the line up of entertainment for this year.

The concerts will be held on South Main Street between the railroad tracks and Myrtle Street.  This includes a block more of space than what has been used in the past.  Concerts will start at 6:30 and last until 9PM except for the July 1st concert which will last until 10PM.  Beer and wine will be sold during the events which are free to the public.

May 20, 2011: CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARD sponsored by BB&T
June 3, 2011: HIP POCKET
June 17, 2011: BILLY SCOTT & CLIFFORD CURRY
July 1, 2011: TAMS sponsored by WILBERT PLASTICS, INC. (followed by fireworks)
July 15, 2011: COASTLINE
July 29, 2011: BAND OF OZ
August 12, 2011: COMING UP BRASS
August 26, 2011: TOO MUCH SYLVIA-CAROLINA CONNECTION
September 9, 2011: EMBERS sponsored by WACHOVIA

 
 

To Improve or Not to Improve My Belmont Home

Thursday, April 28th, 2011

You learn something new every day. This article from NAR and HouseLogic.com has a formula you can use to see if you are over improving for your neighborhood. I haven’t seen that formula before but I agree with it completely. Bottom line, don’t over improve to the point you make your home the largest and most expensive in the neighborhood. Also, don’t add items that are not typically found in other homes in your community. If you want a bigger, fancier house, then financially you may come out better if you sell and start over. Irl Dixon

  • Should You Move or Remodel?

    When your house no longer suits you, you can move or remodel. Find out which big change is the right investment of your housing dollars. Read

Visit houselogic.com for more articles like this.

Copyright 2011 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

How To Fight Foreclosures In Your Belmont Neighborhood

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011

Foreclosures are a big problem in many cities.  In some first time Buyer neighborhoods of Charlotte it has led to major crime issues.  In Belmont and Mount Holly, we haven’t seen the crime increase but it has affected property values. Before the recession, appraisers did not normally use foreclosures as comparable sales in determining a home’s value.  Due to the large number, many are using them today.  The result has been a “Catch 22.”  Property values drop to the point that even solvent sellers can no longer sell their properties and pay off their mortgages.  The result in many cases is that Sellers sometimes are forced to “short sell” their home or simply walk away creating even more foreclosures and even worse comparable sales and thus even lower values for the remaining homeowners.  I have seen homes that Belmont Sellers have lost as much as 15% of their value in a little over a year.  The good news is you might be able to make up that loss on your next purchase provided you have the equity to get out of the old home.

The following is a great article courtesy of the NAR and HouseLogic.com showing how property owners can try to fight back to save some value if the foreclosure cycle hits their Belmont community.  Irl Dixon

4 Ways Vacant Foreclosed Homes Hurt You and 7 Ways to Fight Back

By: Jeannette Bernay 

Published: July 23, 2010 

Vacant foreclosed homes steal value from your home and your neighborhood. Here’s how to limit the damage. 

4 ways vacant foreclosed homes can hurt you 

1. You may have trouble refinancing or selling your home to a buyer who needs a mortgage if you live too close to too many vacant foreclosed homes. Appraisers have to report to lenders any vacant or boarded-up homes near yours and to analyze how those vacant homes influence the value of your home. 

You’ll begin to have financing trouble if banks don’t pay HOA fees during the foreclosure process. When HOA delinquencies rise to 15%, you could be unable to refinance with a loan guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or the Federal Housing Administration. 

There are some exceptions to this rule for some condos in markets where the overall foreclosure rate is high.

2. Vacant foreclosed homes are targets for arson and other crimes. If crime and fires occur in the boarded-up, vacant foreclosed homes on your block, you could be charged more for your homeowners insurance or your insurance company may not renew your policy. 

3. Your health can be put at risk if nearby vacant homes become dumping grounds for debris that attracts vermin, mosquitoes, and other pests.

4. You’ll either pay higher taxes or lose services when your town has to pay legal fees, police, and fire costs for vacant foreclosed homes. Money spent on vacant foreclosed homes is money that isn’t being spent on schools, parks, and other community services.  

7 ways to fight back

1. When you find out a home on your block has been abandoned or foreclosed, make sure local officials know, including the building code enforcement office and the law enforcement officials who patrol your neighborhood. 

2. If a bank isn’t maintaining a vacant home that’s being foreclosed upon, call and ask the bank to fix whatever is wrong—to mow the grass, repair broken windows, etc. 

3. Can’t figure out who owns a vacant foreclosed home? Push your town to enact a vacant property registration. In towns with VPRs, owners of vacant homes have to provide contact information to local officials and the public. You’ll find sample VPR legislation and forms from other communities at the Safeguard Properties website. Share that information with local officials.

4. Suggest to local officials that they could be earning money by fining banks that don’t maintain properties. Los Angeles just passed an ordinance that will charge banks up to $100,000 for failing to keep up vacant foreclosed homes.

5. Publicize the issue by writing a letter to the editor or starting a petition about the condition of the vacant foreclosed home in your neighborhood. If a bank owns the home, it’s not going to want negative publicity.

6. Start a neighborhood crime watch program to keep an eye on vacant foreclosed homes. Even if you don’t have a formal group, ask your neighbors to report to the police any suspicious activity they see at the vacant foreclosed property.

7. You may have to do the maintenance yourself (think of it as playing defense on the property value team) if your neighbors walk away from their house and mortgage.

You and the others who still live on the block can take turns mowing the lawn, shoveling the snow, and parking a car in front of the house, so would-be buyers aren’t turned off by the lack of yard care and criminals can’t identify the house as an obvious vacant foreclosed home. You can alert the post office to the vacancy and ask the newspaper to stop delivery, or just pick up the paper and fliers after they’re delivered.

Before you take on any of those tasks, check local trespass laws so you know whether doing the extra chores that will protect your property value could potentially land you in trouble. If you know the neighbors are going to leave the house vacant, ask them to sign a statement giving your group permission to take care of the home in their absence.



Jeannette Bernay has been in the real estate industry for over two decades. She lives in western Washington State in a rambler on 8 acres with her two horses, two dogs, and three cats.

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

Getting a Snake Out Of Your Home

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

Visit houselogic.com for more articles like this.

Copyright 2011 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

Pets Can Cost You A Sale Even In Belmont

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

As much as Belmont homeowners love their pets, buyers can often find them a distraction.  Even buyers who have pets of their own can be turned off from a house with strong pet odors. There is nothing more obnoxious when showing a property than having someone’s pet jumping on a buyer, barking, or trying to get in or out of a home while you are showing it.   Here are some tips to lessen the problem.  Irl Dixon

Pet Odor Can Chase Away Buyers

By: G. M. Filisko 

Published: October 15, 2010 

Don’t let pet odors derail your home sale. 

Air your house out. While you’re cleaning, throw open all the windows in your home to allow fresh air to circulate and sweep out unpleasant scents. 

Once your house is free of pet odors, do what you can to keep the smells from returning. Crate your dog when you’re out or keep it outdoors. Limit the cat to one floor or room, if possible. Remove or replace pet bedding.

Scrub thoroughly. Scrub bare floors and walls soiled by pets with vinegar, wood floor cleaner, or an odor-neutralizing product, which you can purchase at a pet supply store for $10 to $25.

Try a 1:9 bleach-to-water solution on surfaces it won’t damage, like cement floors or walls.

Got a stubborn pet odors covering a large area? You may have to spend several hundred dollars to hire a service that specializes in hard-to-clean stains.

Wash your drapes and upholstery. Pet odors seep into fabrics. Launder, steam clean, or dry clean all your fabric window coverings. Steam clean upholstered furniture.

Either buy a steam cleaner designed to remove pet hair for around $200 and do the job yourself, or pay a pro. You’ll spend about $40 for an upholstered chair, $100 for a sofa, and $7 for each dining room chair if a pro does your cleaning.

Clean your carpets. Shampoo your carpets and rugs, or have professionals do the job for $25 to $50 per room, depending on their size and the level of filth embedded in them. The cleaner will try to sell you deodorizing treatments. You’ll know if you need to spend the extra money on those after the carpet dries and you have a friend perform a sniff test.

If deodorizing doesn’t remove the pet odor from your home, the carpets and padding will have to go. Once you tear them out, scrub the subfloor with vinegar or an odor-removing product, and install new padding and carpeting. Unless the smell is in the subfloor, in which case that goes next.

Paint, replace, or seal walls. When heavy-duty cleaners haven’t eradicated smells in drywall, plaster, or woodwork, add a fresh coat of paint or stain, or replace the drywall or wood altogether.

On brick and cement, apply a sealant appropriate for the surface for $25 to $100. That may smother and seal in the odor, keeping it from reemerging.

Place potpourri or scented candles in strategic locations. Put a bow on your deep clean with potpourri and scented candles. Don’t go overboard and turn off buyers sensitive to perfumes. Simply place a bowl of mild potpourri in your foyer to create a warm first impression, and add other mild scents to the kitchen and bathrooms.

Control ongoing urine smells. If your dog uses indoor pee pads, put down a new pad each time the dog goes. Throw them away outside in a trash can with a tight lid. Remove even clean pads from view before each showing.

Replace kitty litter daily, rather than scooping used litter clumps, and sweep up around the litter box. Hide the litter box before each showing.

Relocate pets. If your dog or cat has a best friend it can stay with while you’re selling your home (and you can stand to be separated from your pet), consider sending your pet on a temporary vacation. If pets have to stay, remove them from the house for showings and put away their dishes, towels, and toys. 

More from HouseLogic

Preparing your home for sale

Staging your home for sale

Spring cleaning guide 

G.M. Filisko is an attorney and award-winning writer whose former mutt Marley no doubt created a wet-dog aroma in her condo that still remains. A regular contributor to many national publications including Bankrate.com, REALTOR® Magazine, and the American Bar Association Journal, she specializes in real estate, business, personal finance, and legal topics.

“Visit Houselogic.com for more articles like this. Reprinted from HouseLogic.com with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®.”

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