L.A. Land

The rapidly changing landscape of the real estate market in Los Angeles and beyond

Category: Neighborhoods: Venice

Manhattan Beach, Venice homes as vacation rentals

June 25, 2009 |  2:22 pm

There's more online interest from property owners in renting out their vacation homes in Southern California beach cities these days, according to a recent report from HomeAway.com.

Manhattan Beach pier Topping the list of markets with the greatest growth in home listings at the site in the first quarter of this year, compared with the first quarter of 2008, was New York City, followed by Manhattan Beach, Vancouver, Mammoth Lakes and Venice.

Meanwhile, travelers' searches increased the most for Arlington, Va.; Watersound, Fla.; Colorado Springs, Colo.; Berkeley; and Beverly Hills. West Hollywood ranked 10th in the HomeAway Vacation Rental Marketplace Report.

Among the reasons owners reported for renting out their second homes was the need to generate income due to job loss, the inability to sell and the risk of foreclosure.

--Lauren Beale

Thoughts? Comments?


Photo: The Manhattan Beach Pier. Credit: Christopher Reynolds / Los Angeles Times


Venice: 'Where affluence and homelessness collide'

April 7, 2009 |  8:30 am

The ongoing problem of people living in RVs along commercial and residential streets in Venice is the subject of a video by The Times' Robert J. Lopez at latimes.com. Among interviewees are one motor home dweller and the owner of Flake restaurant.

Seems things have gotten so bad along Rose Avenue that the locals call it "Skid Rose" these days. Otherwise, it doesn't sound like much has changed since L.A. Land's Jan. 22 post on the issue.

-- Lauren Beale

Thoughts? Comments?


Hot Property: 'General Hospital' star lists Venice home

April 1, 2009 |  4:18 pm

Ingo's house 

Ingo Rademacher, who since 1996 has been the hunkiest reason to watch "General Hospital," unfortunately doesn’t come with the property in Venice he is trying to sell for $2,895,000.

The main house has four bedrooms and three bathrooms. There are two detached rental units, one with two bedrooms and the other a one-bedroom, one-bath apartment. The combined square footage of the units is 4,277.

The main house, built in 2004, has high ceilings, a great room, tumbled marble kitchen counters and stainless-steel appliances. The home has many green features, including solar panels, a tankless water heater and radiant heat in the floors. French doors lead to a rooftop courtyard, where there is a fireplace. The home has a three-car garage.

If all three of the units are leased, the projected monthly income is $14,400 a month, according to the Multiple Listing Service.

Rademacher, 37, has played Jasper "Jax" Jacks on "General Hospital" almost continuously for about a dozen years. His character is known as a man who gets what he wants, so perhaps a house sale is, indeed, on the horizon for him.

Randy Freeman of Prudential California Realty is the listing agent.

-- Ann Brenoff

Thoughts? Comments?

Photo: Mike McNamara


Venice residents up in arms over RVs clogging their streets

January 22, 2009 |  8:30 pm

Rvs"Special zones urged for people who sleep in RVs, cars in Venice" Thursday at latimes.com looks at a problem more communities may be addressing as this economic downturn wears on:

Tough economic times have spilled onto the streets of Venice, which has become a favorite place to park for scores of otherwise homeless people living in cars and campers. The practice has ignited a mini-uprising among residents living in the pricey coastal community.

The number of cars and recreational vehicles has swelled so much over the last year that Councilman Bill Rosendahl, who represents the city's coastal areas, has proposed creating special zones away from neighborhoods where people can sleep in their vehicles.

"The community has been going ballistic," Rosendahl said.

Even though city laws prohibit sleeping in cars, about 200 people are living in them, according to the councilman. Both sides see problems with the proposal.

... some Venice residents said they feared that Rosendahl's plan might also designate certain residential streets in the beach-side community as RV zones.

"We don't believe the solution is turning residential areas into urban RV campgrounds," said Mark Ryavec, who heads the Venice Stakeholders Assn., which recently submitted to Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and the council a petition with 237 signatures of residents opposed to Rosendahl's proposal.

And some RV dwellers are opposed to moving away from schools their children are attending and concerned that their vehicles can't make the trip.

Santa Barbara has been dealing with this issue for the last four years with its "RV Safe Parking Program." Is your area experiencing a similar situation?

-- Lauren Beale

Thoughts? Comments?

Photo: RVs crowd 7th Street in Venice. Credit: Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times 


Westside weakness? One reader sees it

April 30, 2008 |  1:25 pm

Jxzh3pncLook carefully at the photo, there is a quiz below.

One of the most popular topics on this blog is the debate over what will happen to prices in higher-cost neighborhoods.  To date, they have generally held their value better than greater Los Angeles, and have not suffered large numbers of foreclosures. That said, reader e-mail from "Someday the Ants Will Eat Grasshoppers":

"Your readers keep asking why the prices are holding up on the high end Westside properties. I’m not sure what they’re looking at, but I have been tracking prices in Westwood, lower Brentwood, Santa Monica (north of the 10), and Pacific Palisades every day for past 3 months. I look at every house for sale under $2M with 3 bedrooms or more, and I look every day. Really.

"Here are the relevant numbers (calculated from my daily Redfin downloads for those neighborhoods and that price range):
"The average number of listed homes dropping their asking price per day: 1.15
"The average size of any one price drop when it occurs: $53,090.90
"The average drop across all 50-60 properties meeting the search criteria per day: $1,017.58
"Ratio of new homes being listed to homes being sold: 3.48.

"So…Westside sellers are constantly dropping asking prices, and often in large amounts (the largest I saw since Feb was $400K). New properties are being listed for sale over three times more often than listed properties are selling. With asking prices for these sub $2M properties dropping about $1K per day, only the very rich would want to buy now. I mean, if you are in that market, that’s like putting $30K per month in your pocket just for waiting.

"People have observed that comps are not lowering. However, the average selling price is about $200K less than the average asking price in these neighborhoods right now. The comps are slow to decline simply because there are very few sales right now. No one (with good reason) seems to be buying. Eventually the transactions will happen, and the comps will adjust. Everyone needs to be patient, although frankly, I wish someone would buy now and then to help accelerate the lowering comps.

"I hope you run this story (or at least selected parts of it), because many of the high earners in your fan club get less attention, and certainly less sympathy, about the difficulty of getting into the market. They deserve to know that their lot will change, too, and their hard work and patience will pay off. Life is fair."

Thanks, Someday.
Now, as promised, the quiz. The house pictured is a 993-square foot, 3-bedroom, 1-bath in the 90405 ZIP code of Santa Monica.The current Zillow Zestimate is:
a) $599,000
b) $714,000
c) $805,000
d) $917,000
e) $1.06 million

Your thoughts? Guesses? Email story tips to peter.viles@latimes.com
Photo Credit: L.A. Times


Video interlude: A Venice loft on Abbot Kinney

February 15, 2008 |  4:23 pm

NightNow for something completely different: The L.A.Times' first video home tour is now up and live at latimes.com.

The home in question, pictured at left, is the newspaper's Home of the Week, a 3,300-square foot, three-story, live-work artist's loft on Abbot Kinney in Venice.

I know, I know, it's expensive.

But you're missing the point, which is that latimes.com's real estate coverage has finally entered the video era. This is an exciting first for the website and showcases excellent work by video journalist Katy Newton. Look for more video home tours and video stories about the struggling real estate market, the foreclosure crisis and other news from the real estate beat.

Photo credit: Latimes.com


Hosed flipper in Venice

October 8, 2007 |  2:29 pm

200710pspotter10thWe know how many of you enjoy hearing about flippers who get stuck, and get burned, so we thought we'd pass along this one from Curbed LA: It's Curbed's "PriceSpotter" game, which is a game show within a blog, but the bottom line is that a duplex in Venice that sold in April of '06 for $1.135 million just sold for a bit less -- $1.080 million. As Curbed observes, "Some poor flipper got hosed."

Your thoughts? Comments? Be nice. E-mail story tips to lalandblog@yahoo.com
Photo Credit: Curbed LA


Price reduced, reduced, reduced

July 27, 2007 |  7:45 am

UnknownGood morning. This one, from an e-mail tipster, gave us a laugh, and we thought we'd pass it along: A Venice home (1686 Electric Ave.) that's been sitting on the market for 159 days has had nine price reductions... of $1,000 each.

Here's the price history from Zip Realty:
Price Reduced: 05/15/07 -- $1,299,000 to $1,298,000
Price Reduced: 05/22/07 -- $1,298,000 to $1,297,000
Price Reduced: 05/29/07 -- $1,297,000 to $1,296,000
Price Reduced: 06/05/07 -- $1,296,000 to $1,295,000
Price Reduced: 06/12/07 -- $1,295,000 to $1,294,000
Price Reduced: 06/19/07 -- $1,294,000 to $1,293,000
Price Reduced: 06/26/07 -- $1,293,000 to $1,292,000
Price Reduced: 07/03/07 -- $1,292,000 to $1,291,000
Price Reduced: 07/10/07 -- $1,291,000 to $1,290,000

If the house looks smallish to you, you're right: it's 1,300 SF on a 3,900 SF lot.

We take it this kind of mischief is inspired by the knowledge that more and more home buyers are searching websites for price reductions.... We'd love to hear your thoughts on this.

Photo Credit: CLAW/MLS
E-mail story tips to lalandblog@yahoo.com



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