Author: Buy2Greece

  • Extreme sport Dream Walker back on Zante

    Buy2Greece.com – 

    Zakynthos will again host the extreme sports events of parachute base jumping at the Shipwreck bay. The Municipality of Zakynthos and the Tourist Destinations Agency Management issued a press release which said it supported the unique sporting event entitled “DREAM WALKER”

    The event will take place at Shipwreck Bay, from 8 to 25 June 2014 with extreme sports involving Polish athletes making impressive strides with various techniques of Dream Jumping and Free Rope Jumping

    This will be the third year that such an event has been held at Shipwreck Bay.

    It is 300mts drop from the cliffs to the shipwreck, making it a very exciting and dangerous sport to watch and now the aim is to raise the profile of the event to an even higher level, by continuing to establishment of this annual extreme sports events during the periods of high season.

    source: ermisnews

  • Buy2Greece- Oscar best in Greek Tourism

    Buy2Greece.com –

    Greece’s Leading Car Rental Company:

    Avis, Europcar, Greece Car Rental, Holiday Autos, Sixt.

    Greece’s Leading All Inclusive Resort:

    Atrium Palace Thalasso Spa Resort, Blue Lagoon Village, La Marquise Hotel, Minos Imperial Luxury Beach Resort & Spa.

    Greece’s Leading All Suite Hotel:

    Bill & Coo Suites, Domes of Elounda, Rodos Park Suites & Spa.

    Greece’s Leading Boutique Hotel:

    Chromata, Elounda Gulf Villas & Suites, Grace Santorini, Hotel Katikies, Iconic Santorini, Lato Boutique Hotel, Porto Zante Villas, Villa Galini at Porto Carras Grand Resort.

    Greece’s Leading Boutique Spa Hotel:

    Casa Del Mar, Kirini Suites & Spa, Life Gallery Hotel.

    Greece’s Leading Business Hotel:

    Athenaeum InterContinental Athens, Athens Ledra Marriott Hotel, Divani Apollon Palace & Spa, Divani Caravel Hotel, Hilton Athens.

    Greece’s Leading Conference Hotel:

    Athenaeum InterContinental Athens, Divani Apollon Palace & Spa, Divani Caravel Hotel, Hotel Grande Bretagne, Hyatt Regency Thessaloniki, The Westin Athens Astir Palace Beach Resort.

    Greece’s Leading Family Resort:

    Aldemar Royal Mare, Arion Resort & Spa, Astir Palace, Elounda Beach Hotel, Porto Carras Grand Resort, Sani Resort, The Westin Athens Astir Palace Beach Resort.

    Greece’s Leading Hotel:

    Athenaeum InterContinental Athens, Divani Apollon Palace & Spa, Elounda Beach Hotel, Hotel Grande Bretagne, King George Palace, Minos Beach Art Hotel.

    Greece’s Leading Hotel Management Company:

    Alternative Management Solution, HotelBrain, Lamway.

    Greece’s Leading Hotel Residences:

    Ava Hotel and Suites (Aθήνα), Brasil Hotel Suites and Apartments (Αθήνα), Elounda Peninsula All Suite Hotel and Residences (Κρήτη).

    Greece’s Leading Resort:

    Aldemar Royal Olympian Spa & Thalasso, Arion, a Luxury Collection Resort & Spa – Astir Palace, Elounda Bay Palace, Minos Imperial Luxury Beach Resort & Spa, Mykonos Grand Hotel & Resort, Porto Carras Grand Resort, Porto Elounda Deluxe Resort, The Westin Athens Astir Palace Beach Resort.

    Greece’s Leading Spa Resort:

    Aldemar Royal Mare, Blue Palace Resort & Spa, Cavo Tagoo, Divani Apollon Palace & Spa, Elounda Bay Palace, Mystique of Santorini, Royal Myconian Resort and Thalasso Spa.

    Greece’s Leading Destination Management Company:

    AVRA tours, Horizon Travel, MidEast International Tours, Vista Events.

  • Rent2Greece – 5 Improvements That De-Value a Home

    Buy2Greece.com –

    “Less is more.” ~ Ludwig Mies van der Rohe

    If you just purchased a home in less than optimal condition to flip or rent as an investment, you’re probably ready to start swinging the hammer. FREEZE!

    Did you know that these 5 home “improvements” actually devalue a home?

    Even if you don’t plan to sell the home for a profit, they’ll hurt your chances of getting the home rented out sooner rather than later…

    1. A Bad Coat of Paint:
      Fresh paint is a must, but not bold paint. Bold color choices are suited for certain personality types and will limit your audience of potential tenants. Not everyone loves a bright yellow kitchen! Stick to neutrals, as tenants will more easily be able to match their furniture and belongings.
    2. Cheap Fixtures:
      Installing low-quality or cheap fixtures that become a permanent part of the house (shower heads and sink faucets) can really hurt you. We know that it’s going to be a few dollars more for the next grade of quality, but it will make your home look much more luxurious and durable.
    3. “Luxury” Headaches:
      Pools, hot tubs and extravagant landscapes are considered things of luxury, but they come along with maintenance – something many renters aren’t interested in investing in or keeping up with. After all, it’s not their home.
    4. Overly Specialized Spaces:
      Don’t turn the garage into a four-season sun room. When you are upgrading spaces, think “functionality” above all else. Renters need to be able to envision their life (and their daily tasks and needs) easily occurring in your home.
    5. Over-the-Top Kitchens and Baths:
      Kitchens or baths that are too taste-specific will not appeal to every tenant. As with paint, think neutral and as with specialized spaces, think functional. No need for extensive tile work or bright red appliances.

    Okay, now you are ready to begin renovations! Did you know that V&V Real Estate Associates has an in-house construction crew in addition to our real estate associates and financial specialists?

    We are able to get investment properties rehabbed and ready for tenants if necessary and can even get the property approved for Section-8. We provide this work at rates that are typically 30% lower than the average contractor would charge and we work extra hard to have the property occupied within 90 to 120 days!

  • Buy2Greece.com-7 things that real estate investors must know This is what’s going to drive real estate economics

    Buy2Greece – ( HouseGreekHouse member )

    7) Housing

    Kelly thinks that the housing market is in recovery mode, but he acknowledges home ownership continues to lag. While Case Schiller reports home prices rising by about 13% over last year, not all areas of the U.S. experience encouraging price increases. Despite moderate growth in the economy, U.S. Census data reflects the lowest rate of home ownership since 1995.

    Credit is again tight, but as the job market improves, home purchases are expected to increase. The multifamily sector may feel downward pressure caused by transition from renting to buying — at the same time an avalanche of new multifamily units is becoming available as a result of boom development in that sector over the past few years.

    6) Capital Markets

    Kelly thinks that the enticement of riding a high-yield wave is luring capital back into real estate, with investment in a wide variety of choices, from agricultural land to commercial mortgage backed securities.

    Action by the Federal Reserve will affect the market as investors await extraction of Quantitative Easing, scheduled to be completed before year end. The question is whether or not we are headed for another “bubble.”

    5) Water

    The U.S. will likely experience serious water shortages as well, Kelly says. Aging water infrastructure, droughts (particularly in the southwest) and reduced water deliveries to agriculture have the potential to cause water-related economic problems. A number of states face severe water challenges; Las Vegas’ Lake Meade, which supplies 100% of the city’s water needs, is projected to have a 50% chance of drying out by 2025.

    A 2013 U.S. government report showed that groundwater depletion in the U.S. for the years 2000 to 2008 was nearly three times greater than the average rate of depletion for the preceding 108 years — from 1900 to 2008. Some future projections project 1.8 billion people living in regions with confirmed water scarcity by the year 2025.

    The implications for real estate are enormous – affecting land value, community desirability, future viability and investment. Consider also that China is home to 20% of the world’s population, but only 7% of its fresh water. Water may become a political issue as well as a health issue in a relatively short timeframe.

    4) Healthcare

    Considerable consolidation of hospital and healthcare organizations is underway, with an enormous impact on real estate – mergers and acquisitions create both excess properties and an increased demand for updated facilities. These new entities are building satellite healthcare centers, urgent care and diagnostic facilities. Pharmacy chains are installing wellness clinics in stores and some large employers are building health clinics within their companies. All of these factors will spur development of different forms of housing.

    3) The Millennials

    The Millennial generation, born after 1980, represents 27% of the U.S. adult population–and their influence is far-reaching. This group is the first to fully embrace new technology, including the Internet, eCommerce, mobile communications and social media. Their practices are poised to change the way society interacts, receives information, shops and lives. Millennials show a strong preference for urban living and working, value mass transit and “work, live, play” communities where residents of all ages, ethnicities, and income brackets live side by side. They carry high levels of student loan debt, drive fewer cars, marry later, and often choose smaller living spaces than the typical homes in the suburbs that appealed to their parents a generation ago. Their preferences are already having an effect on both city and suburban residential, multifamily, office and retail sectors.

    2) Jobs

    The economy has now replaced all of the jobs lost during the Great Recession, Kelly claims, although they are much lower wage jobs. He says the real estate industry must adapt to those changes.

    “We need to find ways where a … first job is not a dead-end job,” Kelly said.

    If the U.S. economy grows by the forecasted 2.8%, the number of new jobs likely to be added will continue to number 200,000 to 250,000 per month. Strong job creation is expected to have a positive impact on the residential and multifamily sectors. The types of jobs being offered should move up the quality scale, raising average wages and boosting purchasing power for consumers as well as the ability of landlords to extract rents.

    Job reductions, however, in retail and branch banking, largely due to changes in consumer behavior and online technology, will take a toll on housing, may benefit the apartment sector and could negatively impact commercial real estate. Service sector jobs may absorb some of those displaced. Communities and neighborhoods that once valued big-box stores may be well served by courting schools, physical therapy services and even independent and assisted living facilities for senior citizens drawn to a retail/lifestyle/entertainment environment.

    1) Energy

    “Energy independence is here, and it a game changer for the economy,” Kelly said. “We’re going to need more and more energy if we’re going to grow. Our question is will we create enough?”

    The impact of energy production changes varies by state and community depending on access to resources, regulatory trends and other factors; however, many communities involved in increased energy production are experiencing a jobs boom with related housing and services growth for workers. Uncertainty in the energy sector created by dueling reports from environmentalists and the oil and chemical companies provide investors with opportunities. The potential for relatively low natural gas prices (now one-fifth the cost of Europe and Asia) in combination with other factors has improved the outlook for manufacturing and could significantly advance the expansion of rail, shipbuilding and related industries should gas exports increase.

  • HERAKLEIDON MUSEUM PROGRAM JUNE – JULY 2014

    Buy2Greece.com

    ATHENS MUSEUMS AND CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS NETWORK “OUR OWN ATHENS”
    14 June 2014-15 June 2014

    “Our own Athens”

    On the 14th and 15 of June
    15 institutions-members of the
    Athens Museums & Cultural Organisations Network
    organize a number of free admission activities
    for adults and families.

     


    The Herakleidon Museum will participate to the above activity with the following program: 

    Venue: HERAKLEIDON MUSEUM
    Theme: “Urban Geometry” –  Photography Exhibition by Anthi Xenaki
    Day & Hour: Sunday, June 15th, 11:00-13:00.
    A two-hour tour to be offered by Mrs. Xenaki
    Target group: Both adults and children
    Description of the action: A photography exhibition by Anthi Xenaki with the title “Urban Geometry”. The exhibition is inspired by the architectural details of Athenian buildings of the Modern Movement.
  • Cuba offers visas to foreign real estate investors

    Buy2Greece.com

    What a difference three years makes. In 2011, President Raul Castro lifted the ban on buying and selling real esate in Cuba, a revolutionary step for the island’s housing market – because until that point, there effectively was no housing market at all.

    The laws, introduced in November almost three years ago, followed years of black market bartering in streetmarkets and let residents of the island legally exchange, donate and sell homes for the first time. Cubans were even allowed to own two homes, including a holiday home, although buyers would have to prove their funds were legitmate.

    Foreigners, though, were not permitted to purchase property: they required a permanent residence in order to take part in the housing revolution. Despite that, people overseas remained interested: approximtaely $1 billion entered the island each year in remittances from Cuban relatives living in the USA.

    Now, though, Cuba is offering residency to those who want to buy from abroad. The government announced this month a “temporary residency” visa for overseas investors buying or leasing property, completing the country’s turnaround from its socialist past.

    The plans arrive just as the island officially allows overseas investment in the country’s real estate. A new investment law was approved in March that would authorise the sale of of real estate to those outside of the country, part of an attempt to encourage investment from overseas.

    Indedd, Cuba needs to attract $2 billion to $2.5 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI) every year to meet its target of 7 per cent economic growth, the minister for foreign trade and investment Rodrigo Malmierca told Cuban TV in March:

    “If the economy does not grow at levels around 7 percent … we are not going to be able to develop.”

    The new law will also halve profits tax from 30 per cent to 15 per cent, with investors exempt from the levy for eight years, reports Reuters. Some experts argued that confidence would be needed as well as tax cuts, assurance that foreign investors’ capital would be secure in the island’s economy.

    “We have to provide incentives in order for them to come,” Malmierca added.

    Now, they have one: visas. The renewable permit is valid for one year and will be available for foreigners “who are owners or lessees of real estate, as well as their foreign relatives who might require it”, reports the Havana Times.

    Foreigners “may carry out activities related to tourism and business duly authorized by the existing legislation”, although any other activities will require another special permit.

    If investors conduct “behavior that violates the Constitution”, remain outside of Cuba for one year, or cease to lease or own the property, the visa will be revoked.

    The scheme follows several around the world from struggling housing markets attempting to stimulate their own economy with investment from non-EU buyers. 

    From no property trade at all to a housing market similar to Europe? What a difference three years makes.

    Where will Cuba be in another three years’ time?

    Author – Dan Johnson

  • ‘Scarface’ Mansion Asking $35 Million

    Buy2Greece.com

    A Southern California mansion made famous in the 1983 film “Scarface” has returned to the market with gusto.

    While the movie depicts a Florida location, it was at this impressive Mediterranean compound in Montecito where some of the more iconic scenes in “Scarface” were filmed. According to the Wall Street Journal, the neoclassical estate with movie pedigree is now upfor sale to the tune of $35 million—a sum that even Tony Montana would appreciate.

    Architect Bertram Goodhue was commissioned to design the estate, known as “El Fureidis,” in the early 1900’s. Recently renovated, the home sits surrounded by mature palms on 10 acres in Santa Barbara County.

    Borrowing from Byzantine influences, the estate touts a 10,000-square-foot floor plan with four bedrooms, nine bathrooms, and a rooftop deck with views of the Channel Islands. Interiors feature 24-carat gold leaf finishes and barreled ceiling, and a central alcove boasts an 18-foot domed ceiling.

    Outdoors, the relaxed grounds further indulge with a range of Mediterranean influences, including various gardens, cascading pools, water features, and the two-level patio used to film the wedding scene in “Scarface.”

    Emily McBride Kellenberger of Village Properties, an exclusive affiliate of Christie’s International Real Estate, has the listing.

  • The Surprising Facts Your Landlord Wishes You Knew

    Most renters know that paying the rent on time and following the lease will keep them out of hot water, but what does it really take to have a great relationship with your landlord?

    The answer may surprise you. (Hint: It isn’t all about the rent.)

    The Ideal Tenant

    When landlords interview prospective tenants, they’re looking for job stability and steady income first and foremost, but their wish list goes beyond that.

    “The quality landlords value most is stability,” said Mia Melle, president and broker ofRenttoday.us. “An ideal renter is one who will stay in the home for years to come, raise a family, create memories and treat the home like their own.”

    Landlords also like to see that you are good at managing your finances. “Having a few months’ worth of rental payments in the bank” is very helpful, Melle said.

    Do the Upkeep

    Once you have moved in, try to treat the space like you own it. Keep everything clean, well-maintained and in good, working order.

    “Many times renters aren’t familiar with the cost of home improvements, so something as simple as not watering the lawn and causing the grass to die can result in thousands of dollars to the homeowner to replace the sod once the renter moves out,” Melle said.

    Take care of landscaping, clean up spills as soon as they happen and keep children and pets from causing any damage to the walls or flooring, and your landlord will thank you for it.

    Always Ask First

    After you have lived in a rental for a while, your tastes—or your life—may change. You may decide to adopt a new puppy, or you may want to repaint the kitchen to match your curtains. Before you make any of those changes, ask your landlord if they are allowed. Not only do bigger changes such as adding a pet often require an addendum to your lease, but your landlord will appreciate being considered.

    Call for Backup the Right Way

    When it comes to making maintenance requests, be careful when and how you contact your landlord.

    “A renter should know how to do simple repairs around the property and understand the landlord cannot always be at their beck and call or send a $200 repair guy to change a light bulb,” Melle said.

    If you have to call to request a repair, make sure you explain the problem thoroughly and be willing to let your landlord troubleshoot issues with you over the phone. If you can save your landlord a bit of time (or money) you will build a great relationship.

    See Things From Your Landlord’s Point of View

    “Ultimately, landlords want renters to understand that they are just regular people with jobs and bills and not faceless, emotionless corporations with huge bank accounts,” Melle said.

    Understanding that your landlord is just another human being who struggles to manage time and money just like you do will go a long way in building a relationship.

  • 6 Easy Steps to Furnishing Your New Home

    Buy2Greece.com

    It’s difficult to call a house a home if it lacks creature comforts. Without the right furniture and accessories a house is just an empty shell. Nevertheless, deciding how to furnish a home can be intimidating when you’re staring at blank walls. Here are six tips to help furnish your new home.

    1. Take Stock

    Before you begin shopping for new furniture for your home, clean house. Go through the belongings at your current place, taking stock of which items you want to keep or get rid of.

    2. Collect Your Thoughts

    Once you have a handle on your belongings, determine your personal style. Don’t get bogged down trying to understand interior design principles. Instead, go through magazines and browse the Internet to get inspiration from the images of things you find functional and fashionable.

    When you’re ready to window shop, measure your new digs so you know what will fit your home. The sofa sectional you swoon over on the expansive furniture store floor might not be a good fit if you are confined to a smaller floorplan.

    Also take time to test the furniture and comparison shop. Do you need durable materials to withstand pets and toddlers, or do you prefer to host elegant dinner parties? You can get a sense of how well a piece will meet your needs by testing the comfort level before buying (sit down, lie down, recline), and taking home a color swatch to see if you still like a fabric once you’re home.

    3. Choose a Color Palette

    Color can set the tone for your home’s personality. If you already own art or a rug, or have a fantastic view, then you can choose a hue from that element and carry the color throughout a room. Not everything needs to match, but it’s more economical to pick neutral furnishings and use color on an accent wall or in accessories like pillows, lamps and throws because you can quickly change those colored items to suit your mood.

    4. Go for Quality, Not Quantity

    When shopping, seek out high-quality furniture that will last longer and be comfortable for years to come. Although fashion fads come and go, classic, simple-line designs never go out of style. Save the frills for smaller furniture pieces, new fabrics and accessories.

    5. Add Accessories

    Accessories add personality to rooms. Mirrors, mantels, plants, clocks, carpets and area rugs are often overlooked home furnishings that can make a unique fashion statement. You can draw attention to a couch by hanging artwork overhead or arranging seating around it. You can play up a bed with matching sheets, comforters and pillows. Alternatively, you can shine a spotlight on your furnishings with an array of modern-day lighting solutions.

    6. Be Patient

    Don’t be tempted to buy everything you want at once, even if your budget can afford it. It’s better to start small and focus on one room at a time to make sure you’re happy with each purchase. While the set-up in a home decor store may look fabulous, buying the entire set will make your home look like, well, the home decor store.

    Remember, when you make the invesetment to purchase a house, you’re likely planning to live in the home for a while. So give yourself time to settle in. Plus furniture shopping should be fun, so you should enjoy and not rush through furnishing your new home!

    This article has been updated from an earlier version by Deena Weinberg.