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Hillsborough, New Jersey

Real estate market information and occasionally spirited opinions about residential real estate in Somerset, Hunterdon, Mercer and Middlesex Counties by a REALTOR® with over a quarter century of experience. COMMENTS ARE WELCOME. Please use the Add Comment link at the bottom of the posting.

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RE: Country Classics Real Estate Trends 2008
Rich, you raise some good points with regard to st...
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Country Classics Real Estate Trends 2008

Feb. 24, 2009

Country Classics in Hillsborough, New Jersey, is a very popular development that has been building since 1991.  When it is finished several years from now, it will have about 800 homes, mostly two-story with full basements and two- or three-car garages mostly on lots less than half an acre.

Country Classics has not totally escaped the real estate troubles of the past two years.  Looking at price trends over the past five years we see the following for "resales" (not new by the builder, who since 2006 is building again and competing with his former customers):

2004     10 sold and closed     Median sale price: $603,750 

2005     11 sold and closed      Median sale price: $686,000

2006     11 sold and closed      Median sale price: $715,050

2007     12 sold and closed     Median sale price: $680,000

2008      9 sold and closed     Median sale price: $659,000

In this development there was a decline of 4.9% in median price from 2006 to 2007, according to the sales reported in the Garden State Multiple Listing Service (GSMLS).  From 2007 to 2008 there was a decline of 3.09% in median sale price of resales.  Part of this decline may be attributed to the competition from the builder, who is vigorously marketing, including finished basements occasionally in his base price.  Right now, his base price is $699,900.

 What is the point to all this?  Value increases (and decreases) all come down to individual homes, and in this development some floor plans have more appeal than others.  Usually, the bigger homes garner more attention as well as more money.  Certain lots - not always the largest - have more attractiveness than others.  Some amenities are more appealing than others.  But the bottom line really is that sellers in developments where the builder is still building, really shouldn't sell unless it suits their own time frame and lifestyle. 

 But isn't that what owning a home should be about anyway?  Don't try to time the market on the basis of a guru's recommendation.  Suit your needs and lifestyle.

For more information on Country Classics, go to:http://tinyurl.com/b2bl3c
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User Comments

1. RE: Country Classics Real Estate Trends 2008

Written by: richcasto
Sep. 8, 2009

http://eeepc.asus.com/global/product900.htmlInteresting data, but a decline in "median" price for sample sets of 9-12 houses may not be statistically meaningful, especially considering the variation in house and lot size in Country Classics. (I suspect that the bigger/pricier houses are harder to sell.)

 

A scatter plot of sale prices over time would be interesting, especially if both new and resales were included (color-coded to show the difference).

2. RE: Country Classics Real Estate Trends 2008

Written by: Karl von Loewe
Sep. 8, 2009

Rich, you raise some good points with regard to statistical validity.  However, Country Classics in a real estate market sense is a very limited subset of the Hillsborough real estate market, and the homes in CC probably have more in common with each other, regardless of price and/or size,  than they have with other homes in the same price range in Hillsborough.  It is not uncommon for transferees to the area to ask to see homes in Country Classics, not a specific price range in Hillsborough.  That suggests a special case, at least that's my read after 15+ years of focusing on marketing CC.

The comparison (and competition) of new and resales is a whole 'nother issue.  I've found in my 30 years of real estate that most people prefer "new construction," but not the costs involved.  In other words, they would like the new-ness without the cost of adding landscaping, driveway, etc.  A house of 10 years or less is most attractive, but only if it has had the landscaping, etc. installed, and such a home is a resale, not new.  Interesting, isn't it?  Talk about conflicted!

Thanks for your comments.

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