An Older Home As A Green Alternative.

Older Home as Green Alternative
Older Home as Green Alternative

Call it recycling on a grand scale. Homebuyers who want their purchase to be more environmentally friendly are turning to older homes instead of building new. In fact, architect Carl Elefante coined the phrase, “the greenest building is the one that is already built.” What he meant by that is that environmental resources that would be used to build a building’s replacement are often times spared by restoring or repurposing an existing structure.

Did you know that it can take up to 80 years for a new, energy-efficient building to overcome the energy and climate change impacts caused during the construction process? Building reuse offers significant environmental savings when compared to the energy consumption of demolition and new construction.

Older buildings constructed prior to reliance on mechanical heating, cooling and lighting systems utilize what nature offers as part of their design. This can help reduce your energy use, helping you save on heating and cooling your home.

Go green and consider purchasing an older home that just needs a little TLC. Use the option to search by Year Built by clicking here to find a home you can recycle.

Real Estate: A Look Five Years Into the Future

After the historic bursting of the proverbial real estate bubble brought the U.S. economy crumbling, the U.S. housing market has been on the rebound in recent years. Several factors come into play when forecasting the real estate market’s growth and change in the next five years

Home Values and Appreciation

In a survey done by Pulsenomics, the annual appreciation will be 3.94% over the next 5 years and the cumulative appreciation will be 19.7% by 2018. The survey also found that home values will appreciate by 4.5% in 2014.

Home Prices

Studies show that in some select markets, such as San Francisco, home prices may rise as much as 3% over the next 5 years. However, due to investors selling off their inventory, prices overall are forecasted to drop slightly over the same time period.

Mortgage Rates

According to CBS’s MoneyWatch, mortgage rates may be likely to rise, however a mortgage will be easier to secure for an average homebuyer. The rising rates will force lenders to loosen their lending standards. There was also a new federal rule that came into play in early January affecting mortgage standards.

What will real estate be like in five years?
What will real estate be like in five years?

The National Association of Realtors classified 2013 as a low inventory year, however it is projected that available home numbers have rebounded, allowing buyers a better selection and opportunity. This is only going to improve over the next five years according to current rising trends.

Fading Foreclosures

The increase in inventory will give way to a decrease in foreclosures. Between November 2011 and November 2012, when inventory was at a high point, mortgage delinquency rates fell from 7.83% to 7.12%. It is projected that in the next five years those rates will continue to decline.

Why Buying is Cheaper Than Renting

In a report released by Trulia earlier this year, it was found that it is still cheaper to pay a mortgage versus paying rent. Over 100 of the largest metropolitan areas were surveyed, and renting was nearly 40% more expensive than purchasing and making payments on a home.

Even with home prices on the rise, low mortgage rates have made payments manageable, and in most cases less than a monthly mortgage payment for the same space. In fact, mortgage rates would need to rise by over 10% in order for renting to be cheaper than buying, and rates haven’t been that high in over 18 years.

It is also important to keep in mind that purchasing a home is an investment, rather than simply a monthly housing cost. Although home price fluctuations have widely varied in the past decade or so, forecasts look good for the housing market overall in the coming years.

Why Buying is the way to go?
Why Buying is the way to go?


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