Showing posts with label paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paris. Show all posts
STREET TALK
The 10 Most Expensive Streets In The World
Mamta Badkar
Business Insider · Mar. 14, 2011
#10 Ostozhenka, Moscow
Top price: $18,000 per square meter
Price change since 2009: -30%
A statue of Friedrich Engels marks the beginning of Ostozhenka Street which is part of Moscow's Golden Mile. The street is known for pre-Revolutionary architecture and newer constructions in the neighborhood have been designed to blend in.
#9 Wolseley Road, Point Piper
Top price: $20,900 per square meter
Price change since 2009: -5%
The $52 million sale of Villa Veneto has been Wolseley Road's most expensive sale. Owned by some of Australia's richest businessmen, many of these homes have stunning views of the Sydney Harbor.
#8 Via Romazzino, Porto Cervo, Sardinia
Top price: $23,700 per square meter
Price change since 2009: -35%
Some of the richest Italian's and Russian billionaires like reportedly have vacation homes at Porto Cervo, an Italian sea-side resort. The Via Romazzino is supposed to be the poshest part of Porto Cervo.
#7 Rue Bellot, Geneva
Top price: $43,000 per square meter
Price change since 2009: -2%
Rue Bellot first made the top 10 list in 2010 and its prices have slipped since. Prices have been pushed up by rising demand for homes and fewer sales.
#6 Quai Anatole, Paris
Top price: $44,600 per square meter
Price change since 2009: (new)
With gorgeous neo-classical architecture and views of the River Seine Paris' Quai Anatole makes its first appearance on the list.
#4 Fifth Avenue, New York (TIE)
Top price: $62,700 per square meter
Price change since 2009: -4%
New York's Fifth Ave which tied for the second spot on last year's list has dropped to fourth position this year. It's still home to some of the most expensive real-estate and boutiques in the world though.
#4 Chemin de Saint-Hospice, Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat (TIE)
Top price: $62,700 per square meter
Price change since 2009: +5%
Prices of the 15 homes on Nice's Chemin de Saint-Hospice have gone up since 2010. It tied for fourth position this year after having dropped to 5th position last year down from the second spot in 2009.
#3 Avenue Princesse Grace
Top price: $69,700 per square meter
Price change since 2009: +2%
Prices on Monaco's Avenue Princesse Grace have dropped significantly from the $120,000 it demanded in 2009. While its rank and rates are up from 2010 and it still makes the top 10 list, there has been a lack of demand for real-estate in the area.
#2 Kensington Palace Gardens, London
Top price: $76,600 per square meter
Price change since 2009: +2%
Kensington Palace Gardens often called Billionaire's Row held the same spot in 2010. The street houses many embassies and billionaire's like Lakshmi Mittal and hedge fund manager Noam Gottesman have homes there.
#1 Severn Road, Hong Kong
Top price: $78,200 per square meter
Price change since 2009: +9%
Having ranked 8th in 2009, Severn Road has held the top spot since 2010. It's rates fell 72% during the recession but the wealthiest residents in Mainland China have driven up prices there.
Les Puces de Saint-Ouen - flea market in Paris

The Paris flea market opens on Saturdays, Sundays and Mondays. It is one of the most popular flea markets in Paris and the biggest in Europe, I was told.
You can find everything here from stylish furniture to old postcards or old Vogue patterns. I also spotted an old LV suitcase.
In the fifties and sixties, the Paris flea market had a reputation as a place where you could buy intereseting old furniture at very low prices.
This is not the case anymore, most of the prices were (in my opinion) far too high. I think it would take a real French person to bargain a good price.
The market is very Parisian and really worth visiting. We bought nothing but took lots of inspiring photos which I am going to share with you:
In the fifties and sixties, the Paris flea market had a reputation as a place where you could buy intereseting old furniture at very low prices.
This is not the case anymore, most of the prices were (in my opinion) far too high. I think it would take a real French person to bargain a good price.
The market is very Parisian and really worth visiting. We bought nothing but took lots of inspiring photos which I am going to share with you:


I loved every single chair I saw on the market but since we travelled to Paris on the plane there was no way AirFrance would let me take something so big!




Paris - furniture shop - Grange
Last weekend me and my husband went to Paris. Since we have been there few times our priority wasn't to see the places always visited by tourists. We wanted to discover Paris from a different side. We did end up in strange places or in strange book shops but overall it was a great weekend. On Saturday we drunk Belgian beer in an Irish bar watching rugby Scotland-Wales! How random was that?
My priority was to visit as many furniture shops as possible and to go to an antique market - Porte de Clignancourt, officially called Les Puces de Saint-Ouen. I have 600+ photos of furniture to get inspiration from and it was very difficult to choose few for my blog.
I decided to split my Paris trip into 2 blog posts; one with a lovely furniture shop and one with the antique market.
So there it is - lovely furniture shop called Grange (they also have a shop in London).
http://www.grange.fr/grange/easysite/grange/fr/accueil


My priority was to visit as many furniture shops as possible and to go to an antique market - Porte de Clignancourt, officially called Les Puces de Saint-Ouen. I have 600+ photos of furniture to get inspiration from and it was very difficult to choose few for my blog.
I decided to split my Paris trip into 2 blog posts; one with a lovely furniture shop and one with the antique market.
So there it is - lovely furniture shop called Grange (they also have a shop in London).
http://www.grange.fr/grange/easysite/grange/fr/accueil
I absolutely loved this bookcase; the shape, colour and the finish!
Second on my list of favourites items in the shop where the colourful side tables. Aren't they georgeous???
The funirture on the set looked amazing and very homely.
I really liked the pictures; what to do with old postcards?? easy!
This green chest of drawers was one of my favourite too!
MORTGAGE CONFUSION
New mortgage rules leave homebuyers confused
Insured buyers must show 'ability to pay'
James Pasternak, Financial Post
Published: Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Frank and Susan Williams bought a house near Hamilton, Ont., this month, they followed a time-honoured tradition of using leveraged financing.
With mortgage insurance they only had to put down 5% of the $270,000 purchase price. They went with a closed variable rate at 2.25% and amortized the loan over 35 years. The deal was initiated with a mortgage broker, with Bank of Nova Scotia providing the financing.
"It's a three-bedroom bungalow. That was attractive to us. We have a dog and we like to do things in the backyard. We did not have the type of money we thought we'd have to put into a house. We said let's just bite the bullet and get this over with," Ms. Williams says.
And getting it over with was probably a good idea. First, they were in a rent-to-own arrangement and had to exercise their option to buy before August 2010. And second, based on pending federal rules for government-backed insured mortgages that come into effect on April 19, the Williams (not their real name) would probably not have qualified for the variable-rate mortgage. In fact, as recent arrivals from the United States and its housing crisis, their credit history might not have passed any stress test.
"We really came from the United States with nothing. Everything we had disappeared with the housing crisis. In areas that had bad loans all the houses just hit bottom. We were expecting US$250,000 out of our house but we got nothing," Ms. Williams says. They walked away from the whole mess.
But while the Williams might have had good reasons for leveraging to get their dream home -- they are firsttime buyers in Canada -- the new federal rules governing mortgages have been widely misunderstood. In fact, the biggest fear among the young and house-less is fear itself.
"There are a lot of rules that changed. But they weren't communicated very well," says Robert McLister, the editor of Vancouver-based Canadian Mortgage Trends (www.CanadianMortgageTrends.com).
Margo Wynhofen, of Grimsby, Ont.-based Verico One Mortgage Corp. ( www.mymortgageadvisor.ca) and vice-president of the Independent Mortgage Brokers Association of Ontario, says she has had to spend considerable time explaining federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty's statement of Feb. 16.
"I had a lot of people misunderstand the announcement. So I had a lot of clients call me for clarification. There was an overwhelming sigh of relief," Ms. Wynhofen says.
Under current mortgage-lending rules, buyers with a down payment of less than 20% of the purchase price must purchase mortgage insurance, with the most common source being Canadian Housing and Mortgage Corp. The new rules affect only customers that are required to purchase the insurance.
Under the new rules, all buyers requiring mortgage insurance will have to meet the "ability to pay" for a higher, more expensive five-year fixed-rate mortgage even if they choose a mortgage with a lower interest rate and a shorter term.
"It's not just first-time homebuyers who are affected. It's anyone who wants a variable mortgage rate now who doesn't have one already, they now have to qualify at a higher interest rate. Some of them won't qualify. And that's fine so they'll just take a fixed rate. It's not the end of the world," Ms. Wynhofen says.
Bernice Dunsby, director of home equity financing at the Royal Bank, says the new rules might even help save first-time buyers from themselves.
"We believe the new measures will have a small impact on mortgage growth, if any. First-time buyers should not be any more concerned about these changes. In fact, I believe the changes will actually help first-time homebuyers to ensure that not only can they afford their home today but in the future, especially if interest rates rise," says Ms. Dunsby.
In some cases, the rules might be outdated before they are fully implemented. A growing number of homebuyers are forgoing the conventional mortgage and using alternative financial products. Take the case of London, Ont., accountant and recent homebuyer Phil Parkinson. Three years ago, he bought his first home with a fully secured line of credit offered through Manulife Financial Corp.
The Manulife One product provides up to 80% of the appraised value of your home. It can be used to pay off the balance of your existing mortgage, personal lines of credit and any other outstanding debts you might have.
"These operate on a variable rate. It's just like one big bank account. You can have your money deposited into the account, you can pay your bills. [As you deposit] you can knock your account down and lower your interest calculation. Theoretically, you don't have to pay anything expect the interest," Mr. Parkinson says.
Other highlights of the rules don't directly affect firsttime buyers. For example, the maximum amount Canadians can withdraw in refinancing their mortgages has dropped to 90% from 95% of the value of their homes. rule has created a mini-stampede.
"There is a bit of urgency now to get [a refinancing] done before April 19. People are chronically refinancing. I have clients that refinance every two to three years to take the equity out of their home to pay off credit-card debt. The home has become an ATM machine," Ms. Wynhofen says.
A January 2007 Statistics Canada study of personal debt concluded that "increasing mortgage debt for refinancing purposes or taking out home-equity loans implies that homeowners in both [Canada and the United States] are using their homes as a source of cash to finance their spending rather than as an investment."
And in an effort to contain the risks of real-estate speculation, as of April 19 the minimum down payment for government-backed mortgage insurance on non-owner-occupied properties purchased for speculation rises from 5% to 20%.
As for ex-patriot Americans Frank and Susan Williams, they're pretty relieved about their fresh start with a new house.
"It's very different to get a mortgage here. It's a lot less hassle than in the United States," Ms. Williams says.
And because the Williams are not particularly worried about the new mortgage rules, they are already thinking about their next purchase.
"We might be able to buy a little place that's larger when we can leverage this up a bit -- maybe get something cheaper than this with more room,' Ms. Williams says.
Photo by: Dom Dada
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