The future of the Marian Court site? $2 million condos
According to this Swampscott Reporter article White Court, the former summer home of President Calvin Coolidge and more recently the site of Marian Court College, has been sold to four Swampscott developers who plan to build 18 condos on the 6.2 acre site.
The project is zoned as an independent living facility, which means that it’s restricted to people age 55 years and older with no children.
Will you help Harborside SIR build a village?
Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty is proud to announce that we will be joining with our colleagues throughout the Sotheby’s International Realty network in support of New Story, a non-profit organization that puts 100% of donations toward transforming dangerous living environments into communities
of safe, sustainable homes. The plan is to build a village with a minimum of 150 homes north of Mexico City.
Click New Story video to learn more about the plans and please click donate to help us build this village. 100% of your donation will hire locals, buys local materials, and build a home in a new community that we’re helping create. Thank you!
Open Houses December 17
Sunny and bright – a lovely New England early winter’s day – and here are the Open Houses you can visit: (more…)
New Listings week of December 15
There are always reasons for people to list houses for sale and for buyers to be looking, even at this time of the year. Here are this week’s new listings: (more…)
Another great Marblehead attraction: the new Transfer Station
When my daughter was visiting from London earlier this year I wanted to show her something special about Marblehead, something that London did not possess. So I drove her around the new Transfer Station, known unofficially as the Dump.
Recently, Sustainable Marblehead organized a tour of the new Station as reported in this Marblehead Reporter article.
Do read the article, as it explains the remediation that has taken place at the site following the discovery of heavy metal soil contamination, as well as revealing that Marblehead currently recycles about 34% of its recyclable material, close to the national average, but way below San Fancisco’s 80%.
The Town’s website, by the way, explains why it is known as a Transfer Station:
All the ash was left on-site until 1975. That was when the ‘dump’ became the ‘transfer station’ whereby trash was collected, then transported to other facilities for disposal via burning or landfill.
Whether you call it the Dump or the Transfer Station, it is well worth a visit and should encourage you to help raise Marblehead’s recycling rate. Sadly, impressed though I am sure she was, my daughter chose to return to London.
If you – or somebody you know – are considering buying or selling a home and have questions about the market and/or current home prices, please contact Andrew Oliver on 617.834.8205 or Kathleen Murphy on 603.498.6817.
If you are looking to buy, we will contact you immediately when a house that meets your needs is available. In this market you need to have somebody looking after your interests.
Are you thinking about selling? Read Which broker should I choose to sell my house?
Andrew Oliver and Kathleen Murphy are Realtors with Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty. Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated
@OliverReports
Marblehead House on Beach: Open House today
The sale of this spectacularly located house , sitting directly on and at the top of the longest beach in Marblehead, fell through at the very last moment, thus providing another opportunity for buyers. After a recent huge price reduction 46 Gallison Avenue – which was substantially rebuilt in 1997 and updated in 2016 – is now offered for a mere $52,000 more than just its assessed land value.
There is an Open House this Sunday 12:00-2:00, or call for a private showing. The website includes a video of the property – and of the views.
Can you imagine living here and waking up to this?
followed by this
and then this
If you – or somebody you know – are considering buying or selling a home and have questions about the market and/or current home prices, please contact Andrew Oliver on 617.834.8205 or Kathleen Murphy on 603.498.6817.
If you are looking to buy, we will contact you immediately when a house that meets your needs is available. In this market you need to have somebody looking after your interests.
Are you thinking about selling? Read Which broker should I choose to sell my house?
Andrew Oliver and Kathleen Murphy are Realtors with Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty. Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated
@OliverReports
Open Houses Sunday December 10
As so often after snow today will be sunny and bright, so plan to visit these Open Houses. There is one more too late to make the list: 46 Gallison Avenue in Marblehead, which just came back on the market:
(more…)How is Swampscott’s 2018 Property Tax Rate calculated?
In my Swampscott’s tax rate goes down – and so do tax bills!! post this week I promised to write another article explaining exactly how the tax rate was calculated. This is it.
The formula is actually very simple: take the $ amount of the previous year’s tax levy, add 2.5% for Proposition 2 1/2, and also add any new growth (such as new construction or a condo conversion). This figure is the new maximum tax levy. To this figure is added debt service – the Principal and Interest payable on the town’s debt. Note that in recent years, Swampscott has not assessed the maximum allowed under this formula, a decision that has reduced the tax bill for residents. And in fact the average tax bill will decline in FY 2018 for the first time since FY 1994!
Here are the numbers for FY 2016, 2017 and 2018, remembering that the FY runs from July to June.
The Tax Levy calculation
The maximum $ amount that can be raised by the property tax will increase year by year. That is because of the formula: last year’s number plus 2.5% plus new growth. In the table above you can see how the FY 2017 maximum tax levy of $46,604,909 becomes the base for FY 2018. Add 2.5% and new growth and the new figure is $48,386,446. To both these numbers is added the debt service – Principal and Interest on the town’s debt, much as homeowners pay P&I on their mortgage. Note that the actual tax levy was less than the maximum allowed by just over $1 million in FY 2017 and by just over $2 million in FY 2018. In other words, the amount of taxes raised was reduced by these amounts each year. Note also that the debt service figure for FY 2018 has dropped by over $0.8 million.
The Tax Rate
The actual tax rate depends upon the total Assessed Value of all property: residential, and commercial, industrial and personal (CIP). The tax rate is calculated by dividing the total dollar amount to be raised from each class by the Assessed Value of each class. Thus, the headline tax rate will also fluctuate depending upon the direction of Assessed Values.
In simplistic terms, if we assume that the $ amount to be raised increases by a little more than 2 1/2% each year, then if the average Assessed Value also increases by a little more than 2 1/2% the tax rate will be unchanged. If the increase in Assessed Values is less than 2 1/2%, then the tax rate will rise. And if the increase in Assessed Values is more than 2 1/2% then the tax rate will fall.
Looking at the Swampscott residential tax rate, in FY 2017 it was $17.45, achieved by dividing $42.7 million by the residential AV of $2,447 million. In FY 2018 the amount to be raised from residential taxpayers is due to drop slightly to $42.4 million, but because the total residential AV increased by 8.3%, the headline tax rate dropped sharply to just $16.00, the lowest figure since 2009.
How does debt service affect the tax rate?
The announced property tax rate announced each year includes the cost of debt service. One of the factors cited for the decline in the tax rate for FY 2018 is the reduction in the cost of debt service, something which the Town warns may be temporary. The impact on the tax rate can be seen in the table below:
Comment
The residential real estate market in Swampscott has been very strong in 2017 (and the 2017 median price will be the basis for the FY 2019 tax rate). At this stage it looks as though the median price will be around $525,000 (a new high), an increase of over 7% from 2016’s $488,000. But bear in mind this is the median price of the SFHs that will actually sell this year, so does not imply that the Town’s residential Assessed Value will increase by 7%.
As to the tax rate for FY 2019, that depends on a number of factors: the amount of debt service, how much of the maximum tax levy is assessed, and the shift to the CIP class being three of them. But he continuing increase in the average Assessed Value will moderate any increases in other areas.
From a real estate perspective, the substantial decline in the tax rate and the reduced shift to the commercial sector are both very welcome news and should encourage more people to decide both to work and live in Swampscott.
If you – or somebody you know – are considering buying or selling a home and have questions about the market and/or current home prices, please contact Andrew Oliver on 617.834.8205 or Kathleen Murphy on 603.498.6817.
If you are looking to buy, we will contact you immediately when a house that meets your needs is available. In this market you need to have somebody looking after your interests.
Are you thinking about selling? Read Which broker should I choose to sell my house?
Andrew Oliver and Kathleen Murphy are Realtors with Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty. Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated
@OliverReports
House on Beach in Marblehead Back on Market
The sale of this spectacularly located house , sitting directly on and at the top of the longest beach in Marblehead, fell through at the very last moment, thus providing another opportunity for buyers. After a recent huge price reduction 46 Gallison Avenue – which was substantially rebuilt in 1997 and updated in 2016 – is now offered for a mere $52,000 more than just its assessed land value.
There is an Open House this Sunday 12:00-2:00, or call for a private showing. The website includes a video of the property – and of the views.
Can you imagine living here and waking up to this?
followed by this
and then this
If you – or somebody you know – are considering buying or selling a home and have questions about the market and/or current home prices, please contact Andrew Oliver on 617.834.8205 or Kathleen Murphy on 603.498.6817.
If you are looking to buy, we will contact you immediately when a house that meets your needs is available. In this market you need to have somebody looking after your interests.
Are you thinking about selling? Read Which broker should I choose to sell my house?
Andrew Oliver and Kathleen Murphy are Realtors with Harborside Sotheby’s International Realty. Each Office Is Independently Owned and Operated
@OliverReports
New Listings week ending December 8
The numbers are dropping off, but there are still new listings coming to the market:
Marblehead new listing
Swampscott new listings
Salem new listings
Beverly new listings
Lynn new listings
Swampscott’s tax rate goes down – and so do tax bills!!
Swampscott’s residential tax rate for 2018 has been set at $16.00, down from $17.45 and the average single family tax bill will actually decline by $153, with some 74% of the town’s residential parcels seeing a reduction in the total tax bill.
There are three reasons for the tax relief: new growth, including Hanover Vinnin Square; the use of free cash to reduce the levy; and a reduction in debt service, which may be temporary with a number of new projects “coming down the pike.” Additionally, the average single family assessment increased by 7%, something that reduces the tax rate.
The commercial tax rate will also drop, from $32.30 to $28.83, as the Board of Selectmen voted to reduce the loading from 175% to 170%.
I will issue a fuller report will be published this weekend. Meanwhile, here is a link to an article in the Lynn Item: Swampscott homeowners get tax break.
Mid-week New Listings
The week’s new listings to date:
Marblehead new listings
Swampscott new listings
Salem new listings
Beverly new listings
Lynn new listings
Open Houses Sunday December 3
Here is the list of Open Houses today in Swampscott, Salem, Beverly and Lynn (click here for the Marblehead Open House list and Christmas Walk schedule):
Swampscott Open Houses
Salem Open Houses
Beverly Open Houses
Lynn Open Houses
Marblehead Open Houses and Christmas Walk schedule
Sunday is the last day of the Christmas Walk and here is a link to Sunday’s event and activities.
And here is the list of Marblehead Open Houses.
Come for the festivities, buy a house while you are here, and finish off the day by attending the joyous Festival Chorus Concert. The closing performance of “The Saints Sing Hallelujah” , featuring celebrated jazz trumpeter Trent Austin, brought the crowd to its feet last night.
New Listings week of December 1
Here are the latest new listings:
Marblehead new listings
Swampscott new listings
Salem new listings
Beverly new listings
Lynn new listings
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