Catskills - Sullivan County - Ulster County Real Estate -- Catskill Farms Journal

Old School Real estate blog in the Catskills. Journeys, trial, tribulations, observations and projects of Catskill Farms Founder Chuck Petersheim. Since 2002, Catskill Farms has designed, built, and sold over 250 homes in the Hills, investing over $100m and introducing thousands to the areas we serve. Farms, Barns, Moderns, Cottages and Minis - a design portfolio which has something for everyone.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Stillwater Road, Stone Ridge NY Cottage 38

Our first effort in the cool area known as Stone Ridge New York continues to move ahead briskly. I think we started this home in November, found some lucky buyers and went into contract in December, and now are on the home stretch here in early April. Below is a picture of a nice rock we took the time to place strategically.

I'll tell you what - if you ever want to create some general aggravation in your life, outsmart yourself by arranging all your icons and apps on your phone into uber smart and organized folders so the next week of your life is spent looking for stuff you used to find with your eyes closed and arm tied behind your back. Although I do have to admit moving my go to calendar from some arcane home screen location to the hot four at the bottom of my phone has reinvented my life in a small way. The Stillwater cottage is pretty hot, inspired by past homes but enhanced in a lot of small little ways. It's not cheap but if you are looking for perfect, Cottage 38 comes pretty close - with 3 acres, a stone wall, 1300 sq ft, 1.5 baths, 2 bedrooms, screened porch, loads of decks/porchs and a 500+ sq ft finished basement with a bathroom, open living space and an office.

We are just entering the final carpentry stage which means I send in our Seals team of six highly trained and thoroughly experienced carpenters to spend two weeks installing the wood ceilings and wallcoverings, installing the window trim, the flooring, the doors, the door trim, the closet shelving, the kitchen - and through a dusty cloud of action arises a home that is ready for the painter. We hope to close on this house in the end of May.

Like many of our homes, the floor plan allows a view of the entire home as you walk in the front door.

Although not a big house, the floor plan is smart enough to allow for this 2 story stone chimney to define both floors of the house.

And of course having a 120 yr old barn beam accenting a handsome woodburning stove never hurt anyone either. Catskill Farms handpicks the salvaged beams and posts for our homes.

And here is how the sausage is made - walls up, and the 12" wide plank floor separated and left to air dry and acclimate for a few days before installation. That prevents, or attempts to prevent, cupping, cracking or shrinking of the boards.

Cottage 38 in Stone Ridge New York has a lot happening inside - here's a shot of the cathedral ceiling clad in wood planks.

The finished basement area is always a bonus. Note the plentitude of light finding a way into this room even though it is partially underground and covered by a deck. We installed a gas fireplace for good measure.

A view from the 2nd floor top of the stairs area, looking down to below.

And then over in Bearsville, a few miles outside of Woodstock proper, sits the new foundation for Cottage 40, a super sweet reinvention of Cottage 36 for a family and their young baby.

On the books -

Under construction - Big Barn, Ranch VI, Barn V, Farm 18, Cottage 38, C0ttage 39, Cottage 40.

Starting soon - Farm 19, Farm 20, Arts & Crafts 2, Arts & Crafts 3, Barn VI, and Cottage 41.

Tonight - "Street Car Named Desire" in NYC. Currently in Saugerties NY, manning our homes under construction up here.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Death of a Salesman

Good seats (hopefully) tonight to the new production of Death of a Salesman - one of my favorites for sure. Saw the Brian Dennehy version in 1999, the last time (I think) the show had a major broadway run.

Monday, March 26, 2012

F20G (Farmhouse 20 Guy) Update #1 – Figuring out the Land

There’s been a lot of activity with FH20 over the past month.

Let’s start with acquiring the land. The play we ran was fairly simple but looking back, we definitely got lucky. This is basically how it worked: (1) I would scour web sites, individual broker listings, and MLS aggregators for land listings I thought looked interesting and fit within my budget. (2) After compiling, culling, cutting, I had a “top 5” or “top 10” list of possible build sites. I sent these to Chuck and he ran them through his various filters. (3) Chuck and/or his contacts would typically know something already about these properties or know someone who knew something about these pieces of land. Many of these properties had been on the market for some time, or they were represented by certain realtors that dominated listings in certain developments or local towns.

I was amazed at the various factors that made plots suboptimal or even unsuitable for building. Tiny road frontage and railroad-car, cookie-cutter layouts. Wetlands or poor drainage. Road noise. We even found an amazing, secluded plot with sweeping views, varying elevation, gorgeous old trees, and an attractive offering price. Perfect, right? Too bad that small creek and gulley that ran alongside the property line meant no direct or easy access given the property lines, and building a “bridge” of sorts might require months or even years for DEC permits and cost tens of thousands of dollars! There is no way anyone could have done this by themselves – even with the help of real estate agents, who might have a whole different set of incentives. It was critical to rely on Chuck’s eyes and ears, many years of experience, and local contacts to whittle things down to possible build sites.

Since I think the farmhouse building and planning parts are a lot more interesting than the land search, I’ll just fast forward and say we’re in contract on a good-sized plot with lake rights in Sullivan County. Chuck even helped negotiate the asking price down to what I’d say is a pretty fair level. Could we have squeezed another thousand or two if we really tried, given this economy? Probably, but what’s the point? The effort, hassle, and bad-blood weren’t worth it at that time... we’d be past the point of diminishing returns. This was the best, most appropriate plot we found for our purposes, and it’s entirely possible I’d still be out there searching if we didn’t find this piece. So we got lucky. I think we found great land and settled on a fair price where both buyer and seller are eager to move forward, and I’m excited to close in the near future and get started on FH20.

Lessons learned:

* Web sites and MLS aggregators are great resources, but I found the best listings were “broker login” listings from their respective MLS. Many times those listings would have exact addresses, maps, clearer photos, tax info, and other details not on public sites. I generally had good success contacting selling agents and asking for these pages; as you can imagine, they all preferred working direct without a buyer’s broker.

* Again, you’ll have to go local for the best info and advice. Chuck has your back.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Barn 5 Movin' On

Barn V is a winner, complimenting a long line of Catskill Farms - Homeowner collaboration winners. It's been a week since my last post - very busy, especially with the early dry spring that has allowed us to accelerate our Springtime playbook. Brand new look.

Kind of mixes the old fashioned farmhouse with small 2nd floor windows, with a barn, complimenting both without being snarky or cynical or self-righteous.

The land it sits on is nothing to shake a stick at either. 5+ acres a few miles outside of Narrowsburg. Veronica and Bill didn't miss many details on this house with the foundation clad in modern stone, a dining corner of windows and a back deck/porch.

This is the dining room window corner, presently a backdrop to the custom barn doors that will be scattered around the house.

One of the Bedrooms... The tubing coming off the right wall is the air conditioning supply for the 'split units', which are localized lower cost a/c alternatives.

And the Man Shed, Miami style.

Just finished walking F20G's new land, - the boundaries just got marked so it's always exciting to get out there and check it out. 25 acres. And Farm 19 boundaries just got marked so I'm gonna go walk that piece in the morning. My two new pieces of land in Saugerties flew through the planning board in two months and we should be under construction of Barn VI and Arts & Crafts II before long. 4 houses in Ulster County under construction, 7 in Sullivan County.

Charles Petersheim, Catskill Farms (Catskill Home Builder)
At Farmhouse 35
A Tour of 28 Dawson Lane
Location
Rock & Roll
The Transaction
The Process
Under the Hood
Big Barn
Columbia County Home
Catskill Farms History
New Homes in the Olivebridge Area
Mid Century Ranch Series
Chuck waxes poetic...
Catskill Farms Barn Series
Catskill Farms Cottage Series
Catskill Farms Farmhouse Series
Interviews at the Farm ft. Gary
Interviews at the Farm ft. Amanda
Biceps & Building
Catskill Farms Greatest Hits
Construction Photos
Planned It
Black 'n White
Home Accents at Catskill Farms, Part 2
Home Accents at Catskill Farms, Part 1