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Jul
26


Long Beach - Best Neighborhood for Walking

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One of the most appealing draws to living in Long Beach CA is the walkability of many of our local neighborhoods. Well, somebody finally decided to start ranking walkable neighborhoods across the country. Walk Score has ranked 2,508 neighborhoods in 40 of the largest US cities to help buyers find walkable communities to live in.

 

Long Beach California has been ranked as the 8th Most Walkable Neighborhood!

  1. San Francisco
  2. New York
  3. Boston
  4. Chicago
  5. Philadelphia
  6. Seattle
  7. Washington D.C.
  8. Long Beach
  9. Los Angeles
  10. Portland
  11. Denver
  12. Baltimore

see the rest here…

 

 

Long Beach Neighborhood Walk Scores:

Neighborhood Score
1 Downtown Long Beach
87
2 Belmont Shore 83
3 Belmont Heights 82
4 Bixby Knolls 81
5 East Side 81
6 Park Estates 78
7 Alamitos Heights 77
8 Circle Area 76
9 Lakewood Village 74
10 Naples Island - Marina Area 74
11 California Heights Historic District 73
12 Poly High District 73
13 Los Altos 71
14 City of Signal Hill 68
15 Wrigley 66
16 Bixby
63
17 El Dorado Park 62
18 Los Cerritos 62
19 City College Area 58
20 North Long Beach 55
21 Airport Area 55
22 State College Area 54
23 West Side 54
24 The Plaza 53
25 North West Long Beach 44
26 Wilmington 29

52% of Long Beach has a Walk Score of 70 or above.

85% of Long Beach has a Walk Score of at least 50.

15% of Long Beach lives in a Car Dependent Neighborhood.

 

 

What do these scores mean?

 

Here are some general guidelines to how these rankings work:

 

  • 90-100 = Walkers’ Paradise: Most errands can be accomplished on foot and many people get by without owning a car.
  • 70-89 = Very Walkable: It’s possible to get by without owning a car.
  • 50-69 = Somewhat Walkable: Some stores and amenities are within walking distance, but many everyday trips still require a bike, public transportation, or car.
  • 25-49 = Car-Dependent: Only a few destinations are within easy walking range. For most errands, driving or public transportation is a must.
  • 0-24 = Car-Dependent (Driving Only): Virtually no neighborhood destinations within walking range. You can walk from your house to your car!

 

 

How It Doesn’t Work: Known Issues with Walk Score

 

Walk Score admits that Walk Score is just an approximation of walkability. There are a number of important factors that contribute to walkability which are not part of their algorithm:

  • Public transit: Good public transit is important for walkable neighborhoods.
  • Street width and block length: Narrow streets slow down traffic. Short blocks provide more routes to the same destination and make it easier to take a direct route.
  • Street design: Sidewalks and safe crossings are essential to walkability. Appropriate automobile speeds, trees, and other features also help.
  • Safety from crime and crashes: How much crime is in the neighborhood? How many traffic accidents are there? Are streets well-lit?
  • Pedestrian-friendly community design: Are buildings close to the sidewalk with parking in back? Are destinations clustered together?
  • Topography: Hills can make walking difficult, especially if you’re carrying groceries.
  • Freeways and bodies of water: Freeways can divide neighborhoods. Swimming is harder than walking.
  • Weather: In some places it’s just too hot or cold to walk regularly.


More information on how the walk score is determined can be found here.

 

Long Beach Relocation and City Guide

 

 

When seeking walkable Long Beach neighborhoods nobody knows the areas better than your Long Beach Realtor. Search Long Beach Homes for sale and consult your Realtor to find out which Long Beach neighborhoods best suit your specific needs.

 

 

 

 

 


Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor

(562) 212-5420

mls wizard


Main Street Realtors
Belmont Heights
244 Redondo Avenue
Long Beach California 90803

value wizard

 

Long Beach Real Estate Blog

Long Beach Real Estate Website

featured listings

contact

 

http://www.lauriemanny.com/003F27
Posted on July 26, 2008 10:09:00 by Laurie.Manny
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Jul
26


Long Beach Mortgage Rates Report: July 25, 2008

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Long Beach Mortgage rates for July 25, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:


3/1 ARM              5.625%

5/1 ARM              5.750%

7/1 ARM              6.125%

10/1 ARM            6.375%

30 Yr Fixed          6.375%

 

All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling (858)-777-9751.


MORTGAGE RATE TREND:


Next 7 days:       Slightly Lower

Next 30 days:     Slightly Lower

Next 3 months:   Neutral


Brian Brady
(858)-777-9751


Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor

(562) 212-5420

mls wizard


Main Street Realtors
Belmont Heights
244 Redondo Avenue
Long Beach California 90803

value wizard

 

Long Beach Real Estate Blog

Long Beach Real Estate Website

featured listings

contact

 

http://www.lauriemanny.com/003F84
Posted on July 26, 2008 04:43:15 by Laurie.Manny
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Jul
25


Long Beach Mortgage Rates Report: July 22, 2008

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We may have seen the worst in the run up in mortgage rates

 

Mortgage rates in Long Beach for July 22, 2008.  Loan amounts up to $417,000:

3/1 ARM              5.750%

5/1 ARM              5.875%

7/1 ARM              6.250%

10/1 ARM            6.500%

30 Yr Fixed          6.500%


All rates offered to the borrower with 1 point cost.  Rate quotes assume a purchase transaction with a 20% down payment, 720 credit score, and full income qualification.  Rates are subject to fluctuation.  Custom rate quotes and rate lock advice are available by calling (858)-777-9751.

 

LONG BEACH MORTGAGE RATE TREND:

Next 7 days:      Slightly Lower

Next 30 days:     Lower

Next 3 months:  Neutral


What a difference a week makes, huh?  Last Tuesday, I signaled that a short-term increase in rates was likely when I changed the 7-day outlook to “slightly higher” from neutral.  I felt that the rally in mortgage bonds was overdone and that traders would sell off a bit; I had no idea it would be this drastic.


If you click the link, you’ll see that I offered a 30-year fixed at 6.0%. last Tuesday- today, the 30-year fixed rate loan is a full .5% higher.  In fact, almost every loan program is .5% higher than it was last week.  The problem?  Wall Street thinks the worst is over for banks and that inflation is going to be the #1 target for the Fed in the next few months.  ‘ Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson is certainly telling the markets that the banking crisis should be averted by Christmas.


So will the Fed raise interest rates in 2008?  I’m not so certain that they will.  The housing decline has been the worst since The Great Depression.  Fed Chairman, Ben Bernanke, is an expert on monetary policy in the Depression.  He subscribes to the Milton Friedman theory that monetary policy must accommodate a healthy banking system.  His 2004 speech signaled two things two us:


(1)- Bernanke believes that tightening during a slowdown could cause further economic declines:


According to Friedman and Schwartz, the Fed’s tight-money policies led to the onset of a recession in August 1929, according to the official dating by the National Bureau of Economic Research. The slowdown in economic activity, together with high interest rates, was in all likelihood the most important source of the stock market crash that followed in October. In other words, the market crash, rather than being the cause of the Depression, as popular legend has it, was in fact largely the result of an economic slowdown and the inappropriate monetary policies that preceded it. Of course, the stock market crash only worsened the economic situation, hurting consumer and business confidence and contributing to a still deeper downturn in 1930.


(2) Bernanke believes that a contracting banking sector withdraws a HUGE amount of money out of the economy:


The banking crisis had highly detrimental effects on the broader economy. Friedman and Schwartz emphasized the effects of bank failures on the money supply. Because bank deposits are a form of money, the closing of many banks greatly exacerbated the decline in the money supply. Moreover, afraid to leave their funds in banks, people hoarded cash, for example by burying their savings in coffee cans in the back yard. Hoarding effectively removed money from circulation, adding further to the deflationary pressures. Moreover, as I emphasized in early research of my own (Bernanke, 1983), the virtual shutting down of the U.S. banking system also deprived the economy of an important source of credit and other services normally provided by banks


His conclusion is foreshadowing:


Some important lessons emerge from the story. One lesson is that ideas are critical. The gold standard orthodoxy, the adherence of some Federal Reserve policymakers to the liquidationist thesis, and the incorrect view that low nominal interest rates necessarily signaled monetary ease, all led policymakers astray, with disastrous consequences. We should not underestimate the need for careful research and analysis in guiding policy. Another lesson is that central banks and other governmental agencies have an important responsibility to maintain financial stability. The banking crises of the 1930s, both in the United States and abroad, were a significant source of output declines, both through their effects on money supplies and on credit supplies. Finally, perhaps the most important lesson of all is that price stability should be a key objective of monetary policy. By allowing persistent declines in the money supply and in the price level, the Federal Reserve of the late 1920s and 1930s greatly destabilized the U.S. economy and, through the workings of the gold standard, the economies of many other nations as well.


I don’t see the Fed aggressively raising interest rates to prop up the dollar.  I think reduced demand will bring oil prices below the $100/barrel mark which will strengthen the dollar.  The Fed’s focus should have been (in the 1930s) and will be (this decade) to promote a healthy banking system.    While the banks are reporting lower losses, they still aren’t healthy. The recent good news from the banking sector needs to be sustainable.  Look for the Fed to restrain itself from raising rates until 2009.


Are higher mortgage rates on the horizon?  Sure, in 2009.  The run up in mortgage rates I predicted, two weeks ago, has already happened.  I don’t think mortgage rates go much higher in 2008.


Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor

(562) 212-5420

mls wizard


Main Street Realtors
Belmont Heights
244 Redondo Avenue
Long Beach California 90803

value wizard

 

Long Beach Real Estate Blog

Long Beach Real Estate Website

featured listings

contact

 

http://www.lauriemanny.com/003F1F
Posted on July 25, 2008 20:30:04 by Laurie.Manny
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Jul
21


Long Beach Home and Income Property Tax Pending

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Long Beach Home and Income Property Tax Pending

Just in from the Pacific West Board of Realtors:

 

 

Long Beach City CouncilThe Long Beach City Council will consider placing a Parcel Tax on the November 2008 ballot this Tuesday, July 22nd at 5:00 p.m. at City Hall.


Guide to Long Beach City Government



The proposed Parcel Tax is $120 annually per residential parcel and $120 annually per unit for apartment buildings.

 



We encourage you to attend this council meeting if possible.




City of Long Beach
333 W. Ocean Blvd
Long Beach, CA 90802
Tel: (562) 570-6555


Why is this important to you?


If you are the owner of a single family home this will cost you an extra $120 per year. Not a lot by anybodys standards and won’t exactly break the bank.


If you are the owner of apartment buildings this parcel tax will be per unit. Own a lot of units? OUCH! This breaks down to about $10 per month per apartment.


If you are a renter, plan on having that included in your next rent increase!

 


Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor

(562) 212-5420

mls wizard


Main Street Realtors
Belmont Heights
244 Redondo Avenue
Long Beach California 90803

value wizard

 

Long Beach Real Estate Blog

Long Beach Real Estate Website

featured listings

contact

 

http://www.lauriemanny.com/003F30
Posted on July 21, 2008 00:58:44 by Laurie.Manny
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Jul
14


Space Saving Ideas for your Long Beach Homes

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Small Living Space Soutions for Long Beach Homes

Hidden Rooms

Space Savers or Hidden Secrets?

 

Down here at the beach we trade square footage for beach living and ocean breezes.  But what do we do with all of our stuff?  Lifetime collections of photos, books and other treasured belongings, that we are just not prepared to part with, need a place in our new homes as well. 

 

Hidden Closet with Bookcase

Small spaces are a challenge when we downsize our lives.  Creative use of our space without feeling cluttered and oppressive becomes a mission.  Creative Home Engineering, a Tempe Arizona company specializing in hidden passageways may have solved some of these issues. 

Under Staircase Storage

 

What a great way to expand space, furnish our homes and create hidden storage spaces!  When your square footage is limited every found space becomes critical.  Living in small spaces certainly has its challenges and rewards.  A small mess in a large home is a huge mess in small space.  One needs to be a neat freak in small spaces.  Creative Home Engineering is providing several wonderful solutions. 

Hall Closet Storage and Safe

Have you been wondering where to hide a safe in your home?  Take an unsightly hall closet and convert it to a hidden safe and a wonderfully elegent storage cabinet. 

Discrete Hiding Places

Looking for a safe and discrete hiding place for those things that should never be found by others?  Lovely and elegant built in’s hide your most private possessions very nicely.

 

While we have many larger homes in Long Beach, many of the homes here are of the smaller cottage genre.  Small living space ideas are in demand, we are pleased to be able to provide some solutions. 


Read also: 

Small Living Space Solutions for Long Beach Homes


Laurie Manny
Long Beach Realtor

(562) 212-5420

mls wizard


Main Street Realtors
Belmont Heights
244 Redondo Avenue
Long Beach California 90803

value wizard

 

Long Beach Real Estate Blog

Long Beach Real Estate Website

featured listings

contact

 

http://www.lauriemanny.com/003EC4
Posted on July 14, 2008 22:48:03 by Laurie.Manny
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Main Street Realtors
Belmont Heights
244 Redondo Avenue
Long Beach California 90803

(562) 212-5420

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Long Beach Real Estate Blog

 

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Long Beach Relocation and City Guide

Long Beach California is Best Neighborhood for Walking

Long Beach California is Best Neighborhood for Walking

 

One of the most appealing draws to living in Long Beach California is the walkability of many of our local neighborhoods. 

Long Beach California has been ranked as the 8th Most Walkable Neighborhood!

Read More>>>

Relocating to Long Beach California?

If you are relocating to Long Beach California you will need lots of information. You will be curious to know about Long Beach communities, neighborhoods and resources. We have tried to include as many area resources as possible here to make your transition a smooth one.

Read More>>>>

 


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Need a larger home?

Prices are at their lowest in many years.

It's a good time to buy YOUR next home!

Call Laurie today to begin your search

(562) 212-5420


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