Blog entries will be posted in the language in which they were written.
May 18th, 2011

Homage to Katie Malloch

Posted by Joan McGuigan
  • Article rank
  • 16 May 2011
  • The Gazette
  • SuSan Schwartz on simplicity
  • The best things in life are simple and unadorned

    “I have gradually been divesting myself of things I don’t absolutely love.” 

    It was close to 10 as I drove home, the CBC’s Tonic on the radio, when one of my favourite Irving Berlin songs came on: What’ll I Do? It’s a haunting ballad of longing and heartbreak – “What’ll I do with just a photograph/To tell my troubles to?” – but this was an instrumental version, unembellished by lyrics. 

    The song ended, Katie Malloch’s mellifluous voice came back on the air, and she described the song with what I thought was the perfect word: unadorned. 

    I like things that are unadorned: simple food and understated clothing, spare prose and rooms that are comfortable but never showy. I didn’t always like restrained, though: for a long time, my tastes ran to the busy and the flashy. I was given to end tables cluttered with framed photographs and elaborate dinner parties with too many courses, to matched outfits and convoluted novels. 

    Credit my increasing dislike of excess and a growing determination to tread upon this Earth with as light a footprint as I can manage, but I have come to believe that less is more. “Simplicity is making the journey of this life with just baggage enough,” wrote Charles Dudley Warner, a 19th-century American essayist and novelist. 

    For a time I amassed things with enthusiasm – tableware was a particular weakness – but no longer. I have gradually been divesting myself of things I don’t absolutely love; I rarely buy anything these days and, when I do, it’s not without giving something away in its place. There’s way less to display – and dust. 

    The notion of less being more is often associated with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, a proponent of simplicity of style – although he was a founder of modern architecture and my tastes run to the salvaged, the shabby and the worn. I like the patina age gives home furnishings. 

    Reading Fifi O’Neill’s Romantic Prairie Style (Cico Books), filled with wonderful photographs by Mark Lohman, I was all set to move into any one of the farmhouses she described. I loved their easy comfort. One of them, in northern California, is inhabited by Maria Carr, who grew up on a diary farm in Montana, her husband, Thad, and their five children. The landscape is picturesque with meadows and 200-year-old towns, and the home’s interior is decorated with rustic furnishings paired with vintage linens. 

    Carr said she likes fabrics with “irregularities and subtleties found in old French linens and European grain sacks.” With help from her mother and two sisters, they are made made into pillows, throws and table runners. 

    In the flea markets of SaintOuen in Paris, I too, was drawn to the vintage linen – specifically, to the dishtowels. They were white or coffee-coloured, with stripes or checks in red or blue or green; even though they were modest and workaday, many were monogrammed because they had been included in dowries. 

    At the table, I am happiest with simple food: find me the freshest ingredients, ideally those that have not travelled too far to my plate – and leave the plate unadorned. 

    Among the noted chefs, people such as Susur Lee and Marcus Samuelsson, and the food writers who contributed to a collection of essays on unforgettable dining experiences in Creating a Meal You’ll Love (Sellers Publishing, 2010, $18.95), several described uncomplicated dishes, unfussy food and family meals. “At home, I like to keep it simple,” wrote Louisville chef Michael Paley. 

    “I have grown to love cooking more meals that are simple and straightforward, and that I can make without the use of fancy gadgets and by using only a handful of seasonal ingredients,” food and wine writer Tracey Ryder observed. 

    Skye Gyngell, a Londonbased chef, recalled a lunch with her father one hot summer day years ago in a small trattoria just outside Florence: for dessert, they were servedpeaches–“ripe,downy and sweet – sitting on top of shaved ice … I was struck by the rightness of just one thing – one perfect ingredient, unfussed with – pure and perfect in its beauty.” 

    It was Laura Ingalls Wilder, the American author who based her Little House series of books on her childhood in a pioneer family, who observed: “I am beginning to learn that it is the sweet, simple things in life which are the real ones after all.” 

    Simple, real – and unadorned. 

    sschwartz@ montrealgazette.com 

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    April 27th, 2011

    Appraiser key to finding your home’s value

    Posted by Joan McGuigan
  • Article rank
  • 20 Apr 2011
  • The Gazette
  • Donna nebenzahl Special to the Gazette
  • Kitchen, bathroom and renovations important in reaching fair evaluation, expert says

    How much is your piece of paradise worth? When you need to find out the value of your home – for a family estate, for a bank to offer a mortgage, for a divorcing couple to figure out their assets, or for a property owner to contest taxes – you get the services of an appraiser. This is the person who will take a good look at the condition, renovations and surroundings of the property, and give it a dollar value.

                                                                                                                                                      John Kenneythe Gazette

    andy Dodge is busy now doing appraisals for property tax purposes, but these professionals are also important for estates, mortgage applications and in many other areas.“I worry about the value of the house on the market,” says Andy Dodge of Andy Dodge and Associates, who has been doing appraisals since 1982, “and right now property tax appraisals are taking up all my time.”

    The most important rooms to evaluate are kitchen and bathroom, Dodge says, and the age of improvements. “If you go into a kitchen and find an old sink with washboard and a plug-in stove, you know that the kitchen is not going to sell very well,” he says, “compared to a kitchen with a Sub-Zero fridge, the latest appliances and huge cabinets. Or if you look in a bathroom and the sink has rust stains, compared to bathrooms with whirlpools and steam showers and double sinks.”

    The renovations affect the value, Dodge says, as do the age of windows, furnaces – the overall condition of the home.

    And while it’s true that people can put in a new toilet without renovating, or you have to guess whether the fireplace works, there are usually telltale dates on furnaces and toilets, so a good appraiser knows the age.But sometimes, even old has value.

    While new windows have advanced technology that makes them airtight, some of the old classic style – leaded windows, ornate woodwork and gingerbread – can increase the value of a home.

    The construction of the house is also a factor. In central Montreal, where he does most of his appraisals, there is virtually no wood construction since the Montreal fire of 1852 that destroyed almost half the buildings in the city.

    But some old houses have settled on what might have once been swampy ground, so one of his tools, Dodge says, is a marble. “You can put it on one side of the room and see if it rolls. This does affect the value; it’s not very comfortable to live in a house that slants.”

    Location also matters. There are clearly some locations where the value is higher, Dodge says, and it’s not realistic to do major renovations in a house that will never sell for a high value.

    Because value is what appraisals are about – an appraisal is by definition the most likely price that a willing buyer and willing seller would agree to in an open market. “That’s what our expertise is supposed to tell you.”

    A huge factor in the appraisal of a property is the demand in the marketplace, says Dodge, who is certified by the Appraisal Institute of Canada.

    “There are all kinds of reasons why prices have gone up – buyers and realtors are more sophisticated, there’s more demand and there’s the influence of the overall market.

    “Watching the real estate market is the same as watching the stock market,” he says. “The Dow Jones is never going to go back to where it was in 1975 and the real estate market won’t either.”

    He believes that another major influence in the value of housing are the baby boomers, who began buying and renovating houses in the 1970s when they started to have families. “There was a huge increase in prices between 1970 and 1980, then a dip because interest rates were so high.”

    Political turmoil in Quebec also caused the market to drop, he says, until 1998.

    “It has just been climbing ever since, except 2009 when the market fell apart.”

    The real estate market follows the stock market, Dodge says, and he offers a monthly real estate analysis in his area of expertise, Westmount, complete with a chart that tracks the rise of home prices over the years. “I have to reflect those trends too, to know what’s happening (andydodgeassociates. com).

    “I have developed this system for keeping track of the theoretical price of the average house in Westmount, which is the ratio of price devaluation times the average valuation. That tells me what the average home would sell for,” he says. He has seen this climb first hand – he recently appraised a mansion worth $6 to $7 million today that would have been valued in the 1970s at $250,000.

    In the final analysis, an evaluation is basically an estimate, Dodge says. “There’s nothing hard and fast. We try to use the best of our ability and knowledge of what the market has to offer

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    April 27th, 2011

    Love your home but be realistic about cost

    Posted by Joan McGuigan
  • Article rank
  • 20 Apr 2011
  • The Gazette
  • Sheila Brady Postmedia News
  • Make sure you can afford your dwelling since interest rates set to rise, says Kinsley

    In 1981, Karen Kinsley was fresh out of university and thought she was a pretty tough negotiator after sealing a mortgage on a two-bedroom condo in Ottawa’s east end.

    “I negotiated a vendor takeback mortgage and then negotiated a one-percent discount on the rate. I thought I got a great deal at 21 per cent,” says the University of Ottawa Commerce grad, who has risen up through the ranks at Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. and recently signed on for a second term as president and CEO of the crown corporation that oversees financing, new design and research initiatives to promote housing across the country.

    “I was in my 20s and thought the condo was a palace,” says Kinsley, who has been named one of Canada’s most powerful women for the past three years by the Financial Post Magazine and Ottawa’s top CEO by the Ottawa Business Journal in 2009.

    CMHC was also named one of the National Capital Region’s top employers by MediaCorp, a Toronto-based publishing company which collects data on employee benefits.

    She calls herself a perfectionist who has a habit of dribbling a bit when sipping water or coffee. Two traits that help explain her dedication to the industry and an impish nature that bubbles up during a wideranging interview.

    “I probably paid $80,000. It was 1,200 square feet, open concept and absolutely perfect for a young person,” says Kinsley, who stayed in her St. Laurent Boulevard palace for about three years before leaving for Toronto and a senior financial job with Bill Teron and his international development company.

    The job and Teron changed her life, planting the seeds that have grown into her passion for the housing and development industry and a career that has her at the head of a complex organization with 2,100 employees at 700 Montreal Rd.

    Just as Teron was returning to the private sector after his own stint as president of CMHC in the late ’80s, Kinsley was offered a six-month contract with CMHC in Ottawa. “I said, ‘Great. Something short term and maybe a bit of a break from the pace of working for the private sector.’

    “I was wrong on both counts. Twenty years later, I am here and I never did get a break. I have to tell you, I have never regretted a day. It has never been boring and there is always a challenge or two.

    “It’s a passion for me,” says Kinsley, who says her enthusiasm for the real estate sector has broadened through her career at CMHC.

    Yet her concern for fiscal control and prudent buying has never varied, even as mortgage rates rise and dip.

    “It doesn’t matter if mortgage rates are 21 per cent or three per cent. The bottom line is you’ve got to make sure you can afford what are getting into,” Kinsley says.

    Interest rates are going to rise, she says, and there is room

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    April 14th, 2011

    McGuigan for McGill

    Posted by Joan McGuigan

    WESTMOUNT INDEPENDENT– April 12-13, 2011 –

     

    Real estate broker Joan McGuigan (left) accepts a book donation for the McGill University Book Fair from Holly Jonas on April 8. McGuigan Pepin Realty, located at 4431 St. Catherine near Kensington, is the new Westmount drop-off for event. Hours are Monday to Friday, 10 am to 4 pm, but would-be givers are advised to call first: 514.937.9393 or 514.846.0846.

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    April 11th, 2011

    Buyers Alert!! fixed rates have gone up

    Posted by Joan McGuigan

     

    Message from Faisal Jamil  -Mortgage Broker:

    Many of you should be aware that the fixed rates have gone up, specifically the 5 year rates.  The variable remains unchanged.

    As rates continue to rise, it is even more important to have your clients pre-approved.  I know many of you like to deal with the banks, however if the ratios do not fit that bank you are going to refer them to, what is your plan B and do you have enough time to achieve it?  Let a broker do the shopping for you to avoid lost time.

    The Bank of Canada is meeting tomorrow to discuss the prime rate.  Updates will be sent out accordingly.

    Thank you,

    Faisal Jamil

    Mortgage Broker

    Hypotheca courtier hypothécaire AC

    Term Bank Rate   

    Hypotheca Rate   

    Variable   

    3.00% – 0.75% =2.25% – 5 year   

    1 year   

    4.30%   

    2.64%   

    3 years   

    4.55%   

    3.59%   

    5 years   

    5.69%   

    *3.99%*   

    7 years   

    6.60%   

    4.69%   

    10 years   

    6.99%   

    4.89%   

     

    For further information , please contact us:  info@mcguiganpepin.com

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    April 3rd, 2011

    Open Houses 2011/04-03

    Posted by Joan McGuigan

    http://matrixreports.centris.ca/MatrixReportServer/Output/64095/Open_Houses_and_Caravans9229.PDF

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    March 29th, 2011

    TOP 7 HOME STAGING FLOPS

    Posted by Joan McGuigan

     

    Good afternoon,

    After staging over $ 71 million of real estate all over Montreal in the past 2 years, I would like to share with you the top 7 reasons why spaces need to be staged professionally. My experience has shown me that these are the 7 most common problems that can be fixed with an expert eye and professional know-how to help you sell faster and for top dollar.

     

     

    1.      EMPTY SPACES   –   people tell me they are spatially dysfunctional. They don’t understand the space without furniture.

    2.     TOO MUCH FURNITURE  –  needs to be diplomatically edited by a qualified expert. Have to be able to see the “bones” of the space.

    3.     TOO LITTLE FURNITURE  –  needs to be efficiently and beautifully spaced to help people visualize and not cost the owner $ to buy stuff.

    4.     FURNITURE BADLY ORGANIZED  –  needs to be professionally re jigged with an expert eye

    5.     BAD LIGHTING  –  needs to be addressed very carefully to create mood as well as function.

    6.     TOO PERSONALIZED  – needs to be diplomatically depersonalized without offending client and this doesn’t mean just putting away pictures.

    7.     TOO MUCH CLUTTER  –  needs to be diplomatically downsized without offending client.

     

    All these reasons add up to poor harmony, bad visual and traffic flow throughout the space.

    This in turn leads to potential buyers getting turned off or total disinterest.

    This yields slower and poorer sales.

    The result: a lot of time and energy on your time that could have been used more profitably.

    GentleMove can easily and economically assist you in your staging presentations so you can sell faster and for top dollar.

    GentleMove’s services include: senior transitioning, downsizing, estate dispersal and staging houses to sell or just to live and love!

     

    Best regards,

     

    Jane      

     

    Jane Guest

     

    Janey & Co.

     

    simplifier votre vie

    simplifying your life

     

    GentleMove

     

    Conseils en transition résidentielle

    Downsizing & Transition Specialist

    Valorisation résidentielle

    Home Staging

     

    514-999- HELP (4357)

    www.janeyandco.com

    www.gentlemove.ca

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    March 23rd, 2011

    Celebremus! Come celebrate a special event!

    Posted by Joan McGuigan

    Choeur des enfants de Montreal

    Celebremus! Concerto Della Donna:

     

    We proudly sponsor this very special musical event

     

    Please join us…call (514) 846-0846 for ticket info

    (Adult – $20, Seniors & students – $10)

    Sunday, March 27th, 2011 @ 4 pm

    Mountainside United Church

    The Boulevard, Westmount

    Choeur des enfants de Montreal

    Choeur St. Laurent

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    February 8th, 2011

    Timbers Resorts Nominated for Readers’ Choice Award

    Posted by Joan McGuigan

     

     

      

    Welcome to Timbers Resorts banner-pic
    Vote for Castello di Casole
     
     

    Dear Joan,

    We are thrilled to announce that Castello di Casole – A Signature Development of Timbers Resorts, has been nominated for the Fractional Life Readers’ Choice Award. As a nominee for this prestigious award, Castello di Casole is recognized as one of the premier fractional real estate developments in the world.

    To cast your vote for Castello di Casole, click here – it’s as simple as just two easy clicks. Voting continues until Tuesday, February 15, and the winners will be announced at the Fractional Summit in London on February 18, 2011.

    San Giuseppe

    We look forward to bringing you more information about all the exciting changes happening at Castello di Casole over the coming months.

    Warm regards,

    David Burden
    David A. Burden
    CEO/Founder, Timbers Resorts

       
     
     

    Real Estate Offerings For Diverse Vacation Lifestyles

    Poggio all CoronaFor some, a succesful vacation is defined not by how much is seen and done, but rather how much isn’t; the revitalization comes through privacy, and treasured moments are intimate, comfortable and distinctly low-key. For others, a lively social scene is a vacation essential; a morning coffee and conversation, an afternoon cooking class, and a late night dinner with new friends provide perfect ways to lift the spirits. 

    Living Room“Our many distinctive residential options truly offer something for everyone,” says Gary Moore, Project Director at Castello di Casole. “For those seeking a more intimate setting where they can settle in and take care of themselves, we have a handful of magnificently private Casali villas.  They have been restored from ruins and coaxed into the modern age with the finest furnishings and amenities, and feature luxuries such as gourmet kitchens and infinity-edged pools.”

    Al Fresco DiningMoore adds there are also several options for Owners who value the social experience. “When Hotel Castello di Casole opens in Spring 2012, as the centerpiece of the estate, it will become the natural place to gather. There will be remarkable ownership opportunities steps from everything. The enclaves of smaller villas such as Villa Sant’ Antonio are perfectly situated for a short walk to pools, the spa, indoor and al fresco dining and so much more.”

    To learn more about current Castello di Casole real estate offerings, contact us at info@castellodicasole.com or call 866.963.5005 in the US or +39.0577.967511 in Italy.

       
     
     
    Timbers Resorts properties
    The Timbers Club Snowmass
    The Residences at Esperanza Cabo San Lucas
    The Rocks Luxury Residence Club Scottsdale
    Castello di Casole Tuscany
    The Preserve at Botany Bay Virgin Islands
    One Steamboat Place Steamboat Springs
    The Orchard at The Carneros Inn Napa Valley
    The Villas at Rancho Valencia Rancho Santa Fe
    The Links Cottages at Doonbeg Ireland
    The Sebastian Vail

    www.timbersresorts.com

    Timbers Resorts
    201 Main Street, Carbondale, CO 81623 • 888.366.6641

     

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    February 2nd, 2011

    Homewood Suites Hilton at Mont-Tremblant

    Posted by Joan McGuigan
    Dear Owner,

    We have just completed and by far,the best ever at hilton homewood Suites Tremblant ! We surpassed our room revenues by more than 200 000$ compared to the best record high of 2007 and the net revenues distributed to ou owners are superior by 137 000$ comparde to the best year.I feel we can all be proud of these results!

    On top of that I am very pleased to announce that the Hilton Homewwod Suites finised by far as #1 in the entire Quebec region for the RevPar in December, surpassing all the 5 star properties on site (The marriot finished 2nd ). The annual results are also encouraging, where we finished amongst the leaders for RevPAr results.

    Geneviève Dumas, MBA

    General Manager
    HIlton Homewood Suites, Mont-tremblant

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