Saturday, February 23, 2008

What $1 Million Buys In Homes Across The United States

Shopping for a seven-figure spread? You're in luck.

That's because nationwide, homeowners are slashing asking prices, often by significant margins, making this year's list of million-dollar properties much more palatable than those in years past.

These homes are still beyond the means of the average American, but there's some comfort in a million-dollar home looking like a million-dollar home rather than a hastily built McMansion or a shoebox-sized studio apartment.

In Los Angeles
, $1 million buys a four-bedroom, Craftsman-style Hollywood home with wood-beamed ceilings typical of turn-of-the-century California architecture. In Texas, seven figures nets a 5,522-square-foot, five-bedroom house in Dallas, or a 5,520-square-foot, six-bedroom home in Houston.

In the Big Apple
, $1 million buys much less.

Assuming you meet the approval of the co-op board, "for a million bucks you get a sweet one-bedroom apartment, or a humble two-bedroom apartment," says Harry DiOrio, a broker with Prudential Douglas Elliman in New York.

If "you're forced into the higher-priced world of condos, you can forget about the two-bedroom on a million-dollar budget, unless, of course, you're willing to cross the river into Brooklyn
or Queens or head north into Harlem."

Stick to Manhattan, and your bucks will bag you a 611-square-foot one-bedroom apartment, close to the East River with views of the city, the bridges, Brooklyn and Queens, and access to a pool, garden and spa--but almost a mile from the nearest subway stop.

Luxury List

Forbes.com studied the 15 largest U.S. metro areas and developed a list of real estate's most basic luxury unit, the million-dollar home. We included properties from New York to Seattle
, and home styles ranging from city townhouses to suburban Victorians.

In places hit hardest by the subprime crisis, buying a million-dollar property might seem a silly notion. But there exists a market for such homes.

Those looking in the Detroit
metro might head to Pleasant Ridge, an affluent community with around 2,000 residents just outside the city. Here, one can buy a fetching Tudor-style home of ivy-covered brick, with 4,000 square feet of space, for $1 million.

In spots largely unaffected by problematic lending or other economic conditions, such as California's Bay Area, a million dollars doesn't seem wildly excessive: The median home price in San Francisco
is $846,800; it's $852,500 in San Jose.

These prices are the result of concentrated wealth in the local economy, high regulatory and business costs for builders that are passed along to buyers, and a very small, confined geographic space that allows for little new development.

"A million dollars won't get you very much," says Courtney Charney, a broker with Alain Pinel Realtors in Atherton, Calif. If you go for an area with good schools, she says, "You're probably only getting a thousand square feet."

In San Francisco
proper, prospects are a bit more grim, as a million bucks won't buy a house without shared walls. That's right--even in cheaper areas, like the Sunset, houses are so tightly packed that they bump up against one another.

Still, there are suburbs, like Burlingame
, Calif., between San Francisco and San Jose, where $1 million translates into a modest 1,650-square-foot house with three bedrooms and a good-sized yard.

But if you move into a desirable suburb, a million will only land a "second-tier location," says Charney.

Best Bets

Prime California markets have always been off-kilter, but in cities such as Minneapolis
and Boston, $1 million buys a good-sized house in a desirable neighborhood. In the Fremont section of Seattle, residents have views of the city skyline as well as Mount Ranier.

Here, seven figures buys a three-bedroom, two-bath home on a terraced ridge, with large windows to take advantage of the sunlight and bird's-eye view.

No plans to settle in Seattle? Take comfort in this: While home sales nationwide are at a historic low, those at or above the $1 million mark can be yours for less.

By Matt Woolsey, Forbes.com
Feb 19th, 2008


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