Category Archives: Real Estate News

The Struggle to Preserve the Brooklyn Navy Yard

by MARC SANTORA

FOR three years, some of the most powerful forces in New York real estate — including the federal and city governments, developers, preservationists and community advocates — have fought over the fate of a cluster of historically significant turn-of-the-last-century houses known as Admiral’s Row in the Brooklyn Navy Yard.

Last month, the parties finally arrived at a compromise that seemed to strike a balance between preservation and development, in a $60 million project that would add a large supermarket to an underserved neighborhood, while also salvaging some buildings of deep architectural and cultural significance.

But it now appears that those historic buildings may be in such precarious condition that they cannot be saved.

“This is one of the worst cases I have ever seen in terms of neglect,” said Alex Herrera, the director of the technical services center at the New York Landmarks Conservancy. “It is a disgrace.”

Full Article via NY Times

New York Real Estate Recovery Compared to Competing Cities Around The Globe.

By Candace Taylor

In a city where cramped studio apartments generate six-figure bidding wars, it’s hard to imagine a place where real estate is even pricier. But there are cities out there that can make Park Avenue look like a bargain. According to data from London-based brokerage Knight Frank, $1 million would buy you only about half a studio in Monaco.

This month, The Real Deal took stock of how New York real estate compares to other major international and U.S. cities, from London to Los Angeles. We chose 25 preeminent cities, in different geographic regions, that compete with New York for real estate buyers and tourist dollars, and pored through real estate data from each one.

Complete Article Here

Seeing White Brick Buildings in a New Light

By JOANNE KAUFMAN

WHEN Lori Berger began looking for a Manhattan pied-à-terre three years ago, she came armed with a list of priorities. The West Side was preferable to the East because it would simplify the drive into the city from her family’s primary residence in Fairfield, Conn. She wanted outdoor space, which took most prewar buildings off the table. And because she and her husband had lived through kitchen and bathroom renovations at home, they wanted an apartment that they could move into right away.

It wasn’t unbridled love when Ms. Berger first saw 165 West 66th Street. But then she remembered her father’s pet saying: “You live inside the house, not outside.”

Which is how Ms. Berger came to buy a one-bedroom in a white glazed-brick building. Long seen as a consolation prize in the real estate sweepstakes, with neither the time-burnished details of prewar nor the sparkling newness of the latest glass-walled condo, boxy white-brick structures were built for the striving middle class in the ’50s and ’60s, when about 140 inserted themselves into the brick and brownstone fabric of the city. But these days, their more-for-less prices are attracting wallet-watching buyers, and their less-is-more-aesthetic is drawing fans of mid-century design.

Full Article Via NY Times

Superfund Designation: Good for Gowanus?

EPA designation might help real estate values, brokers say March 31, 2010

By C. J. Hughes

At left: The canal, a narrow 1.8-mile, tilde-shaped waterway, includes bits of neighborhoods like Park Slope and Carroll Gardens. At right: The EPA plan would curb runoff and remove the sludge in the Gowanus Canal.

Last month, Brooklyn’s Gowanus Canal became one of the most polluted places in the country, at least in the eyes of the federal Environmental Protection Agency, which named it to the infamous “Superfund” cleanup list.

While that environmental scarlet letter may not make for the most compelling marketing gimmick — New York’s Love Canal, whose toxicity led to the creation of the Superfund in 1980, is hardly prime real estate today — Gowanus probably won’t see its property values dip, according to many brokers, landlords and developers.

There are a couple of reasons for that counterintuitive assessment. For one, the neighborhood around the canal, a narrow 1.8-mile, tilde-shaped waterway, includes bits of established neighborhoods like Park Slope and Carroll Gardens.

What’s more, mopping up the mess from oil refineries, tanneries and raw sewage, which have contaminated the Gowanus since it was dug in the 1860s, will likely mean better things to come.

Continue to Full Article

City Hall to Get Solar Panels

Mayor Michael Bloomberg

New York City Hall could be come one of the city’s largest providers of solar energy, if Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s plan to install as many as 158 solar panels on its roof goes through, according to the Post. The green upgrade is part of the nearly two-centuries-old building’s $100 million makeover, and could help the building achieve silver LEED status. If the maximum 158 panels are put in place, they would comprise about a 10th of the roof’s total 20,000 square feet. Although the panels won’t “zero out the [traditional] electricity” consumption in the building, Ken Vogel of Long Island-based Solar Power, said, they will help encourage environmentalism among New Yorkers. “It’s more symbolic than anything else,” Vogel added.

Full Article

‘New Domino’ Project Gets Big Thumbs Down from Councilman

After receiving a resounding rejection from the local Community Board last week, another blow was dealt last night to an ambitious $1.2-billion plan to turn the landmark Domino Sugar Refinery site in Williamsburg into a residential complex with 2,200 apartments and four acres of public park on the waterfront. At a public hearing held by Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, freshman City Council member Steve Levin came out against the project, which could spell much bigger trouble for developers than the Community Board’s vote, because Council members typically defer to the local councilmember on land-use issues. At last night’s hearing, an aide read from a statement explaining Levin’s objections:

The project is simply too big. Too big, too high, too many people. The plan would introduce over 6,000 new residents to the neighborhood, a nearly 25-percent population increase for the half-mile area surrounding the site. How does everyone get to work? [The L] train is over capacity during morning rush hour as it is.

An environmental impact study found the development would increase rush hour subway ridership in the area by 1,350 people and have a “significant adverse impact” on the transit system. Domino developers insist that increased ferry service to Manhattan would reduce that impact, as would a potential MTA plan to replace the M train with the V, theoretically giving Domino residents a direct link to midtown from Marcy Avenue and alleviating pressure on the L.

Continue Full Article Here

Dodd Weighs Changes to Overhaul of Financial Rules

By Phil Mattingly and Alison Vekshin

March 20 (Bloomberg) — Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd will begin weighing amendments to his proposed overhaul of financial rules next week after accepting a change sought by Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair.

Dodd plans to begin committee meetings March 22 that will consider some of the 399 amendments senators have offered to the plan he unveiled this week, his spokeswoman Kirstin Brost said yesterday. The Connecticut Democrat has already agreed to revise language that Bair said could lead to “backdoor bailouts” of firms through a Federal Reserve lending facility, Brost said.

“There are provisions that would suggest that the Federal Reserve Board could support an open institution if it’s involved in payment processing or clearing facilities,” Bair said in a speech yesterday at the Independent Community Bankers of America convention in Orlando, Florida.

Full Article

Extell Unveils New (Improved?) Riverside Center

riverside center1
Extell Development Company showed the public its new design on Wednesday for Riverside Center, the biggest development proposal in the neighborhood, and one of the biggest in the city. It’s got five towers with at least 2,500 apartments, 210,000 square feet of retail, a hotel, a movie theater, an underground automobile service center, a new K-8 school, and a fountain that you can play in with your shoes off. Words can only go so far to describe it, so we took plenty of pictures (at bottom, including a larger picture of the above drawing).

Extell modified its original design to change the heights of buildings and space them out more, and it is getting rid of its proposal to include a Costco or other big-box retailer. But more on that later.

Riverside Center would stretch from 59th to 61st Streets, and West End Avenue to the edge of the West Side Highway (in the future a new road called Riverside Boulevard will flank the development to the West).

Continue to Full Article Here

By: Avi – Westside Independent

Home-Buyer Tax Credit Countdowns Begin

By Dawn Wotapka

Time is almost up on the federal home-buyer tax credit, the government’s gift of up to $8,000, crafted to jump-start a stalled housing market. Just about six weeks remain for buyers to get those contracts inked. Home builder Lennar has a bright countdown on its Web site. “TIME IS RUNNING OUT,” warns KB Home (yes, it is in all caps), which is tracking the expiration to the millisecond.

For those just now getting into the market who want the cash, “you’re going to have to move quickly,” says Walter Molony, a spokesman with the National Association of Realtors, one of the trade associations that pushed hard for this credit and its two extensions in February and December 2009.  “You’ve got to be prepared to make quick decisions.”

In honor of the countdown, here are six things to keep in mind:

  1. This round is actually an extension, but it doesn’t just cover first-time buyers.  Move-up buyers are also eligible, though they only qualify for up to $6,500.
  2. Only the contract has to be signed on or before April 30. The home purchase must be completed by June 30. Real-estate experts advise signing the contract as soon as possible and leaving plenty of time for closing, given lenders remain extra careful these days. Don’t try to squeeze in a July 1 deal. It won’t work.
  3. The definition of a first-time buyer isn’t as limiting as the words indicate. In this case, the “buyer” hasn’t owned a principal residence in three years. For married taxpayers, both parties can’t have owned.
  4. It might seem genius to “buy” a home from your parents, but skip any such notion. You can’t purchase a home from most family members: Parents, children, grandparents and grandchildren are excluded.
  5. Consider that prices might fall after the credit expires: Buyer traffic will undoubtedly decline once this enticement goes away. As sellers adjust to this slower new reality-they’ll be more than likely to shave prices.
  6. Of course, there’s talk of another extension, given housing’s recovery remains choppy. (Mr. Molony says the NAR isn’t advocating for a third round.) Some think the time has come to end the program. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com pushed to extend the tax credit last fall but he said last month it’s time to let it expire. “It’s worn out its benefit,” he said. “If you extend it again, it isn’t going to do much, and what you’re doing is providing a tax break to folks who bought anyway.”

Article Here

Time Coming For Commercial Mortgage Market To Stand On Its Own

NEW YORK -(Dow Jones)- The Federal Reserve on Friday will conduct the last round of purchases of existing commercial mortgages, marking the end of a government program designed to buoy markets and boost investor confidence in securities that have been battered since the financial crisis in 2008.

The end of this part of the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, leaves a corner of the commercial mortgage market on its own, and investors won’t see new deals until later in the year, when regulators are expected to provide more clarity on securitization.

While the Fed’s role has been small relative to other programs–the central bank has granted only $11 billion in loan requests since last June–the impact has been much larger in a sector still in the throes of a painful correction.

“TALF provided psychological support for the market,” said Darrell Wheeler, head of commercial mortgages at Amherst Securities. “It served its purpose at the time it was needed.”

Continue Full Article Here

By Prabha Natarajan Dow Jones Newswires

Interview w/ Nancy Chemtob Esq. – Johnathan Miller Housing Helix Podcast

nancy

Johnathan Miller – The Housing Helix

25 Feb 2010 | Interviews, Law, Podcasts

I speak with Nancy Chemtob, a partner with Chemtob Moss Forman & Talbert, LLP a New York City law firm specializing in divorce, family and matrimonial law.  My firm has done a lot of work with Nancy and her partners over the years and admire her approach and candor.  Plus she’s fun to talk with.

The biggest asset in a divorce action is most often the real estate.  The housing market crunch of the past 18 months has played havoc with the divorce process.  What’s most interesting is the fact that divorce attorneys are often at the leading edge of a changing real estate market as their clients deal with the reality of market conditions within their strategy.

Note: I’ve got a new equipment set-up (again) and I am still wrangling with it so my audio track is a bit too loud.  But Nancy makes her presence heard.

Interview Can Be Heard Here

Banks Out of the Woods? Maybe Not

Published: February 26, 2010

MORE than $1 in every $10 that American banks have outstanding in loans is lent to a troubled borrower, a ratio far higher than previously seen in the quarter-century that such numbers have been compiled.

Bad Bank Loans Soar

The problems are greatest in construction loans for single-family homes, where nearly 40 percent of the loans either are delinquent or have been written off as uncollectible. But they are also high in mortgage loans for single-family homes, where $1 in every $8 of loans is troubled.

The figures were released this week by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as it announced that the number of banks in trouble had risen sharply, and forecast that the rate of bank failures would increase.

Full Article at NYTs

Dodd Financial-Reform Bill Earns Praise From GOP—But Not Votes

Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd’s draft bill for sweeping financial reform will consolidate banking regulators, as well as create a systemic risk council and a new consumer watchdog agency within the Federal Reserve, according to a source familiar with the contents of the legislation scheduled to be unveiled Monday.

US  Sens. Christopher J. Dodd (right) and Bob Corker.
Orlando Sierra | AFP | Getty Images
US Sens. Christopher J. Dodd (right) and Bob Corker.

Senator Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) who’s been working with Dodd on a bipartisan bill for more than a month, told CNBC.com Sunday evening that he expected Dodd to “introduce a bill that will be to the left of where we were — close, but left.”

Corker called Dodd’s draft “a much better bill” than the one the Connecticut Democrat offered in November, but added “he knows that will be a bill I cannot support.”

“Hopefully we can offer some amendments in committee and get it back into the middle,” he said.

Continue Reading at CNBC

By: Albert Bozzo Senior Features Editor

The Going Gets Tougher – Fannie & Freddie Requirements

THOUGH the economy appears to be stabilizing, the market for financing remains tight.

THE MORTGAGE WARS Dr. Stephen Krieger and Dr. Nada Gligorov prevailed over a lender who didn’t like the size of their prospective building’s reserve fund.

By ELIZABETH A. HARRIS

Some people are able to get mortgages without much trouble, but others find the process arduous, mystifying and prolonged. Then there are the buyers who think their financing is secure, only to see it evaporate sometime between the signing of the contract and the closing table.

“Is it a problem? Yes, it’s a problem,” said Dottie Herman, the president of Prudential Douglas Elliman. “When these things fall through, it’s not because people are destitute — they have good incomes. It’s because banks are very, very tough now.”

Banks can be such sticklers that missing just one payment on a bill can result in a thumbs down. Change jobs and expect the microscope. To complicate matters, sometimes it is the buildings themselves, not the buyers, that fail to qualify, thanks to new or newly relevant Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac lending guidelines.

Continue to Full Article at NYTs

A Tax Surprise

Despite real estate slump, city tells some homeowners that their market values are up

March 01, 2010  By Caren Chesler

Down market? What down market? In the wake of one of the biggest housing declines since the Great Depression, some New Yorkers saw the values of their homes rise last year — on the city’s tax records.

Townhouse prices in Manhattan were down 32 percent in 2009 from 2008, according to data from Miller Samuel. And yet the city’s Department of Finance hiked the market values of some townhomes in Upper Manhattan by as much as 20 percent. (Co-ops, as a class, were up 1.8 percent on average.)

In the eyes of the city Department of Finance, the market value on Meghan Beard’s two-family Harlem townhouse increased from $1.15 million to $1.32 million in the last year, which will apply to the tax year beginning on July 1. Alan Wang’s one-family, meanwhile, rose from $1.05 million to $1.2 million.

Continue Reading at TRD

Trade Center Financing Rift Still Wide as Deadline Nears

With a deadline approaching, the Port Authority and the developer Larry A. Silverstein have so far been unable to resolve their longstanding differences for rebuilding ground zero, with the authority getting a chilly reception to its latest proposal.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is already building 1 World Trade Center, a $3 billion, 1,776-foot-tall skyscraper formerly called the Freedom Continue reading

Tenants Questions Answered in Stuyvesant Town Conference Call

While the settlement agreement between the Tenants Councel and the defendants Tishman-Speyer has not yet concluded a conference call was held today for the tenants association members.
Questions had been previously emailed by the tenants and those present on the call to illuminate the facts were Council member Dan Garodnick, Councel for the plaintiffs Alex Schmidt and Congresswoman Carol Maloney.
It is now known that the highest court in New York ruled in favor for the tenants whose apartments had been improperly deregulated by managing partners Tishman-Speyer to receive re-regulation and refunds.
The settlement is still under negotiations all of which were elucidated in today’s conference call.
1. The settlement: Until the settlement has been finalized there will be an interim agreement lasting 7 weeks, a 7 week stay, if the defendants stipulate that this is a class action suit that interim agreement may be extended until July.
2. The new billing: Tenants will begin to receive their new rent stabilized rent bills in the next few days for the January billing cycle.
3. The rates: The calculations will be based from when the apartment was last stabilized plus the allowed 20% vacancy rate increase plus the allowed capital improvement increase of 1/40th of the cost of improvement plus the rent guideline board yearly rate increase (usually 3%) this will determine the rate of your new apartment. An example may be- $1500 last stabilized rent plus $300 vacancy rate plus $1000 (example for $40,000 capital improvements) plus 3% annual increase ( we will say 3 years for this example) equals $3059. This will be your new rate. However, if you pay less than this example that could be attributed to your actual apartment then the lesser number takes precedent. In some cases the market rate you pay may be lower than the stabilized rate.
But once you’re rate is calculated that will become your new stabilized rate. No one will receive any increases.
It has been estimated that 30-40% of all market rate tenants will not receive a reduction. In part because so many have re-negotiated their rents since the economic collapse began last September 2008.
So to summarize the agreement made was that whatever number is lower will be paid for the balance of the lease.
4. Tenants ready for their lease renewal:For people who renew their leases in the interim period they may be affected and will pay a higher rent. The maximum increase will be subject to the rent guideline board (usually 3%).
5. The 1/40th rule: This is a legal provision. A landlord can make improvements and charge this number. Currently it is an indefinite law to receive the costs even after the costs have been recouped. Counsel members are looking to change this to a 1/84th rule in addition to a limitation on recouping costs. They will argue to have costs limited once they have been fully recouped. Currently there is no limitation for landlords due to the current law which enables them to charge for capital improvements indefinitely.
6. How do you validate the capital improvement costs?: How can a tenant certify the investment made by the landlord? Invoices will be subpoenaed for MCI’s. An independent expert/consultant will be part of the scrutiny efforts. As negotiations continue in the settlement more legislative evaluation is to be considered. Going forward- newly rent stabilized tenants will be subject to the MCI increases.
No MCI’s have been calculated in the current rent stabilized rates- meaning in the future there could be additional charges factored in to these rents. However there is a State 2 year rule – state law has a statute of limitations if a landlord did not factor in the MCI charges during that period.
7. Apartments with forced vacancies: Vacancy rates entitle the landlord to receive a 20% increase but artificially created vacancies may affect the estimated rate. The landlord could be forced to roll back the rate. That is vacancies forced through deregulation would have received an improper increase. Each unit will be scrutinized to determine the proper rate.
8. The 10 step formula: An independent expert/consultant will be part of the scrutiny efforts to determine what exactly is the correct number to be appropriated for each affected market rate apartment.
9. Acceptance of the new rent rate:Do tenants waive their rights if they accept the final rental rate? No was the quick answer to this. The settlement agreement will bound all parties but tenants have the right to opt out of the settlement and may pursue litigation.
10. The refunds:Monies have been placed into an escrow account and have been turned over to joint custody to Tishman/and the attorney for the tenants. The attorneys for the tenants are looking to gain full control of the funds. Once this has been negotiated the refunds will be returned. Councel for the tenants hope this will be concluded by the end of January. The distribution of the funds has not been fully determined at this time. The retroactive discussions continue but will not be litigated while the 7 week or extended stay is in effect. Councel for the tenants stipulated that the defendants must agree to retroactive payments or there will be no settlement.
11. Former tenants: How can they make sure to participate fully? They should send an email which was suggested as better than a phone call to:liskow@whafh.com or doster@whafh.com
Please give your name/ current contact info-former address at PCVST- and the dates you lived there.
You will be made automatic members of the class action suit. There is no limitation at this time. But you must be placed in the databank. You are only eligible to receive escrow funds if you had been a resident after April 1 2009.
12. Tishman and foreclosure or bankruptcy: This case will be preserved as by New York State law. Damages and claims will be preserved.
13. Tenants in restored units: This question was asked by a tenant living in a restored apartment which is not the same as a renovated apartment. Councel remarked that this was a category worth investigating. But that it was likely to be the same process as with a renovated unit, the 1/40th rule.
And so after 90 minutes the conference call had concluded. It has been a terrific victory for affordable housing and on behalf of all the tenants, for which I am in that category I would to thank our advocates and legal Councel for their tremendous diligence and hard work. I will report on the first rent bill I receive in the coming days.

Stuyvesant Town Tenants Wins Court Decision-A Resident Speaks

Something For The Wanna Have’s.

The battle between The Tenant’s association and PCVST management company Tishman Speyer ended yesterday with the highest court in New York ruling in favor of the The Tenants.  This was the last possible appeal from Tishman after an Amicus brief was prepared which served to prove Tishman’s double dipping in the form of receiving J-51 tax breaks and market rate rent hikes. The law clearly bars deregulating units “which became or become subject to [stabilization] by virtue of receiving tax benefits” under the city’s J-51 program. This was a huge victory for the lower and middle class. During this time of excessive corporate greed and massive bonus payments justice was served today with a very clear message; You can’t expect to break the law, make a profit while also receiving tax benefits and not be punished. You can’t have it both ways and enjoy a capitalist compensation and a socialist compensation while you screw the people in the community. That’s called exploitation. This was a risk taken to earn a profit and the risk has not paid off. The beauty of which is pure capitalism. There are some commentator’s and journalists out there who see this as an unjust verdict. One of which is Steve Cuozzo in his NY Post article. He suggests that Jerry and Rob Speyer had another interpretation of the law (yeah no kidding) and writes “With so much hanging on the meaning of “by virtue of,” Jerry and Rob Speyer nonetheless rolled the dice. Now the court has made things far worse for them and for the entire decontrol cause, which too briefly offered a way out of the system’s socialist-style deathlock on the rental housing scene.” My answer to that is, Are you friggin serious Steve? So you’re supporting tax theft at the very least? This was a victory for pure capitalism and justice. If you take a profit gamble and you fail due to what is written in law then it’s game over. And the fallout from this can neither be protected or rationalized. If other landlords profit margin were based on the same expectations then that too is their big gamble. For the record I am a resident in Stuyvesant Town making $150,000 a year and I cannot save any money. This is a true victory also for the middle class. We deserve a victory after all our money has been either stolen from us or simply gobbled up by credit card companies and rent.

The final question I have is, now what? What happens from here with the decision. How will the money be parceled up for the victors? I live in a market rate apartment but I signed a lease agreeing to those terms.  While it’s true that 4,352  apartments are now market rate, I signed my lease agreeing to pay that rate.  I have asked employees working for Tishman Speyer whether I will receive a new re-regulated apartment and at this time it is not certain what the costs will be to TS or the re-structuring of the leases. I do not expect pro rated rent payments to be awarded but an apartment rate that could help me save would be nice.

We’re Back. We’ve Upgraded. We’re better For Your Health & The Environment.

It’s been a two week hiatus, though it seems like so much longer. We’ve missed out giving you news for The Apthorp and whether it had reached it’s requisite 25 condo sales-It seems like they did, but some say that is to be disputed, the drama continues. The Stuyvesant Town battle rages on between the purchasers Tishman Speyer and The tenant’s association, the New York State Court of Appeals has yet to bring in their decision but it doesn’t look pretty for Tishman.

So, thanks for your patience and we will be posting all your favorite daily pieces and articles.

The Most Interesting Real Estate News of The Day

Carl Ruderman

Carl Ruderman


1. Porn publisher lists his two units for $13.25 million-courtesy of NYO

2. Stuyvesant Town mega deal loses 60% of it’s value-courtesy of Curbed

What NYC Real Estate Can You Buy For $900K

NY1 Report September 5th

NY1 Report September 5th

The weekly report courtesy of NY1.The delicious Jill Urban reports.

Prices Cut on Most Remaining One Hanson Units

Something For The Wanna Haves.

Prices Cut on Most Remaining One Hanson Units-Courtesy of Brownstoner

Price Cuts - One Hanson Place

Price Cuts - One Hanson Place

Biggest Price Drop of The Day

Here’s Something For The Haves.

136 east 79th S #11A was given a whopping cut from $7,500,000 to $6,200,000. That’s a 17.3% slice.

Show Me The Numbers.

136 east 79th street #11A (Co-op)
$6,200,000
$4632 maintenance
3 Bedrooms
3 Bathrooms
4 Wood burning fireplaces
1 maid’s room
39 weeks on the market

Daily Price Cuts For Apartment Sales

Daily Price Cuts For Apartment Sales Courtesy of OLR.

Daily Price Cuts August 25th 2009

Daily Price Cuts August 25th 2009

Home Sellers May Become Reluctant Landlords

NY 1 August 24th 2009

NY 1 August 24th 2009

The weekly real estate report courtesy of NY1.

If you would prefer to sell your home but are not getting the price you need maybe you will turn to renting your home. These are some of the important responsibilities and pitfalls you will need to know.

1. You must list the price at market or slightly lower. The high level of inventory give’s renters the advantage. To succed in renting your home it must be priced as a good deal.
2. Do your homework before accepting a tenant-you must screen the applicant. Verify who they are, their financial and work background. Credit, criminal and personal checks are necessary.
3. You must let the tenant know that you wish to sell the property in the near future when the market can offer a better price.
4. The lease should state that you wish to sell the property and that the tenant must allow for open houses and private viewings. You should also have a termination clause in the lease in the vent that you do sell.