Welcome to Boston, MA
  • Home
  • Sign-up
  • Advertise
  • Suggest
  • PhotoBlog
  • BlogGuide
  • Resources
  • Tell a Friend
  • Subscribe
  • Blog Login
  • Account Login
Demo
Join a daily "Learn to Blog" demo.
Learn how to blog in minutes!
Monday - Friday, 11:00 a.m. Pacific Learn to Blog
Claim
Real Estate Agents - Be your City's
Real Estate & Relocation Specialist
Author
Advertise
Build a Community Stake a Claim
Login to Blog - Sign up to Blog
USER NAME
PASSWORD
Remember Me Password Recovery

Boston's Real Estate Marketing Specialists

WEICHERT, REALTORS® - Synergy is a full service residential real estate firm specializing in representing buyers and sellers in niche markets of Boston and throughout the MetroWest. Our Gold Services platform ensures the highest quality service around.
martin kalisker - Broker, e-Pro, ABR, TRS
WEICHERT, REALTORS® - Synergy
 
w: 781-237-3102
c: 781-694-3513

My Website: Visit Me There
Email: Email Me Now
We're the talk of the town!
WEICHERT, REALTORS® - Synergy is a full service residential real estate firm specializing in representing buyers and sellers in niche markets of Boston and throughout the MetroWest. Our Gold Services platform ensures the highest quality service around.
martin kalisker - Broker, e-Pro, ABR, TRS
WEICHERT, REALTORS® - Synergy
 
w: 781-237-3102
c: 781-694-3513

My Website: Visit Me There
Email: Email Me Now
We're the talk of the town!
WEICHERT, REALTORS® - Synergy is a full service residential real estate firm specializing in representing buyers and sellers in niche markets of Boston and throughout the MetroWest. Our Gold Services platform ensures the highest quality service around.
martin kalisker - Broker, e-Pro, ABR, TRS
WEICHERT, REALTORS® - Synergy
 
w: 781-237-3102
c: 781-694-3513

My Website: Visit Me There
Email: Email Me Now
We're the talk of the town!

Where Do Mortgage Rates Come From?

Posted by martin kalisker on August 5th, 2008

Where do mortgage rates come from? Not the 10 year nor 30 year Treasury as many think.

Why and how mortgage rates change in the marketplace is often misunderstood – even by the news media. They often report mortgage rates will go down when the Federal Reserve announces a rate cut when sometimes the opposite can happen.

How do Federal Reserve rate changes affect mortgages?

Fed rate changes don’t directly affect mortgage rates. Instead, they affect the inflation expectations of investors. The role of the Federal Reserve in our economy is to control inflation so we have long-term economic growth and prosperity. If the economy grows too fast, we get inflation. If the economy shrinks, we have recession. The Fed’s main tool in managing the economy is to change short-term interest rates. They can directly change the rate banks charge each other for loans and the rate the Fed charges banks. Banks eventually change the rates they charge customers for certain loan and savings products as it gets cheaper or more expensive for them to borrow money. Loans indexed to the Prime rate are usually the first to change. The Fed lowers rates to speed up the economy. Lower rates encourage more business and consumer spending as loans become cheaper and saving becomes less profitable. The Fed raises rates to slow the economy. Higher rates discourage spending as borrowing becomes more expensive and saving money becomes more profitable.

If investors think Fed rate changes will make the economy grow fast enough to cause inflation, the mortgage rates they demand will go up. If they think the Fed’s actions will reduce inflation, mortgage rates are likely to fall. There are times when mortgage rates will go the opposite direction of Fed rate changes based on the inflationary impact investors expect.

What do investors have to do with mortgages?

Did you know that individuals and businesses can invest in securities backed by people’s mortgages? Institutions that make mortgages frequently sell them to investors. The mortgage interest homeowners pay provides income to buyers of mortgage-backed securities. That buying and selling of mortgages gives lenders a ready source of money for making mortgage loans. As a result, far more people can get mortgages and buy homes than would otherwise occur.

How do mortgage investors influence mortgage rates?

Investors require a return on their money in exchange for the risk they are taking. That required rate of return directly impacts mortgage rates. Simply put, if the rate offered on a mortgage-backed security is below the return investors require, they won’t buy it at face value. To get face value, the institution selling the mortgage must raise their mortgage interest rates to a level that meets the required rate of return.

The rate is generally based on two kinds of risk – inflation expectations and risk the borrower won’t repay on time.

During this period of credit risk and increased property foreclosures, mortgage backed securities are deemed risky and therefore the selling institution has to pay a higher rate to attract investors. This helps foster higher mortgage rates at the consumer level.

How inflation expectations of mortgage investors affect rates?

Inflation occurs when prices for goods and services rise over time. As prices rise, the purchasing power of a dollar falls. Investors want to ensure that inflation won’t erase the value of the earnings on their investments. If they expect inflation to increase, they’ll want a higher rate. If they expect inflation to decrease, they’ll accept less. As mentioned before, Fed rate changes are a big factor in those expectations.

Comment (1) | Permalink | Lifestyle, Real Estate, Mortgage, Government, General, CityBlog, Education, Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 4 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Bye Bye Newspaper Advertising For Real Estate

Posted by martin kalisker on August 4th, 2008

As further evidence of the shift to online advertising, the Los Angeles Times has announced it will no longer publish its weekly real estate section. Click here for the entire news story.

Is Boston next? As a Realtor®, I am often asked by Sellers and Agents alike, why I am reluctant to use the newspaper for marketing and listing of properties for sale. Besides the high cost and low return on the advertising dollar spent, over 80% of homes are sold because somebody saw the listing on the Internet.. What could be more convincing?

I understand that it used to be fun to sit down with a cup of coffee on a Sunday morning, circling open house ads, but that was literally, yesterday’s news. Today’s buyers are more motivated to simply drive around an area of town that they like to look for open house signs so that they can do some research on the Internet before they call their Buyer’s Agent (notice I did not say the Listing Agent, because listing agents represent the seller - not the buyer, so why would you call the listing agent to help you buy the property?)

With decreasing readership in the print editions of newspapers and magazines, proactive Realtors® are spending their advertising dollars more wisely. It sounds like the LA Times just helped agents in Southern California make the inevitable decision. Wow, two great things to come out of LA this week - first the demise of the real estate section in the paper, then the news that they took Manny out of Boston. Maybe those earthquakes are making people in Lala land think more rationally. Well, maybe not. They did take Manny - who now has his IQ printed on his jersey (99).

Comment (1) | Permalink | Real Estate, Retirement, Mortgage, Lifestyle, General, CityBlog, Education, Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 4 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

FAQs about HOPE For Homeowners Legislation

Posted by martin kalisker on July 30th, 2008

This is hot off the press news. President Bush just signed into law the HOPE For Homeowners legislation on July 30, 2008.

When does the program start?

The legislation is effective upon enactment; the HOPE for Homeowners program goes into effect on October 1, 2008. The Oversight Board will write more detailed program rules.

What agency is administering it? Will people be calling state offices or federal? Or will people just contact their lenders directly?

The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) will administer the program. The process begins when a homeowner or servicer of an existing eligible loan contacts an FHA-approved lender. Homeowners can contact lenders or servicers directly or through counselors (for which the bill provides another $150 million). It is important to note that this is a voluntary program.

Do borrowers have to use their current lender, or can they switch to another?

Borrowers may use any FHA-approved lender, as long as their current lender or investors agree to take the write-down in value.

Is it just subprime loans that can be refinanced? When did the bad loan have to have been taken out for them to qualify?
Any owner-occupants who are unable to afford their mortgage payments are eligible for the program. No investors or investor properties will qualify. Homeowners must certify, under penalty of law, that they have not intentionally defaulted on their loan to qualify for the program and must have a mortgage debt-to-income ratio greater than 31 percent as of March 1, 2008. Lenders must document and verify borrowers’ income with the IRS for the new loan. Loans had to have been originated before January 1, 2008.

What percentage of the current market value of the house must the loan be less than?

The size of the new FHA-insured loan will be the lesser of the amount the borrower can afford to repay, as determined by the current affordability requirements of FHA, or 90 percent of the current value of the home. Loans must be 30-year, fixed rate loans.

How will the interest rate be determined for the new 30-year fixed-rate loan?

Interest rates will be determined by the market. Because loans are insured by FHA, rates are expected to be very competitive.

What are the fees involved, and when are they paid? There is an annual default insurance premium, isn’t there?

Borrowers pay an insurance premium of 1.5% of the principal, which will be included in the monthly payment. In addition, the current lender makes an upfront payment of 3% of the principal to FHA.

Can the owner re-sell the house right away? Is there a waiting period? How much of the proceeds does the owner give up if they sell, and who gets those?

Borrowers must share the newly-created equity and future appreciation equally with FHA. This obligation will continue until the borrower sells the home or refinances the FHA-insured mortgage. Moreover, the homeowner’s access to the newly created equity will be phased-in over 5 years. If borrowers sell or re-finance within a year, they will pay the FHA 100% of any profit they may realize.

How many borrowers will be able to take advantage of the program? Is it first-come, first-served for qualifying borrowers?

The program is authorized to insure up to $300 billion in mortgages and is expected to serve approximately 400,000 homeowners.

Can a borrower be declined if they also have a home-equity line of credit? Is there any help available to also pay those off?

Borrowers have to retire any debt on the home to qualify for the program.

When does the program end?

The program will sunset on September 30, 2011.

Comment (1) | Permalink | Lifestyle, Real Estate, Mortgage, Government, General, CityBlog, Education, Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Weichert Forecasts Housing Market on the Rise

Posted by martin kalisker on July 22nd, 2008

Real estate pioneer calls the bottom of the market and expects home sales to begin showing modest, steady increases

As president and founder of Weichert, Realtors, one of the nation’s largest privately-held real estate companies, James M. Weichert has seen his share of market shifts. In fact, Weichert has become quite efficient at predicting changes by regularly studying the factors that shape the housing sector. Yet, this well-respected industry pioneer has never felt so strongly about a market shift that he would come out and declare so publicly – until now.

In a message to the company’s nearly 18,000 sales associates as well as approximately 2,000 employees, Weichert announced that “we have reached the bottom of the housing market and will soon begin to see improvements.”

“We saw an extraordinarily hot market at the start of the decade like we may never see again. I knew in May 2005 that we had reached the peak of the market when mortgage payments began to stretch beyond buyer affordability,” said Weichert. “Now, everything I am seeing is telling me the worst is behind us and we’ll begin to see a gradual increase in sales activities.”
Weichert acknowledges that the recovery will happen at slightly different times and at different rates throughout the country because real estate remains a local business. “I recognize that some areas locally and some states nationally are not there yet, but by and large, we are turning the corner.”

As is typical in real estate, the Northeast appears to be the first area heading in to a new market. In many states, home sales are increasing slightly month over month and the home supply is waning. At the same time, interest rates remain historically-low, foreclosures are on the decline and mortgage money is becoming more readily available again.

Perhaps the biggest factor Weichert feels points to a market on the way back up is the increase in buyer interest. “There is just a lot of pent-up demand right now. We are seeing more traffic to our Web site, more people coming to our Open Houses. Despite the downturn the past few years, life goes on. People continue to get married, have kids and change jobs and buying a new home often goes hand in hand with these life milestones.”

“I know there are a lot of interested buyers who have sat on the sidelines the past few years either because they lacked confidence in the market or because they were hoping to time their purchase perfectly and buy at the lowest point possible,” added Weichert. “I would tell those people there is no more reason for uncertainty or hesitation.”

Comment (1) | Permalink | Real Estate, Mortgage, Lifestyle, General, CityBlog, Education, Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (No Ratings Yet)
Loading ... Loading ...

New Housing Characteristics - Where Does Boston Fit In?

Posted by martin kalisker on July 22nd, 2008

THEY’RE GETTING BIGGER AND BIGGER

According to the Census Bureaus’ Characteristics of New Housing report for 2007, the average square footage of homes is currently at a historic high.

On average, a completed single-family home had 2,521 square-feet, up 2.1% from 2,469 square-feet in 2006.

Additionally, the report provides characteristics on indoor and outdoor housing features. Data from this report gives insight into current trends to better understand today’s buyer.

Home-size findings from the report include:
• The average square footage of new homes completed has grown about 46.6 percent since 1 977, when the average was 1,720 square-feet.
• About 26 percent of all new single-family homes completed in 2007 had 3,000 or more square-feet of space, up from 24 percent in 2006 and 11 percent in 1988.
• The percentage of new single-family completed with 1,200 square-feet or less of floor area shrank from 25 percent in 1 973 to 4 percent in 2007.

Housing characteristics of single-family, newly-completed homes include:

• In homes with 4 or more bedrooms, over half had 3 bathrooms or more.
• Across the country, half of all homes had at least one fireplace.
• 90 percent of all homes had air conditioning.
• 67 percent of all new homes used gas as the primary source of heating fuel.
• At 32 percent, vinyl siding is the most commonly used material for the exterior of a home.

Comments (2) | Permalink | Real Estate, Mortgage, Lifestyle, General, CityBlog, Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Do Boston Buyers Really Want One Stop Shopping?

Posted by martin kalisker on July 21st, 2008

You’ve just signed an Offer to Purchase on your new dream home. Your energy level is at an all time high, and if you had your way, you’d close on the transaction tomorrow. But what does your Realtor do? Does he/she hand you a list of lawyers, mortgage lenders and other service providers and pleasantly tells you to go through the list and “find someone that you like?” That might be ok if you are a seasoned homebuyer who knows exactly what questions to ask and otherwise manage these relationships. Or, does your Realtor take you by the hand and to the office next to his to introduce you to their One Stop Shopping service manager (at Weichert, we call this the Gold Services Manager)? Read the results of a recent NAR study and share your feedback.

According to a recent National Association of Realtors’ One-Stop Shopping Consumer Preferences survey, a large majority of recent and future buyers would consider using one-stop shopping in the homebuying process. Results also showed that the majority of buyers were happy with their latest real estate transaction; the most satisfied buyers were those that used one-stop shopping.

Statistics from the survey include:

• 93 percent of homebuyers would consider using one-stop shopping. The number of recent buyers who used a one-stop shopping service increased 45 percent from 2002 to 2008.
• Nearly twice as many recent buyers in 2008 report using a Sales Associate whose office offered a full range of buying services compared to 2002.
• The biggest perceived advantages of one-stop shopping are saving money (77 percent), increased efficiency/manageability (73 percent), convenience (73 percent) and things not falling through the cracks (73 percent).
• The average satisfaction score for overall experience of buying a home was 7.9, on a 10 point scale where 10 meant “completely satisfied.” Recent buyers were most satisfied with their Sales Associate and homeowner’s insurance (8.3).
• One-stop shoppers were more satisfied with their overall experience than those who used multiple sources (8.3 vs. 7.6). When it comes to buying a home, they were also more likely to report that they would prefer service providers to be affiliated with a Sales Associate (35 percent vs. 18 percent).

So, do you agree?

Comments (0) | Permalink | Real Estate, Mortgage, Lifestyle, General, CityBlog, Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 4 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Renting? It’s A Good Time to Buy

Posted by martin kalisker on July 21st, 2008

Renters Plan to Buy Homes

According to a survey conducted by Harris Interactive for the National Apartment Association, one in five renters plan to buy a home in the next year, and most said they expected to make the move to homeownership within five years. Cumulatively, 41 percent of renters said they no longer expect to be renting after two years, 56 percent would no longer be renting after three years, 60 percent after four years and 69 percent within five years.

Additionally, more than half of those polled – including renters, homeowners and adults living with their parents – expect housing markets to improve in the next six months.

A growth in market confidence and renters planning to buy homes may indicate that an increase in home sales is not far behind.

Comments (0) | Permalink | Real Estate, Lifestyle, General, CityBlog, Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (1 votes, average: 5 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Boston Real Estate Deals

Posted by franklinknotts on March 19th, 2008

Looking for LUXURY or HISTORICAL property in BACK BAY, SOUTH END, WATERFRONT, DOWNTOWN and BEACON HILL areas of BOSTON REAL ESTATE:

ARE YOU INTERESTED IN PREVIEWING BOSTON REAL ESTATE THIS WEEK? DETAILED LISTS OF OPEN HOUSES ARE AVAILBLE BY EMAIL. PLEASE EMAIL ME AT FRANKLINKNOTTS@AOL.COM AND I WILL SEND YOU THE MOST COMPLETE LIST AVAILABLE AS WELL AS DAILY ALERTS THEREAFTER ! OR CALL FRANKLIN KNOTTS @ CELL # 617-365-1151 FOR IMMEDIATE HELP OR ANYTIME ON VOICEMAIL # 617-796-7415.

Comment (1) | Permalink | Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (3 votes, average: 3.33 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Boston Real Estate

Posted by franklinknotts on February 29th, 2008

BACK BAY, SOUTH END, BEACON HILL, BOSTON REAL ESTATE: DETAILED LISTS OF OPEN HOUSES ARE AVAILBLE BY EMAIL.

ARE YOU LOOKING TO GET INTO BOSTON REAL ESTATE THIS WEEKEND? ARE YOU INTERESTED IN PREVIEWING HOMES IN THE BACK BAY, SOUTH END, WATERFRONT, DOWNTOWN, FENWAY AND BEACON HILL AREAS ? PLEASE EMAIL ME AT FRANKLINKNOTTS@AOL.COM AND i WILL SEND YOU THE MOST COMPLETE LIST AVAILABLE AS WELL AS DAILY ALERTS THEREAFTER ! OR CALL FRANKLIN KNOTTS @ CELL # 617-365-1151 FOR IMMEDIATE HELP OR ANYTIME ON VOICEMAIL # 617-796-7415.

Comments (0) | Permalink | Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (2 votes, average: 2 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Back Bay’s Historical Real Estate

Posted by franklinknotts on February 26th, 2008

Please call Frank Knotts @ Coldwell Banker to purchase Real Estate in Back Bay and surrounding areas of Boston, MA. Frank Knotts - Voicemail # 617-796-7415

Back Bay’s Historical Real Estate –
Detailed Information about the neighborhood for purchasing real estate.

Back Bay – Boston’s Centrally located Neighborhood

The boundaries of the Back Bay, as defined by the Neighborhood Association of Back Bay, are “the Charles River on the North; Arlington Street to Park Square on the East; Columbus Avenue to the ‘New York, New Haven, & Hartford’ right-of-way (south of Stuart Street and Copley Place), Huntington Avenue, Dalton Street, and the Massachusetts Turnpike on the South; and Charlesgate East on the West.” The block between Charlesgate and Kenmore Square is often included as it retains Commonwealth Avenue’s central park and pedestrial mall.

The Back Bay Architectural District, which is much smaller, was established by state law in 1966, and is bounded by “the centerlines of Back Street on the north, Embankment Road and Arlington Street on the east, Boylston Street on the south, and Charlesgate East on the west”.[2]

History:

The neighborhood gained its name because the area was, in fact, before it was filled in, literally the “Back Bay” for Boston. To the west of the Shawmut Peninsula, on the far side from Boston Harbor, a wide bay opened between Boston and Cambridge, with the Charles River entering at the west side. As with all of the New England coast, the bay was tidal, with water rising and falling several feet over the course of the day. At low water, part of the bottom of the bay was exposed.

In 1814, the Boston and Roxbury Mill Corporation was chartered to construct a mill dam, which would also serve as a toll road connecting Boston to Watertown, bypassing Boston Neck. The dam was later buried under present-day Beacon Street.[3]

The Back Bay neighborhood was created when a parcel of land was created by filling the tidewater flats of the Charles River. This massive project was begun in 1857. The filling of present-day Back Bay was completed by 1882; filling reached Kenmore Square in 1890, and finished in the Fens in 1900. The project was the largest of a number of land reclamation projects, beginning in 1820, which, over the course of time, more than doubled the size of the original Boston peninsula. It is frequently observed that this would have been impossible under modern environmental regulations.

Effect of landfill on size of Boston.Back Bay’s development was planned by architect Arthur Gilman with Gridley James Fox Bryant. Strict regulations produced a uniform and well-integrated architecture, consisting mostly of dignified three- and four-story residential (or once-residential) brownstones.

Greatly influenced by Haussmann’s renovation of Paris in the mid-to-late 19th century, the main thoroughfares of Back Bay emphasize order, with wide, parallel, tree-lined avenues and more homogenous architectural styles. Five east and west corridors run the length of the Back Bay: Beacon Street (closest to the Charles River), Marlborough Street, Commonwealth Avenue, Newbury Street, and Boylston Street. With the exception of Commonwealth Avenue, the wide central thoroughfare, these streets are one-way and intersect with north-south cross streets at regular intervals. The north-south cross streets, also one-way, are named alphabetically starting at the Public Garden, and a 1903 guidebook notes an alternation of trisyllabic and bisyllabic names: Arlington, Berkeley, Clarendon, Dartmouth, Exeter, Fairfield, Gloucester, and Hereford. (This same set of street names is used for the long East-West main streets in the center of Gladstone, Oregon, but the origin of this connection is unknown).

Perspectives on Back Bay:

William Dean Howells, writing of memories of his first visit to Boston, recalled, “There are the narrow streets, stretching saltworks to the docks, which I haunted for their quaintness… There is Beacon Street, with the Hancock House where it is incredibly no more, and there are the beginnings of Commonwealth Avenue, and the other streets of the Back Bay, laid out with their basements left hollowed in the made land, which the gravel trains were yet making out of the westward hills.”

To the W. C. Fields character, con artist Cuthbert W. Twillie, it came as naturally as breathing to feign that he was “one of the Back Bay Twillies.” However, there was a subtle social distinction between the Back Bay neighborhood and the older Beacon Hill district. A 1921 novel, By Advice of Counsel, characterizes one Bostonian by saying:

“William Montague Pepperill was a very intense young person, twenty-six years old, out of Boston by Harvard College. … There had been an aloof serenity about his life within the bulging front of the paternal residence with its ancient glass window panes—faintly tinged with blue, just as the blood in the Pepperill veins was also faintly tinged with the same color… For W.M.P. the only real Americans lived on Beacon Hill, though a few perhaps might be found accidentally across Charles Street upon the made land of the Back Bay. A real American must necessarily also be a graduate of Harvard, a Unitarian, an allopath, belong to the Somerset Club and date back ancestrally at least to King Philip’s War.” By 1900, most of the building up of Back Bay was done, as noted by the architectural historian Bainbridge Bunting in 1967:

“By 1900 the Back Bay residential area had almost ceased to grow. After 1910 only thirty new houses were constructed, after 1917 none at all. Instead of paying high prices for filled land on which to erect a home within walking distance of his office, the potential home builder escaped to the suburbs on the electric trolley or in his automobile. This flight from the city left empty much of the area west of Kenmore Square and adjacent to Fenway Park, and only later was it occupied by non-descript and closely-built apartments.”

Back Bay today:

Main streets of Back Bay.Culturally speaking, the Back Bay is known for being the home of the wealthy and the upper middle class. It is best-known for its expensive housing and shopping areas. Most stores are located on Newbury and Boylston Streets, with the ends closer to the Boston Public Garden traditionally more expensive. The Back Bay is dense with luxury hotels that include The Colonnade Hotel, Westin Copley Place, Fairmont Copley Plaza, and the largest hotel in the city, the Marriott Copley. The new Mandarin Oriental, Boston is due to open in June 2008, with an arcade area housing a number of upscale designer boutiques and restaurants.

The Copley Square area is close to the Back Bay railroad terminal, and is the eastern nexus of a system of hotels and shopping centers connected by a set of glassed-in pedestrian overpasses.

The large Copley Place mall includes the first Neiman Marcus opened in the New England area. The system of overpasses extends over half a mile[citation needed] to the Prudential Center and the shops surrounding it. The 52-story Prudential Tower, thought a marvel in 1964, is now considered ugly by some.[4] However, the Prudential Skywalk observatory offers wonderful views of Back Bay, Boston, and surrounding areas.

The Architecture of Back Bay:

The residential streets of Back Bay are some of the best preserved examples of late 19th century urban architecture in the US. Copley Square, bounded by Clarendon, Boylston, Dartmouth, and St. James streets, includes Trinity Church, the Boston Public Library, the John Hancock Tower, and other notable examples of architecture. The “Back Bay Historic District” was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 14, 1973.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Back Bay, Beacon Hill and South End neighborhoods are some of the best places to live in Boston !” If you are interested in receiving more detailed information about these neighborhoods please give me a call to discuss moving purchasing or renting in Boston. Franklin Knotts, Coldwell Banker Voicemail, # 617-796-7416

Comments (0) | Permalink | Chamber of Commerce | Flag as offensive
Loading Form....

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (2 votes, average: 3 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...

Blog Your Favorite City

State

City

Tell a Friend about CityBlogUSA.com
Email Me Visit my Website
Real Estate & Relocation Specialist
Thinking of moving? Need expert real estate advice? Please contact me!
WEICHERT, REALTORS® - Synergy
781-237-3102 (work)
781-694-3513 (cell)
martin kalisker - Broker, e-Pro, ABR, TRS
ATTENTION MORTGAGE LENDING PROFESSIONALS!

Make this CityBlog your Blog!

Become the Exclusive Mortgage Professional for this town!

Featured CityBlogUSA Sponsors

ePartner
Sponsor CityBlogUSA!
CityBlogUSA.com
Sponsor this Site

Search

Park Bench Topics

  • Chamber of Commerce
  • CityBlog
  • Education
  • General
  • Government
  • Healthcare
  • Lifestyle
  • Mortgage
  • Real Estate
  • Retirement
  • Sports
  • Suggest a Park Bench

Top Commentators

  • wayne (1)

Top Blogged Cities

  • Boston
  • Worcester
  • Springfield
  • Lowell
  • Cambridge
  • Brockton
  • New Bedford
  • Fall River
  • Lynn
  • Quincy

Local Businesses

  • Add Your Business

Terms of Use | Privacy Policy |blog@CityBlogUSA.com | (877) 380-1000

Copyright © 2007, ePartner USA, Inc. All rights reserved.
"e-Partner" is a registered trademark ® of ePartner USA, Inc.
"CityBlog" and "CityBlogUSA" are trade marks ™ of ePartner USA, Inc.