Vail Resorts announces opening dates — with no plans for last season's pandemic restrictions

 
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As Vail Resorts on Thursday unveiled opening dates for its iconic ski slopes in Colorado, the company also announced last season's pandemic-related restrictions are not in the works for this winter.

"Vail Resorts prioritizes the health and safety of its guests, employees and communities and will continue to monitor public health guidance surrounding COVID-19," read the company's press release. "Details of any necessary safety protocols will be communicated ahead of the season as the situation continues to evolve."

The release added that last season's reservation systems, aimed at thinning crowds, are not planned for the winter ahead.

The announcement comes as the delta variant continues to rise in Colorado and across the world, along with "breakthrough" cases in fully vaccinated people.

The state's COVID-19 hospitalizations have reached their highest numbers since mid-May. In a press conference this week, Gov. Jared Polis said hospital capacity "is not currently in jeopardy" and added he would not, for now, implement restrictions.

Lockdowns in Australia forced some ski resorts to close this month, including Vail Resorts' Perisher.

The company plans to kick off its North American season in Summit County at Keystone, where snowmaking upgrades have led to opening day hopes of early October. Breckenridge and Vail are slated to host skiers Nov. 12, with Beaver Creek and Crested Butte following Nov. 24.

For updates, visit The Gazette.

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Just Listed: Mountain Living in Quarter Share of Winter Park Condo

 
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Relish mountain living in this 4 bedroom 1/4 share in the heart of Winter Park.

1 week a month in a rotating calendar, you are steps from shops, restaurants, mountain bike/hiking trails, Hideaway Park for summer concerts, Rec Center and on the free shuttle to hit the slopes. To help keep this 4 bedroom with 2 master suites well maintained with no wear and tear, rentals or pets allowed in this agreement.

Listed by Leah Bishop for West + Main Homes. Please contact Leah for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

Have questions?
West + Main Homes
(303) 935-8787
hello@westandmainhomes.com

Presented by:
Leah Bishop
(970) 531-4723
leahbishop@westandmainhomes.com


 

New Show Coming to Rocky Mountain Repertory Theatre

 
 

Don’t miss your chance to be a fly on the wall of fame… at Million Dollar Quartet this fall!

Million Dollar Quartet

Playing Dates: Opening Friday, September 3rd

Book by Colin Escott & Floyd Mutrux
Original Concept & Direction by Floyd Mutrux
Inspired by Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis, & Carl Perkins

Four red-hot rock ‘n’ roll legends come together for one unforgettable night. Inspired by the famed Sun Records recording session with Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins and what would become one of the greatest jam sessions ever. Million Dollar Quartet brings that legendary night to life, featuring a score of rock hits including “Blue Suede Shoes,” “Fever,” “That’s All Right,” “Sixteen Tons,” “Great Balls of Fire,” “Walk the Line,” “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” “Who Do You Love?” “Matchbox,” “Folsom Prison Blues,” “Hound Dog” and more.

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America’s housing stock is aging: That can mean good deals but hefty repair bills

 
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American homes aren’t just growing dramatically more expensive. They’re also getting older.

The median age of U.S. homes had risen to 39 years as of 2019, according to the latest American Community Survey. For homebuyers frustrated by fierce competition and soaring prices, older homes present a more affordable option. One obvious caveat: Aging structures require more maintenance.

“In many markets, those older homes are more affordable — but they come with an increased need for repairs and maintenance,” says Danielle Samalin, chief executive of Framework Homeownership, a company that coaches first-time homebuyers. “Budgeting for maintenance and repairs is critically important.”

Samalin speaks from experience: She and her family live in a 1799 home in western Massachusetts.

Samalin loves the home’s character, although she acknowledges that owning a home built during the presidency of John Adams isn’t for everyone. “Some people think we’re crazy,” she says.

Why homes are getting older

The aging of the U.S. housing stock is partly a lingering bit of fallout from the Great Recession. Overbuilding was a hallmark of the real estate bubble of 2005. Since then, builders have underbuilt. In contrast to the massive suburbs built in the 20th century, the homes that have gone up in recent years have skewed larger, pricier and less numerous.

The result? There just aren’t a lot of new homes in the U.S. housing market. Fully 65 percent of American homes were built before 1989, according to American Community Survey data.

Homebuyers are adapting to the new reality. According to a recent TD Bank survey of Americans aiming to buy their first home in 2021, fully 71 percent aren’t looking for a dream home. Instead, they’re shopping for a starter home or a fixer-upper.

“This low inventory has been out there as an issue since the financial crisis of 2008,” says Scott Lindner, national sales director at TD Bank Mortgage. “We haven’t really been adding a lot of inventory.”

‘We wanted the soul of the old home’

Samalin’s 3,000-square-foot home has no air conditioning or garage. Electricity hadn’t been harnessed when the house was built in 1799, and some rooms still have no overhead lights.

Despite the inconveniences, Samalin loves the house. “We’re very happy here,” she says.

Samalin tells homebuyers that a number of state and local grants and zero-interest loans are available to owners of older homes. She tapped into Mass Save, an initiative by Massachusetts’ utilities that funds improvements to energy efficiency.

That program is just one of many forms of financial assistance available to homeowners who opt to invest in aging properties. State and local governments also offer home improvement programs and historic preservation loans that carry favorable terms.

“It’s important for folks not to rule out this option,” Samalin says.

While an older home requires more attention than a new place, she says the payoffs are many. Her house was framed with locally harvested timber, and she learned that the home’s original owner was a minister who performed more than 100 weddings in one of the rooms in the home. Such quaint touches appeal to her desire to live in a home with a story, rather than a cookie-cutter tract house.

“We wanted the soul of the old home,” Samalin says.

‘Sometimes it’s like camping’

Dawn McMullan lives in a home near downtown Dallas that was built in 1870. When she and her husband went house shopping 20 years ago, she was charmed by the Victorian home’s distinctive round windows.

“I thought, ‘That house is just calling to me,’” McMullan says.

She also loved the vintage woodwork inside the house. The brick chimney in the back adds to the Reconstruction-era ambiance. McMullan knew the home would need a lot of work, and the neighborhood wasn’t great at the time — but those factors helped push the house into her price range.

“It was very reasonably priced for Dallas,” McMullan says. “I just had a feeling that this was a unique area that was only going to come up in value.”

That prediction proved prescient. But maintaining an old house is a constant project.

“We gutted the kitchen, and we’ve reconfigured almost every space in the house by now,” McMullan says. “It’s certainly a money suck in a lot of ways.”

Because the house is in a historic district, many changes require city approval. And even after upgrades, McMullan’s home hasn’t been thoroughly modernized. There’s no garage, for instance.

“There’s still a place in my laundry room where I can see outside,” she says. “Sometimes it’s like camping.”

While mortgages are available for old homes, McMullan says appraisers can struggle to find comparable properties for her place — most homes in the neighborhood are 30 years newer. “It’s such an anomaly of a house,” she says.

In one incentive, McMullan received a property tax break for years, part of a city program to lure buyers to older neighborhoods.

Tips for buying an older house

When you buy an older home or one in need of work, closing is just the beginning of a long process. Some tips for navigating home repairs:

  • Pay close attention during the home inspection. TD Bank’s Lindner says this is your first chance to really get to know your home’s hidden flaws. “Buyers don’t always take this seriously,” he says. “Maybe they hang out in the living room while the inspector makes his rounds. You should become attached at the hip. Really look at the inspector as a person to go around with and learn about the property.”

  • Beware of cost overruns. It’s an unwritten rule of home renovation: No matter how thorough that cost estimate seems, you’ll discover costly new issues.

  • Consider a fixer-upper loan. If you deplete your savings for the down payment, that leaves you no cash to pay for repairs. One possibility: an FHA 203(k) loan, a type of mortgage that lets you borrow the purchase price and construction costs based on the post-renovation value of the property.

  • Look for other sources of help. State and local home improvement programs, historic preservation loans and energy-efficiency programs can provide low-cost money for upgrades. Some municipalities offer breaks on property taxes.

Get more info on purchasing older homes on Bank Rate.

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3 Former House Flippers Reveal Why They Quit Flipping

 
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Flipping houses is all fun and dollar signs on TV. From watching regular people who strike gold flipping houses into Magnolia-worthy renos to those who create their dream home out of a diamond in the rough, who hasn’t wondered if they should get in on the game?

It seems too good to be true, right? You buy a house for a fraction of what it could be worth, fix it up with a bit of elbow grease, put it on the market, witness a bidding war, and turn your massive profits into your next project. Buy, renovate, repeat. Before you know it, you’ve quit your day job and you’re on the path to a home reno empire. 

Except it’s not always that easy. For every house flipper who finds the path to entrepreneurship, another loses money — or at least their patience — in the deal. I talked to three former flippers about their experience, the problems they encountered, and what drove them to quit house flipping.

DIY isn’t as easy as it seems.

Melanie Allen, who runs the blog Partners in Fire, went in bright eyed and excited about the opportunity to buy a house in need of a little (or a lot of) love, fix it up with her own two hands, then turn around and sell it for a profit. She bought houses both in Georgia and Pennsylvania before realizing that DIY is a unique skill set that isn’t as easy as picking up a hammer.

“I was one of those idealistic folks who saw everyone talking about how great flipping houses is — and I wanted in!” she says. “Unfortunately, getting into the field wasn’t as easy as the experts made it seem. You need capital and good credit to start, and I didn’t have much of either. Still, I found a way by purchasing a fixer upper. But I quickly learned if you don’t have the skills to DIY yourself, it can get very expensive, and I didn’t have the extra capital to pay contractors to do all the necessary work.”

When your house flipping equation relies on doing the work yourself, throwing in the extra costs associated with a contractor can skew the profit margin. Allen did walk away with a profit, but whether it was worth the headache is the question.

Good contractors are hard to find.

Ask anyone who’s attempted a home renovation recently and they’ll all tell the same story: contractors are in high demand right now. You always have to do your due diligence to find a contractor who’s both efficient and reputable. But Andrew Herrig, of the blog Wealthy Nickel, found himself particularly frustrated trying to successfully flip a house in the current climate.

“My wife and I are current real estate investors and former flippers. We’ve flipped at least 7 to 8 homes over the last several years, but, thanks to 2021, we are no longer flipping. We have found that, especially now, it is difficult to find quality contractors, and materials are especially hard to source. It has become too challenging to make a profit on a flip.”

When lead times are long, materials are expensive, and contractors are costly, your investment goes up in more ways than one. You spend more time sourcing skilled people to work with and you spend more on them — and that can lead to the question, “Is this really worth it?”

A beautiful renovation is only part of the equation.

A good eye and a sense of what buyers want aesthetically will draw people into a real estate listing online, for sure. But that’s not everything. You still need to understand the market and know when a fixer-upper is priced low because it’s not in an area that will interest your target buyer.

Chris Alexakis found himself in a situation where he hadn’t done adequate research on the local market and, while his flip looked great, it wasn’t what buyers wanted. He says, “Although I’m experienced with trade work, I stopped flipping houses because I only have the bare minimum knowledge of real estate. I bought and renovated a property in a location that isn’t seeing a hot market and, while the renovation I did with my team restored the property’s aesthetics and functionality, selling it took a while simply because of its location.”

You can’t assume that jumping on a good deal and renovating it to Instagram-worthy perfection is enough. You need to do the legwork to understand whether the finished product will actually fetch the price you need to justify your investment.

There are a few other things to consider before trying to flip.

Lastly, there are several other pieces of the flipping puzzle that could make you second guess whether it makes sense for you. Make sure you can confidently answer these questions before you take the plunge. 

Do you have time to manage this project? With ordering supplies and scheduling contractors comes hours and hours of management. This can be tough to fit in with a full-time job, particularly since most contractors work during 9 to 5 hours.

Do you have the capital to hold this home throughout the renovation and selling process? Paying your own living expenses and another mortgage isn’t cheap. Are you willing to make this sacrifice in your budget?

Are you familiar with the problems that can arise with older homes and the permits required for renovations? These time-consuming factors can add up in terms of both cost and logistics. You need to prepare for the worst, just in case.

Are the houses in your market actually fixer-uppers, or just homes in need of minor cosmetic updates? It’s worth considering whether you’re helping a home become move-in ready for a new family, or you’re taking perfectly acceptable housing stock away from buyers with smaller budgets.

However, if after these tales, you’re still feeling the itch to try your hand at a flip, make sure you’ve done your due diligence. If you know what you’re getting into, you could find yourself on the winning end of a success story.

Read more like this on Apartment Therapy.

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