There are also some great photo’s as well as a live web cam on their website: http://www.gallerybuckhead.com/building.htm I took these photos last week on 2-22-07 from the Eclipse parking deck in Buckhead.



I took these photos a few days ago and they are already out of date… The retaining walls are much taller today and several new holes are currently being dug.
These photos were taken last Thursday, 2-22-07, from Two Buckhead Plaza’s parking deck.



Brookhaven may get 6- to 8-story towers
DeKalb waives area’s 2-floor limit
By Ty Tagami
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution - Published on: 02/14/07
Buildings as tall as eight stories could be going up at a major DeKalb County development after the County Commission voted Tuesday to allow an exception to the two-story limit in the Brookhaven area.
Sembler Co. wants to build a mix of offices, shops, restaurants and condo towers on a 50-acre tract along Peachtree Road south of Oglethorpe University. The site is now occupied by an aging apartment complex.
There are no buildings that tall near the site, which is surrounded by one- and two-story homes and low-slung strip malls, but there is a five-story building on the university campus.
Florida-based Sembler, known for “mixed-use” developments such as its Edgewood Retail District near Little Five Points, wants to build several towers of six to eight stories. The plan calls for a total of 1,560 housing units plus 150,000 square feet of office space and 600,000 square feet of retail.
Tuesday’s vote to waive the height limit was 6-0. Commissioner Kathie Gannon abstained, she said, because of her involvement in other zoning changes proposed for the area by neighborhood leaders.
The permit means a tower can rise 18 feet from the edge of Giles Stevens’ yard. (I told Ty and the Board of Commissioners that my bedroom window was 18 feet from the property line, see pictures below).


The president of a development consulting firm said he supports such investment near his neighborhood, but said he is concerned about the height of the proposed buildings, with one so near his bedroom window.
Stevens said he could find no other examples in DeKalb of buildings that tall next to single-family houses.”This has been a rushed process,” he told the county commissioners, urging postponement of a decision.(Here is interactive map that I created showing the Transitional Hieght Plane Analysis of Northern Dekalb County that I sent to the BOC)
But Kathryn Zickert, an attorney for Sembler, said there are examples of such contrasting development elsewhere in DeKalb, including in Northlake in the northeast part of the county.
Other Related Stories:
Click Here for All of our stories about the Sembler Company
Sembler to buy Peachtree Garden Apartments in Brookhaven| January 20, 2006
Sembler announces $400 Million Brookhaven Place| June 2, 2006
A neighbors thoughts on Brookhaven Place| June 20, 2006
AJC reports on Sembler North Druid Hills Project,| October 2, 2006
Bill Draper of the Brookhaven Peachtree Community Alliance wrote compiled this:
The Brookhaven Place Diaries (more…)
I took this video out the window of my truck with my cell phone while getting on Buford Highway last week from Peachtree in Midtown. You can see that Carter is coming along pretty well with their new tower (201 17th street) over at Atlantic Station.
Where I shot the video from:


You can also see that Cirque du Soleil is in town and has picked some prime real estate to set up their tent. 201 17th Street’s construction is being managed by Carter and is the second office building in Atlantic Station.
After achieving a more than 95% occupancy rate at 171 17th Street, AIG Global Real Estate and Jacoby Development moved forward with the development of 201 17th Street. Carter was tapped to provide project management services for the high rise. The Building will be 350,000 square feet and is scheduled to be completed in July 2007.
201 17th Street is located directly next to 171 17th Street, is 17 stories high and contains approximately 350,000 rentable square feet. In 2006, Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough, an Atlanta-based law firm, was signed on to serve as lead tenant for the building.
With an exterior consisting of a glass and aluminum curtain wall system comprised of low-vision glass and opaque glass spandrel panels, 201 17th Street is poised to make its mark on the Midtown Atlanta skyline. (more…)
As much as I hate to admit it… Trulia has really come along way with their Google maps mashup for Atlanta. The site pulls in FMLS and then runs statistical analysis based off predefined items such as Zip codes and they are also currently defining certain neighborhoods.
Quite a cool trick I have to say…
Kudos guys!!
Giles
I just want to take a moment to personally thank Todd Jackovich and the rest of his team members at Julian LeCraw & Company for their support of the Urban Land Institute’s upcoming event (click here for info). Todd and the rest of the Acquisitions & Investment Assessment team at LeCraw are great to work with and their generous support of ULI’s Young Leaders Group is certainly appreciated.
I hope many of you can come out next week to our event, which will host Ms. Shirley Franklin discussing both her upcoming term and Atlanta’s real estate market. Make sure and say hello and thank Todd and any of the Julian LeCraw staff if you see them at the event!
Sincerely,

Giles Stevens

For more info about Julian LeCraw & Company, visit their website:
www.Lecraw.com

More About Julian LeCraw
Julian LeCraw & Company, LLC (JLC) has been an active participant in the Atlanta real estate market since 1955. Since its origin, the company has expanded in size and disciplines while maintaining its focus on Atlanta and surrounding markets. Over the past five years JLC has actively sought investment opportunities in select Southeastern markets including Charleston, SC, Jacksonville/ Ponte Vedra Beach, FL and (more…)
David Tufts out….. Brad Horner in

David Tufts David Tufts out….. Brad Horner in
Last week, agents for Coldwell Banker’s the Condo Store received an email from their founder and president, David Tufts, telling them that the Company, which has grown rapidly in Florida since 2005, would be downsizing in 2007, and an employee work force reduction would be necessary.
On January third Condo Store employees received a surprising email from Jim Schmidt, a Senior Vice President for NRT telling them that the person who sent that email would also be leaving the company, along with the Executive Vice President Betty Harbourt.
Click here to read The Company email
Brad Horner Bio:

Brad’s 15 years of multi-faceted real estate e (more…)



The single family home and condo market here in Atlanta has slowed.
There… I said it! However the doom and gloom that all of the national media and local newspapers are constantly reporting on are starting to get to me with their blatant misrepresentation of the truth.
They certainly aren’t flat out lying, they are just bending the truth as they love to do.
They certainly aren’t putting these stories on the cover of their papers:
So anyway… Here is a great example in Today’s cover story of the AJC:
Georgia foreclosures jump 99%; rate is nation’s 3rd highest
Homeowners feel pain as climbing adjustable mortgage rates bite back
In the article they paint a gloomy picture stating certain facts and omitting others. Lets face it, the average reader or even real estate professional typically doesn’t fully understand the foreclosure process. I would like to say that the AJC doesn’t understand it either…but my guess is they do.
My point:
The article states in the headline and the body of text that “Foreclosures in Georgia are up a stunning 99 percent in the past year. The state now has the nation’s third-highest rate of foreclosures: One in every 449 households. In October, that meant 6,895 properties were in the foreclosure process.” See the missing number? This is like where is waldo…
Since I worked in the foreclosure business for some time buying at auction, selling, negotiating workout arrangements with lenders, taking properties Subject-to and the thing we were always trying to figure out was this missing piece of info. Still can’t guess? Well its simple… it is the actual number of homes actually sold at auction “foreclosed” if you will. See this article clearly states that the homes entering foreclosure was up but it never states that X number of houses were foreclosed in 2005 and this is how many so far this year. I suspect because like the research nuts that we are… they couldn’t find this out either. I looked back at many of their Doom and Gloom stories dating way back and cant seem to find the exact year by year statistics.
I would love to hear their response to this clear and obvious omission just to sell some newspapers.
The AJC Response:
Mr. Stevens, Thanks so much for the message.
Have you sent me other emails (’I'm still waiting’)? This is the first message from you that I am aware of. If you have sent other messages that were snagged by our spam filter — or that I lost in a barrage of other communiqués — please accept my apologies. I do try to respond to readers. About the actual number of homes lost, you raise a good point. That ‘missing number’ would be nice to have in the article. Here’s why it is not there: Because there is no central database that tracks that number. The deeds that indicate a transfer of ownership are filed in court, but there is, as best as I can tell, no one who puts them all together. I do hope we can do some more research and come up with something more definitive. I wish we had done so already, but it will take a fair amount of time — and keep in mind that when we do get to research this, we are not likely to get a precise number. That said, I don’t think we have tried to tell people that all properties in the foreclosure process end up with the homeowner chucked out. We said, ‘hundreds’ of homeowners would lose their homes. Think about the six thousand-plus homes that were listed last month. Attorneys who are involved in this have given me a range of estimates, from about twenty percent to nearly half. Let’s say it is at the low end of that
— let’s say it is even fewer. Let’s say that a mere fifteen percent of homes that are advertised as being in the foreclosure process go all the way through: That would be roughly nine hundred homeowners (out of the six thousand) losing their title. I do hope that at some point we can get closer to the precise number. But in the meantime, what we used — ‘hundreds’ — seems like a conservative estimate. As to whether the question of whether we should ignore or downplay this story, I think a ninety-nine percent increase in foreclosure filings seems significant. As to the larger question of whether we are making too much of trouble in real estate, I think the stories we have done are fair — especially in a context of rising inventories, falling sales numbers and stagnating prices. Meanwhile a large reservoir of homeowners with modest incomes are holders of mortgage products — adjustable rate mortgages (ARMs), option ARMs and interest-only mortgages — that set them up for problems. Which means that this trend *might* get much worse. You may disagree. Thanks again for writing.
My Response:
Well… when you claim in a headline that Foreclosures are up 99% Then admit that:
“About the actual number of homes lost, you raise a good point. That ‘missing number’ would be nice to have in the article. Here’s why it is not there: Because there is no central database that tracks that number. The deeds that indicate a transfer of ownership are filed in court, but there is, as best as I can tell, no one who puts them all together.”
I knew you didn’t have this missing number the second I read the Headline… that is why I wrote my post…The article headline should read:
Homes going into Foreclosure are up 99%
In my opinion there is a big difference
Isakson Barnhart, Atlanta’s award-winning developer of residential communities
offering seniors a continuum of care, invites you to the
Peachtree Hills Place Design Studio Grand Opening
425 Peachtree Hills Avenue, Suite 29C
Atlanta, Ga 30305 404-869-8805
Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006
Ribbon Cutting at 10:30 a.m.
The focal point of the 3,654 s.f. Design Center is a full-scale Kingswood plan. Allowing buyers to truly visualize the look and feel of their new home, this Design Center is unlike anything currently existing among CCRCs. This facility will give media a look at the newest trends in marketing to mature buyers. Please RSVP to Flammer Relations no later than December 12, 2006
770-383-3360 or frances@flammerpr.com
Original story:
PEACHTREE HILLS PLACESM TO OFFER SENIORS
A NEW WAY OF LIFE IN BUCKHEAD
Isakson-Barnhart’s CCRC Already 40% Reserved
ATLANTA – (April 21, 2006) – Isakson-Barnhart’s Peachtree Hills PlaceSM, (more…)
I just wanted to let everyone know that my friends over at Simon-Meyer Construction Consultants have launched their new website. The site looks helpful and easy to work with… just like the team at Simon-Meyer!
Keep up the good work -Giles
INSPECTIONS ~ PRE-CONSTRUCTION ANALYSES ~ PROPERTY CONDITION ASSESSMENTS ~ AND MORE…
The team at Simon-Meyer, LLC is proud to announce the launch of our website! Find out more about our company and our affiliates which give us Southeastern coverage as well as some of the projects we’ve been a part of and with whom we’ve worked. We hope you find the website informative and feel compelled to share it with your friends and colleagues. Thank you for your business and we look forward to continuing to serve you with customer service continuing to be our number one priority!
Sincerely,
Molly and Tony Vincent and the entire Simon-Meyer, LLC team
www.SimonMeyer.com
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