Monthly Archives: December 2010

Disney Homes for Sale!

AT LAST – DISNEY HOMES FOR SALE!

Disney’s Magic Kingdom…THE BRITISH HOME GROUP is most proud to announce that British Homes Sales, our Orlando-based International Estate Agency, has been appointed to represent the new Golden Oak community at Walt Disney World ® Resort in Orlando, Florida.

Golden Oak is Disney’s brand-new super luxurious residential community right in the heart of Walt Disney World, between the Magic Kingdom, Epcot and the world-famous nightly fireworks display!

As our friends at Golden Oak put it: Golden Oak at Walt Disney World® Resort is a resort community where families can live in the embrace of luxury, privacy and the magic of Disney.

This new, gated community will feature distinctive neighborhoods of exquisite homes, expansive natural preserves and inviting amenities – including Concierge & Resident Services, a private proposed clubhouse and a unique opportunity to experience most of what Disney has to offer.

Also planned for Golden Oak is the Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney World®, with an 18-hole golf course, spa and restaurants. To learn more about this one-of-a-kind opportunity to bring together family, friends and cherished Disney traditions, visit www.disneygoldenoak.com or call us on (+1) 407 396 9914.

  • Prices – Range from $1,500,000 to $8,000,000 (multi-currency financing available)
  • Less than 30 New Golden Oak Homes Available
  • Each to be designed and built in line with your specific individual requirements and dreams!
  • Reservation Deposits Must Be Received by January 21, 2011

 

So why not fly over for a day or two in the sun, warm-up, select the location for your new Golden Oak dream villa and return home …before the neigbours know you are gone!

Multi-Currency Mortgage Financing Available. For those preferring to finance up to 50% of their purchase price we can arrange low-interest mortgage financing through our colleagues at Lloyds TSB Bank International.

Over 20,000 Other Holiday Homes to Choose From!

If Golden Oak does not fit your requirements or your budget we have a vast and varied selection of other Florida homes and investment properties to choose from – from bargain-priced condos in Orlando’s current, but temporary, distressed property “buyers market” (with prices down some 70%) to luxury upmarket beach-front villas throughout the Sunshine State – from Tampa to Miami!

Please let us know immediately if you are at all interested in this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to own a Florida home at Golden Oak.

There are less than 30 luxury villas available and Reservation Deposits must be received by next month.

We can arrange a quick “mini-holiday” inspection trip, site selection, purchase details and, if you wish, purchase financing.

It’s all part of our renowned “one-stop” shop service for our international clients.

To a “Magical” New Year!

Bill Cowie President

www.britishhomesgroup.com

Orlando office 407 396 9914

Request more information on this home or submit a Custom Search Request

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The BRITISH HOMES GROUP Florida

Harry Potter and Mickey Mouse

From this weekend’s USA Today:

Theme park showdown: Harry Potter vs. Mickey Mouse

The eye-popping success of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter has been a shot in the arm for Orlando-area attractions.

By Mitch Stacy, Associated Press

ORLANDO – Craig Taylor wasn’t much interested in vacationing in Orlando with his parents this month – until he and his girlfriend plugged into the hype swirling around the new Harry Potter attraction.

So Taylor, 23, a police dispatcher who lives near Manchester, England, and girlfriend Katherine Lucarz, 22, both fans of the wildly popular books and movies about the boy wizard, decided they had to tag along to experience The Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando. That’s where they were on a sunny, cool weekday afternoon in early December, taking a break among the other Muggles in the shadow of the towering Hogwarts castle.

“It’s brilliant,” says Lucarz, adding that the steep, snow-covered rooftops, crooked chimneys and shops of Hogsmeade village are even more like the movies than she imagined. Other visitors queued up just to get in the door at Ollivander’s Wand Shop, and waited an hour for the centerpiece ride, a fantastic state-of-the-art flight simulator/robocoaster called “Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey.”

That sort of devotion to all things Potter is precisely what Universal hoped to tap into when it debuted the $250 million attraction in June in a corner of its Islands of Adventure park.

IF YOU GO: How to get the most out of a Disney/Universal theme park visit
Harry has conjured all the magic Universal expected, and then some. In the quarter after the attraction opened, crowds at Universal parks swelled by 36% over the same stretch last year, while attendance at Disney’s Orlando parks stayed roughly the same.

But the big question is, can Universal keep the edge and take a bigger bite out of the Mouse’s historical dominance as more families shake off the recession and come back to the parks?
That’s hard to tell, industry analysts and tourism officials say, but everyone agrees that the eye-popping success of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter has been a shot in the arm for all the Orlando-area attractions.

Thanks to the new attraction and an improving economy, hotel occupancy rates in Orange County shot up nearly 21% in July over the same month last year, and through September were running nearly 7% ahead of 2009 totals.

“Harry Potter certainly has been a very powerful motivator,” says Gary Sain, president of the Orlando/Orange County Convention & Visitors Bureau. “I believe that it has helped to drive additional visitation to Orlando. And then no one just comes for one attraction, they come to visit several attractions.”

But Disney, historically good at keeping extended-stay visitors on its properties, is losing more park days to Universal now because of the Harry Potter attraction, says Dennis Speigel, president of International Theme Park Services Inc., an independent industry consultant. He believes the Potter attraction has also taken a considerable bite out of attendance at SeaWorld Orlando, whose image – and attendance – is still recovering from the violent death of a whale trainer in February.
“(Harry Potter) has had an enormous impact, and we believe it has legs,” Speigel says. “I don’t think you’re going to see a 36-percent increase at any theme park for a while. But we believe that Harry Potter has enough story line to carry forward for the next 15 years, if it is properly executed in the parks.”

Moody’s Investors Service said last month that Universal’s boost from the attraction should last several years.

Steve Baker of Baker Leisure Group, a theme-park industry consultant, predicts a two-year benefit for Universal, but Disney’s dominance and skill at keeping visitors on its properties is too hard to crack for Universal to gain any permanent and significant ground on the mighty Mouse.

“I think what’s happened so far is that (Harry Potter) hasn’t brought new business to the market yet, it’s just enjoyed a bigger market share of what exists,” Baker says. “And I think until Disney comes out with something new, that’s probably going to be the case. Harry Potter will be a big influence on the attendance at all the parks for quite a few months. I know Universal is hoping it’s everlasting, but nothing is everlasting.”

For now, though, there’s no mistaking what’s bringing people to the park.

On a late morning in early December, typically a slow period for all the Orlando parks, the wand shop at the Wizarding World wasn’t the only one with a crowd. Wannabe witches and wizards also stood in line to get into the gift shops, belly up for a butter beer and eat at the Three Broomsticks Inn. The hubbub at the Wizarding World didn’t spill over into the other areas of Universal’s two parks, where crowds were sparse and wait times for rides were no more than five or 10 minutes.
Universal spokesman Tom Schroder says the new attraction has “been great for everything we are.”

“The Wizarding World of Harry Potter has helped us reach a new audience, and we’ve used that opportunity very strategically to help people understand everything they can experience when they come here,” Schroder says.

Overall, though, 2011 is expected to be another soft year for the theme park industry with only modest growth, analysts say, with much higher hopes for 2012.

“We’re not a recession-proof industry, but we’re a recession-resilient industry,” Speigel says. “We bounce back faster than a lot of industries. People want to escape, they want to get out, they want to have fun. In 2010 we saw a lot of pent-up demand that had carried over from ’08 and ’09.”

Sincerely,

Bill Cowie

President

www.britishhomesgroup.com

Looking at buying a home in Florida? Use one of our easy contact links below. 

Request more information on this home or submit a  Custom Search Request

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Central Florida Property Market Trends

From our friends at Stirling Sotheby’s…

I am pleased to provide you with our updated January through October 2010 Central Florida Market Trends report which reflects a 20% drop in October sales compared to October 2009.  The report also reflects a month over month sales decline from our June 2010 market peak.

The following are highlights and market observations from October 2010:

  • October single family sales were down 28% from the same time period in 2009 and declined 23% from September 2010.
  • October condominium sales totaled 434, slightly ahead of October 2009, and down 9.16% from September 2010. 
  • October overall sales declined 35% from the June 2010 market peak and were down 20.13% from the same time period in 2009.
  • New Home sales contracts filed in October 2010 totaled 3,466, down 10% from the same time period in 2009.
  • Central Florida’s overall pending contracts totaled 8,817, down just slightly from the same time period in 2009.
  • All cash transactions continue to dominate with 53.57% of all closed sales in October 2010 closing for cash – the highest all cash sales month for the year.
  • In October 2010 there were 15,441 homes available for purchase through MLS, down 1.92% from the same time period in 2009 and the single lowest inventory month for 2010.
  • Distressed sales, which include bank-owned properties and short sales, continue to be an active part of our overall Central Florida sales.  The total number of distressed sales in October total 67%. Distressed sales since February 2010 have ranged between 65% to 70% of all sales monthly. 
  • Central Florida’s luxury market of $1 million plus properties is performing substantially stronger in 2010 over 2009 with Orange County seeing the bulk of sales activity.  Through October 2010 Orange County reported 145 $1 million plus property sales followed by Seminole County with 20 $1 million plus sales.

 

The luxury end of the market continues to see more consumer confidence, which is resulting in more property showings and luxury home sales.  It is our belief that luxury home sales will continue to strengthen through 2011. 

I hope you find this information helpful and I will continue to keep you updated on Central Florida’s Real Estate Market Trends.

International Drive – Orlando, FL

From this past Sunday’s New York Times

 
A Street for Adults in Orlando


On International Drive, the refurbished Pointe Orlando mall has a B. B. King’s Blues Club, theater and restaurants.
 
INTERNATIONAL DRIVE in Orlando, Fla., a shaded boulevard lined with inexpensive hotels, theme restaurants and sundry entertainments (most notably, SeaWorld), is already one of many areas in the city dedicated to keeping children happy. But to many adults traveling without kids – certainly a sizable chunk of the millions who attend events at the nearby Orange County Convention Center – the attraction of I-Drive, as it’s known, has been limited to a handful of bewilderingly large shopping malls.
Orlando Travel Guide

These days, a segment of I-Drive close to the convention center is beginning to hold more grown-up appeal, with upscale hotels, restaurants and entertainment that doesn’t involve leaping orcas.

In September, the Peabody Orlando hotel (9801 International Drive; 407-352-4000; peabodyorlando.com), popular with conventioneers since 1986, opened a $450 million wing, adding 750 rooms. The expansion, more than a decade in the making, gives the hotel some resort appeal: additions include a spa with 12 treatment rooms and a watsu pool, a restaurant serving California cuisine, and a three-acre recreation area, complete with a pool, a waterfall and cabanas.

Also nearby is the 1,400-room Hilton Orlando (6001 Destination Parkway; 407-313-4300; thehiltonorlando.com), which opened in late 2009. Amenities include a spa and fitness center, a putting green, tennis courts and a pool complex that features both a meandering 892-foot-long river (can’t forget the kids altogether) and a separate pool with cabanas geared toward adults looking for a little solitude.

Most of the area’s new entertainment options are concentrated in – surprise! – a mall. But the recently overhauled Pointe Orlando (9101 International Drive; 407-248-2838; pointeorlando.com), has a more sophisticated feel than most of its brethren, with some attractions devoted to decidedly adult pursuits.

Travelers see live performances at B. B. King’s Blues Club (407-370-4550; orlando.bbkingclubs.com), watch stand-up comedians at the 21-and-over Orlando Improv Comedy Club & Dinner Theater (407-480-5233; theimprovorlando.com), or take in a play for only $20 at the Pointe Performing Arts Center (407-374-3587; pointearts.org), a small theater run by a production company that set up shop in Orlando this summer after three years in Jersey City, N.J.

Some of the Pointe’s restaurants offer their own entertainment. Dancing on tables is encouraged at the Taverna Opa (407-351-8660; opaorlando.com), where authentic Greek cuisine takes a backseat to a raucous atmosphere of belly dancers and shouting waiters flinging stacks of cocktail napkins. Arrive after 8:30 p.m. on a Friday or Saturday for maximum spectacle.

The Funky Monkey Wine Company (407-418-9463; funkymonkeywine.com), which opened last year, perhaps comes closest to achieving a truly cosmopolitan vibe. The restaurant serves creative sushi appetizers (the stuffed avocado, brimming with cubes of juicy raw tuna, is a must; $13) and Asian-inflected American entrees, and has an estimable wine list. On Friday nights, a talented drag troupe led by Danielle Hunter, a blond transsexual, descends on the restaurant for a scandalous musical show.

It’s an experience that seems far afield from the typical central Florida offerings, and yet, in closing a recent show, a scantily clad Ms. Hunter asked the audience, “Where else can you get this stuff?” Winking, she purred her answer: “Only in Orlando.”

Wow – is Mickey growing up!So why not own your very own place in the sun – at up to 70% off?There’s never been a better time to invest in Florida property – for children of all ages!

But act soon as the best deals will not last long.

One British Homes’ customers, Paula Hughes from Brentwood in Essex, actually flew over to Orlando for 24 hours last month (!) to make sure she got the home of her dreams – at the right price ………………. and she did!

As Paula said after her whirlwind holiday-home buying trip to Orlando:

“The reason I came so quickly was because it was such a good deal, and as I was going away, I was worried if I didn’t come I would lose out and it worked for me, as our house came back on the market that day and it was a nicer house than the one I came to buy. So we are very pleased about that and about the care and service you gave me on my short trip. Nothing was too much trouble and you provided me with all the information we needed to buy here and you have continued that service even after we bought. We thank you very much.”

And thank you, too, Paula – and welcome to our rapidly growing family of happy Florida property investors (now well over 1,000 UK families)!

So why not arrange your own “mini-holiday” to Orlando, like Paula Hughes, while Orlando’s “Buyer’s Market” is in full swing – and we will do the rest.

Your savings will more than pay for the trip – and provide a very pleasant 2-3 day Florida “warm-up” at the same time!
 
Sincerely,

Bill Cowie

President

www.britishhomesgroup.com

Looking at buying a home in Florida? Use one of our easy contact links below. 

Request more information on this home or submit a  Custom Search Request

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The BRITISH HOMES GROUP Florida

December’s Florida Property of the Month

4 BEDROOM 2 1/2 BATHROOM POOL HOME CLOSE TO DISNEY…

NOT a short-sale or bank-owned property, just an amazing price for this huge home. Immediate response on all offers. 4/2.5 POOL home in short-term rental community. Close to Disney and other parks. New carpet and freshly painted, vaulted ceilings, split bedroom plan, 2 car garage, inside laundry room. Home sits on a cul-de-sac on a huge lot (over 1/4 acre). Very nice home for short-term rental or primary residence.

Mortgages are available for British and other international buyers with a 30% down payment.

December’s Hot Property – click on one of the links below to make an offer or request more information on this home. 
 
4  Bedroomed, 2 1/2 Bathroom Pool Home Close to Disney World
Status: Available 
Built: 1993
Listing Price: $174,917
Bedrooms: 4
Baths: 2 1/2
Sq.ft: 2,621
 
Located close to Orlando’s World Famous Attractions, shopping, airports and restaurants. Take advantage of Orlando’s buyer’s market today.
 
Request more information on this home or submit a  Custom Search Request
 
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The BRITISH HOMES GROUP Florida
2960 Vineland Road
Info@britishhomesgroup.com or (+1) 407 396 9914
 
November’s Property of the Month – AVAILABLE