In a depressed market, progress happens 140 characters at a time. South Florida brokerages have joined the slew of other businesses that use Twitter, the short instant messaging system, and are learning the benefits and drawbacks.
Esslinger-Wooten-Maxwell (EWM) has been on the Twitter bandwagon for about 18 months.
In fact, the company maintains several Twitter accounts — one for media announcements, one to promote its Smart Living division for properties under $300,000, one to showcase special features inside luxury homes and another to post links to its videos. EWM has about 1,200 followers on its accounts.
“Twitter definitely raises our company’s profile among a younger, more technologically proficient demographic,” said Beth Butler, COO of EWM in Coral Gables. “Twitter has also helped us attract experienced agents and we have many success stories from brokers who have sold houses through Twitter leads.”
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August 15th, 2009
Venny Torre and Frank Mackle smell opportunity. In fact, they see the proverbial perfect storm in the real estate industry and are betting on a potentially profitable niche: distressed property workouts.
The real estate building veterans last November launched Miami-based Torre Mackle Group, a firm specializing in completing distressed real estate projects and Chinese drywall remediation.
The duo is on to something. South Florida ranks third among U.S. markets for the volume of commercial real estate and condo projects in some level of financial distress. The region has at least 232 known troubled assets, representing more than $6 billion in problematic loans, according to the latest report from Real Capital Analytics.
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August 15th, 2009
Movie magic. That’s what Cesar Pelli sees when he watches the 1999 Sean Connery film Entrapment, filmed at the Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. That’s because Pelli designed the buildings, which are now the tallest twin towers in the world.
“You can tell immediately all the tricks they used in the movie, showing things that are not in the building, totally impossible in the building,” laughs Pelli, 82, whose love affair with architecture began at age 16, when pondering college majors. “It’s very flattering, and that was a very entertaining movie. I have other buildings in terrible movies. But it’s okay. It’s entertainment, after all.”
The Argentina-born Pelli, named one of the ten most influential living American architects by the American Institute of Architects in 1991, has designed some of the most spectacular buildings in the world, from high-rise office towers to private homes. Landmarks such as the U.S. embassy in Tokyo, the World Financial Center and Winter Garden in Lower Manhattan, and the Petronas Twin Towers have earned his firm more than 100 awards for design excellence.
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August 6th, 2009