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Robbinsville: The Brooklyn of NJ?

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Robbinsville: The Brooklyn of NJ?

Robbinsville: The Brooklyn of NJ?

Brooklyn used to be thought of as a place where tough guys come from.  “I’m from Brooklyn!”  If you said that in the voice of an Italian mobster, you’re not the only one.  Yet today, Brooklyn is a far cry from its former self.  The borough now conjures images of skinny jeans, beanies and thick-rimmed glasses.  Regardless of whether you’re a hipster-hater or not, Brooklyn’s renaissance is an undeniable model of urban revitalization.   Though Robbinsville is a distance from New York, it’s easy to see some parallels to such a reinvention. 

I’m a lifelong resident of Robbinsville, NJ.  I was here when it used to be Washington Township.  I remember as a kid, peering out at a vast sea of dirt from the back seat of my mom’s old Nissan Sentra, wondering what in the world they were building where Centro now stands.  As a member of the last Robbinsville class to be exported to Lawrence High School, I can remember being teased that we Robbinsville kids were all farmers.  Seems ridiculous, I know.  But we all got pretty excited when they put that Taco Bell in, didn’t we? That can’t be a good sign. 

And there are questions that frequently cross the minds of Robbinsvillians which can be revealing about our quaint little town - 

Will we ever get a grocery store to fill that Marrazzo's-size hole in our hearts? 

Will it be a Trader Joe's?   

Why is there a fourth drug store going up?

Is it still Catherine's Birthday?

Or perhaps you’ve wondered why we’re still constructing more city-scape store fronts when a quarter of them are still empty?  Maybe you’re like me and dreamed up the possibility of a Starbucks in Town Center.  Or better yet, a Chipotle. 

Let’s face it, Robbinsville has had a sort of identity crisis over the last two decades.  Are we a farmer’s paradise?  Surely not.  At least, not anymore.  We’ve transformed.  Like a phoenix, nay, a raven, rising from its own smoldering ashes.  We are up-and-coming, evolving and building ourselves into something we can all be proud of when we try to explain to people where Robbinsville is.  We’ve made some changes, but is our metamorphosis complete? 

Not too long ago, on our first date at Centro, my girlfriend and I found ourselves laughing hysterically at our town’s new, self-branded slogan:  She pointed out the sign across the street, “Robbinsville: Be at the Center of it All.” 

In a town lovingly referred to as “The bubble,” such a statement seemed ridiculous and yet affable, in the way a heavy-set, unattractive man might introduce himself as an underwear model to an attractive woman.   It’s kind of pathetic, but cute and likable at the same time.

A year or two ago I lived with a roommate in Foxmoor, both of us lifelong residents of Robbinsville.  I was a substitute teacher at Robbinsville Schools at the time, and my roommate, Brent, taught English at the high school.  When we would have friends over from out of town, we half-lovingly and half-jokingly referred to Robbinsville as "the Brooklyn of New Jersey.”  This was especially audacious since some of our friends actually lived in Brooklyn.   Joking about Robbinsville is like teasing a younger sibling;   you can make fun of Robbinsville if you’re in the family, but we get pretty defensive if an outsider has something to say about it.

“The Brooklyn of NJ," we called it.  Our friends would laugh, and yet, even they appreciated its charm.  As much as we were joking and poking fun of our hometown, there was a part of us that was undeniably serious about our hyperbolic statement.  Robbinsville, as much as it drives us crazy to lack the amenities some towns take for granted, is a unique town of great character.

We may not have a grocery store.  And we may lack some name-brand stores in town center, but damn-it, we’ve come a long way. 

Ever go to DeLorenzo’s?  It’s a pizza-Mecca.  Ever go to Centro on a Friday night?  That place is bumpin' but still keeps it classy. 

Have you sat at the Town Center Lake with a sandwich from Dolce and Clemente’s watching the sunset?  Nothing’s better.  Just be careful, the geese can be aggressive.    Ever go to Ernie’s?  Ernie’s is indescribable.  Really, I’m not even going to try to describe Ernie’s.  It’s a little bit like trying to describe the Mona Lisa.  You just have to see it for yourself. 

Sometimes I walk my dog late at night in Robbinsville (you’ve probably seen me) and I feel completely safe.  Heck, I usually leave my car door unlocked because I feel so safe in Robbinsville (good thing you don’t know which car is mine).  

And how about the people?  The people are great. 

Robbinsville is a family town.  No doubt about it. 

Back when I used to work at Marrazzo’s in high school, I’d see neighbors, friends, coaches and the like, all happy to be running into one another.  Marrazzo’s was the sort of central plaza of our town.  A meeting place where people gathered for 50-cent hamburgers.  That sounds like something out of the 40s, not the 90s.  But really, there was something magical about those 50-cent hamburgers! 

Even though we’ve had some losses (RIP Marrazzo’s), we’ve gained so much, and we’re picking up steam.  I think we all know, even though we may criticize it sharply at times, that Robbinsville is a special hometown.  It may be hard to describe why it’s so special to those who haven’t experienced it.  It may be hard to understand how it can be so inconvenient at times and yet a sort of suburban, small-town paradise in another sense.

So next time you hear it or see the sign:  Robbinsville: “Be the Center of it all.”  Allow yourself a loving chuckle, but don’t be surprised if a few years from now Robbinsville comes to be known as “The Brooklyn of New Jersey.” 

 


I hope you enjoyed this article about Robbinsville!  Please share with your friends and family, and be sure to check out the rest of the Rasmussen Homes website here.

My name is Brandon Rasmussen and I’m a Realtor.  If you are thinking of buying, selling, or renting a home I can make it simple and stress-free.  Give me a call or text at 609-651-5167.  Or shoot me an email at brandon@rasmussenhomesnj.com.


Other articles you may enjoy:

·         4 Reasons You Haven’t Bought a Home Yet

·         5 Benefits to Staging Your Home

·         5 Rights You Didn’t Know You Had as a Renter

·         5 Reasons Your Home Hasn’t Sold Yet

·         6 Tips for Staging Your Home

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4 Reasons You Haven't Bought a Home Yet

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4 Reasons You Haven't Bought a Home Yet

4 Reasons you haven't bought a home yet

 

1.       You want everything

Sometimes we become so intense about finding our dream house that we forget to be realistic.  If you have a long laundry list of specific features you want in a home, don’t be surprised if you can’t find a home that has exactly everything you’re looking for.  Of course, you may get lucky and find that perfect home, but if you don’t, try to remember that you can always alter parts of a home to make them your own.  If a home checks most of your boxes, but it doesn’t have those granite countertops you want, well that’s something you can easily alter.  Be careful not to cast a home to the wayside if it doesn’t meet all the requirements at face value.  Ask yourself if you would be able to make simple updates after a move-in to make it your dream home.

 

2.       You’re waiting for that "spark"

This may come to some as a shock, but houses are not people.  They don't have souls.  (Unless you believe in animism, in which case skip this point, because it doesn’t apply to you.)  When you think about your future home you probably do more than picture yourself in it.  You can probably feel the emotions that the very idea of “home” evokes.  As we shop for that home, it’s very easy for the shopping process to become an emotional one.  We want to feel that instant “this is the one.”  Kind of like you see on that TLC show about the wedding dresses.  Sometimes the bride breaks down in tears as if they’ve reached wedding gown-nirvana.  On the other hand you see some brides that come in and they’ve over romanticized what it will feel like to find that dress to the point that it is almost impossible for the reality measure up.  Or, like finding that special someone, we can easily psyche ourselves out if we over romanticize what it will feel like with this person.  You may find yourself passing someone up very special because “the spark” isn’t there on the first date.  This can easily happen when finding a home. 


We are searching for the space where a significant portion of our lives will happen.  And so, we become so acquainted in our imagination with the joy that will ensue in this place, that when we step inside it don’t get butterflies, we wonder “where’s the spark?” 


I’m all about trusting your gut, but it’s important to consider that this type of approach may be a trap.  Now, even if houses were people, consider this: some people fall in love at first site and fireworks are going off and its like something out of a movie.  Other people think rationally and think wow this person offers a lot and the love grows over time.  Buying your “dream” house is an emotional decision but don’t let your desire for that instant spark keep you from deciding on a great house.  And after all, it’s not necessarily the house that makes a home special, but the people and interactions inside it.

 

 

3.       You’re a maximizer

In the age of instant information we have a wonderful supply of inventory available to us, and that’s a good thing.  Gone are the days of flipping through the Real Estate Book.  But, think about how your perspective might be different if you didn’t have the internet to find a home.  I imagine that people would feel a whole lot more in love with the homes they liked.  With the internet, you might find a home you really like and instead of thinking “Wow, I’m so lucky to have found this!” you are thinking “well I like it, but there might be something better.”  In psychology, they call this type of thinking maximizing.  I have to admit, I’m one of them. But let me attest personally that this attitude can actually set you back in some cases.  Some people just make a decision and stick with it without an overly exhausting search.  Some people, like me, can’t even make small purchases without finding the best possible option via extensive research.  They exhaust all of the options until they’ve found the best possible choice.  But the funny thing about these contrasting types is that studies show that the person who makes a quicker decision tends to be happier with it when compared to the maximizer.  Don’t get me wrong, you should search hard for the right home, and it’s a decision to be made with great care and due diligence.  However, if you’re obsessed with using the internet and think there’s always something better no matter how much you like a house, then you may just be a maximizer.

 

4.       You’re closed-minded about neighborhood

Sometimes we absolutely know where we want to live and aren’t willing to compromise on that, and that’s fine.  When it gets tricky however is when the location that you’re dead set on becomes unnecessarily restrictive. When this becomes a recurring issue, you may want to consider another nearby location which is going to give you more of the features you're looking for.  Another important idea worth considering is to examine why you really want to live in that area.  Are you committed to Robbinsville for the school system?  Or do you really want access Princeton’s restaurants and culture?  Well you may or may not be able to compromise for a nearby town depending on what your reasons are, but it's worth making that clear for yourself.


When you know what you want and why, it can be empowering and helpful.  Just make sure you don’t needlessly limit yourself until you see what other locations have to offer. 

That’s not a knock against Hamilton.  It’s a lovely place.

That’s not a knock against Hamilton.  It’s a lovely place.


I hope you enjoyed this article buying a home!  Please share it with your friends, your family and your dog.

My name is Brandon Rasmussen and I’m a Realtor.  If you are thinking of buying, selling or renting a home I can make it simple and stress free.  Give me a call or text at 609-651-5167.  Or shoot me an email at brandon@rasmussenhomesnj.com.


Other articles you may enjoy:

·         5 Benefits to Staging Your Home

·         5 Rights You Didn’t Know You Had as a Renter

·         5 Reasons Your Home Hasn’t Sold Yet

·         6 Tips for Staging Your Home

·         Robbinsville:  the Brooklyn of NJ?



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6 Tips for Staging Your Home

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6 Tips for Staging Your Home

Six essential staging tips for selling your home

This is a 5 minute read, listing a few simple things you can do to stage your home for maximum buyer interest.

 

1.       De-personalize your home.

I have a funny story about this one.  A few years ago, back before I knew anything about interior design, I asked my mom and sister to decorate some of my first apartment.  One of the things they put up was a stick-on phrase in my bathroom wall: “relax, refresh and renew.”  Being a 24 year old bachelor, I found it especially fitting (sarcasm.)  Every time I stepped into my bathroom I felt emasculated by the domineering cursive commands commandeering my wall (how’s that alliteration?).  In selling your home, you want to avoid any words on walls.  A common one is to put up words like “love” or “family,” or “live, laugh, love,” etc.  While these commands are universally appealing in a sense, they are a problem in a few ways

No one likes being told what to do.  I don’t walk up to a girl I like and yell “love me.”  People like feeling love, but a giant bold command on the living room wall instructing you to do so is off-putting to prospective buyers.


When people shop for homes, it’s like trying on a pair of jeans at a clothing store. 


The jeans have to be nice, but what’s more important is that you feel good about yourself wearing them.  They might arguably be the best jeans money can buy, but if they don’t fit why would you buy them?   Same thing goes for buying a home.  The person has to be able envision living in the home.  It may be hard for the young newly-weds to imagine starting their own family in your house when you have pictures of your own kids hanging on the wall with the words “live laugh love” underneath.  It’s just too personal.  It’d be like if you were trying on a pair of jeans and someone came up and was like “Oh I just tried those on.  I think they looked nicer on me.”  A little off-putting, even if you liked those jeans.

 

2.       They just hate us 'cause they paint us.

If you decide to repaint, use a neutral color!  You might be thinking, “do I need to repaint?”  Well good sir, if you have to ask then you probably should.  Your 5th grade son might love the Spongebob-yellow walls in his bedroom.  But maybe the perspective buyer doesn’t have kids and was planning to turn an extra bedroom into an office.  It’ll probably be hard to picture for that buyer if all they can think of when looking at that room is “who lives in a pineapple under the sea?”  Also, even if the color isn’t obnoxious like that example, consider going neutral over your currently colored walls.  You may love baby blue, but I know there are many young buyers that equate baby blue designs of the 80s.  Maybe the red on your walls isn’t going to appeal to the perspective buyer that is a former matador with PTSD.  A fresh coat of a soft earthy gray, or greige (gray + beige) will go very far in making your home palatable to the masses, and allow their imagination to work with what is in front of them.  I sound dreary, but avoid bold colors in general, even on accent walls. 

 

3.       Pre-pack.

I have news for you.  You are going to have to pack at some point.  Why not do most of it now? 

This costs you no money and has a huge impact on appeal.  Remove and or pack as much as you can.  Throw it in your basement, attic, a friend’s house, etc. until you’re ready to move.  I guarantee that the more you pack away, the larger, cleaner and more inviting your space will appear to perspective buyers. 

 

4.       Bathrooms and kitchens.


You may have heard that bathrooms and kitchens sell homes.  I guess it’s because people love to eat and as a result have to use the bathroom. 


When it comes to your kitchen, clear away as many appliances as possible.  You want negative space.  Negative space is beautiful in interior design.  If you are handy and want to go the extra mile, install a simple backsplash.  If the design is congruent with your space, a white subway tile backslash is cheap, modern and non-alienating to young buyers that tend to avoid browns and bold color. Painting cabinets is a huge job that I don’t recommend trying to squeeze in unless you have a lot of time, energy and know how.  Something simple you can do however is purchase brushed nickel hardware.  You can get great hardware from Amazon for a third of the price compared to Home Depot or Lowes. Installation is easy peasy with a template like this one: (template).   When it comes to bathrooms, there are two things to remember: clean it thoroughly (no grime in your tile.  Get in there with CLR and a toothbrush if need be), and put your toiletries out of site.  Throw them in your vanity or somewhere no one can see them.  Toiletries are both unappealing and alienate buyers by being personal.  Put out clean white towels on towel racks, make it smell nice and don’t poop before a walkthrough. 

 

5.       Make the space look larger.

There are a few things you can do here: The easiest is to make sure all drapes and curtains are pulled open so the room is flooded with as much light as possible.  I’m a light freak.  I bought my first home with based on how much light it gets and I haven’t regretted it.  It’s really important to some people so don’t underestimate this tactic.  Consider mounting your drapes higher on the wall.  This makes the ceiling look higher and the room larger.  And of course, the less stuff you have, the bigger the house is going to feel, so pre-pack! 

 

6.       Consider updating your home:

Updating your home is not for the faint of heart.  If you do it yourself it takes a lot of time, energy and stress.  If you hire someone it can be very costly and still take some time.  Consider however that when you update your home you will get your money back and then some.  Updating a kitchen and bathroom will give you the most return on your investment.  Make sure however that you do not spend money on updating these rooms only to have a design that is unappealing.  It’s a sad story when I see someone spend a lot of money on redoing a bathroom or kitchen and the design is outdated. 


Just because something is new doesn’t mean it is going to look new to a buyer. 


And sadly, many contractors are stuck in the 80s and 90s and just don’t understand what a good kitchen and bathroom looks like in the year 2015.  Clean lines and neutral colors will appeal to the masses. Stay away from brown cabinets, brown countertops and pretty much anything brown.  Brown was in during the 90s.  Guess what it will look like if you go brown?  Probably about 15 years old.  Pinterest, Houzz and HGTV are great ways to find modern deigns that sell.  Gray, white and neutral colors are in at the moment.  Another thing to consider:  do you have carpet?  Is there a wood floor under the carpet?  If so, you’re sitting ongold mine.  Okay not really a gold mine, but it’s a no-brainer to rip that sucker up and buff that floor.  The 80s and 90s were a very strange time.  Why would anyone put a nasty carpet over that gorgeous floor!?  Time for you to benefit from someone else’s (or your own) silly 80s antics.  Hardwood floors are in. 


I hope you enjoyed this article on tips for staging your home!  Please share it with your friends and family.

My name is Brandon Rasmussen and I’m a Realtor.  If you are thinking of buying, selling, or renting a home I can make it simple and stress free.  Give me a call or text at 609-651-5167.  Or shoot me an email at brandon@rasmussenhomesnj.com.


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