Hawkins Agency - Your Real Estate Specialist

 

T+L  AMERICA\’S FAVORITE PLACES | U.S.

America’s Most Underrated Cities

These cities promise to exceed your expectations.

Peter Schlesinger

Meggie Dials left Illinois for Indianapolis 13 years ago. “Mostly, people think of Indy as a quiet town in a rural state,” Dials, VP of sales at a local tech company and founder of The Sussy Project, told Travel + Leisure. “But we are so much more.”

T+L readers agree, and think that Indianapolis is one of America’s most underrated cities.
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You’re Invited!

Join the Sam Hawkins Team at the Holliday Park Trail Run on March 18, 2017.  This year’s event offers a 5-mile Trail Run/Hike (ages 10 and up), 1-mile Trail Run/Hike, Tot Trot (ages 5 and under) and a Free Kids Zone featuring climbing wall, crafts, games and more!

Registration is now open!

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50 Best Places to Travel in 2017

The 50 destinations that made our list this year include one of France’s lesser-known wine regions, America’s next big dining spot, and a buzzy Greek island.

Putting together our annual list of the best places to travel is a process that takes several months—we survey writers based around the world, talk to our A-List travel specialists, and look at the most exciting hotel and restaurant openings. While news and global events have a large impact on the places we choose, we also pay attention to cities that are worth revisiting: Philadelphia, in particular, may surprise you with the amount of growth and development it has seen in recent months. North America made a strong showing on this year’s list—more than a quarter of these places are within reach for a long-weekend trip from the United States.

Whether you favor mudroom-style built-ins or a minimalist approach, your best bet for a tidy house begins at the entry

 

November 11, 2016 from Houzz
Houzz Editorial Staff. Home design journalist writing about cool spaces, innovative…

 

If you can corral keys, coats and bags as soon as you enter your home, you’ve won half the battle against clutter. The following entryways offer three stylish takes on dealing with outerwear and gear at the most important threshold.

November Garden Calendar

Time to tuck your garden into bed for winter!

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Start preparing your house for the holidays now, and you’ll be thankful later that you did

 November 1, 2016 from Houzz
Houzz Contributor. I cover topics ranging from decorating ideas, product picks, Houzz…
With Thanksgiving approaching and the winter holidays just around the corner, there is a lot to look forward to (and prepare for) at this time of year. Batten down the hatches for winter weather and get a jump on holiday hosting prep, so you can relax and savor the many simple pleasures of the season, from big family dinners to walks in the crisp air outdoors.

12 Things That Make A Neighborhood Truly Great

By Michael Corbett | August 22, 2016 from Trulia’s Blog

great_neighborhood_full

Find out what will make you fall even deeper in love with your neighborhood.

When you’re in the market for a new place to live, it helps to remember the golden rule of real estate: You’re not just buying or renting a home — you are also becoming part of a neighborhood.

All neighborhoods are not created equal and there’s no such thing as the perfect neighborhood; everyone has different needs and desires.

However, there are components common to all great neighborhoods. As you evaluate the best aspects of a prospective neighborhood, you’ll want to match them to your daily needs.

1. Lifestyle match

Is the neighborhood in sync with your current lifestyle? Both renters and homebuyers tend to gravitate to areas with similar demographics. Just as a fantastic suburban neighborhood in a gated community may not be right for a young single professional, a family with three small children might not find a small condo in a hip downtown neighborhood to be the best fit for their lifestyle.

2. Pride in ownership

Pride in ownership is obvious when the residents maintain their homes and care about their neighborhood. Neighbors connect and create local groups that bring the residents together for the betterment of the area.
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Vogue Magazine’s:

Don’t Call Them Flyover Cities: Why You Should Visit Kansas City, Indianapolis, and Oklahoma City

flyover states
Photo: Courtesy of the Indianapolis Museum of Art / @imamuseum

The vast, middle of our country, known as “America’s Heartland,” appears as an endless patchwork of farmland and snaking rivers, punctuated by the occasional city that often seems so small and inconsequential—especially from an airplane window. To coastal dwellers, these “flyover cities,” a slightly disparaging term, refer mostly to the swath of land making up states like Illinois, Oklahoma, Indiana, and Missouri. Beyond the well-traversed Windy City of Chicago, a few smaller Midwestern cities are luring travelers with their creative cuisine, live tunes, new museums, and serious laid-back charm. Here, a guide to three cities worth landing, and lingering, in.
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As seen in IndyStar

551 Forest Boulevard, Williams Creek

In the 1920s, architects Edward Pierre and George Wright set out to develop a swatch of farmland in Marion County, building five distinctive homes in an area they called “the Switzerland of Marion County,” also known as Williams Creek. Each home was designed in a different style.

For the past two decades, Bruce and Stefany Mitlak have resided in the house built in the Italianate English Tudor style, retaining many of the original features of the home, but modernizing when necessary…

To read complete article, please click here.

You can also visit our website for complete property information on this listing by clicking here.

About the home:
• Location: 551 Forest Boulevard, Williams Creek.
• Details: Four bedrooms, five bathrooms, finished basement, dual staircase, four fireplaces, two-car garage, 6,211 square feet.
• Asking price: $1.55 million.
• Listing: 21436959.
• Contact: Sam Hawkins, F.C. Tucker Company, sam@talktotucker.com, (317) 580-7854.

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9 Ingredients of a Great Neighborhood, Ranked

Sam Hawkins is the #1 Realtor in Meridian Hills and Williams Creek.  He knows what makes these areas among the best neighborhoods in Indianapolis…

Article written by:
Angela Colley from Realtor.com

kid playing soccer in nice neighborhood

Imgorthand/iStock

You’ve checked out the schools and researched the crime rates. You’ve driven by your would-be future home three times to make sure the neighbors take care of their properties, there isn’t a profusion of weirdos wandering around at all hours, and there are no Pokemon Go “gyms” in the immediate vicinity.

So, you know this is a good neighborhood. But will you like it?

Truth be told, there’s way more to a neighborhood than just good schools and conscientious neighbors. To really love where you live, you need amenities. But which ones?

Since we can’t all have all the things, we asked real estate pros to break it down by ranking a variety of neighborhood amenities on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being “gotta have it” and 1 being “seriously, this is what you’re obsessing about?” We averaged those results to come up with a definitive list of what you need for perfect neighborhood bliss. Let’s take a look.

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