The McIntosh Company is driven by a single, simple goal: to provide a level of personal, focused attention to buyers and sellers that only a small firm can, while offering the same access and marketing capabilities available from large firms. As a member firm of the Real Estate Board of New York and its ROLEX listing service, we have access to an extensive state-of-the-art real-time computerized data base.
We have access to data on thousands of apartment and townhouse listings, including building information and sales history. We keep current with the market and share our exclusive listings immediately with hundreds of other real estate firms in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens. McIntosh Company agents enjoy cordial collegial relations with brokerage companies throughout the real estate community.
We have access to data on thousands of apartment and townhouse listings, including building information and sales history. We keep current with the market and share our exclusive listings immediately with hundreds of other real estate firms in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens. McIntosh Company agents enjoy cordial collegial relations with brokerage companies throughout the real estate community.
Services
In 1990, after several years learning the ropes at a mid-size real estate firm in Manhattan, I struck out on my own and formed The McIntosh Company. Having grown up in Texas, I came to New York City to study art history. I was lucky to land my dream job at The Museum of Modern Art and later became director of a gallery specializing in rare antiquarian prints and maps.
As members of the Real Estate Board of New York, we have access to ALL listings of REBNY members. If there is something you would like to see, or something you would like us to find for you that is not among our exclusive listings, that information is in our database and we will be happy to show it to you.
It's easy for a real estate broker to waltz through your apartment suggesting paint and repairs, not to mention storing enough of your belongings to remove any clutter. But to live through this when you're probably already overcrowded is another story. On the other hand, there is no doubt whatsoever that a clean, fresh looking apartment sells faster and for a higher price than one that looks tired and worn.
Co-op boards want exactly what you want in your new home: good neighbors who meet their financial obligations to the co-op. Passing the Board. A co-op board's responsibility is to do what benefits the co-op, and it has the right to turn down a potential buyer without giving a reason. Remember that a prospective buyer's qualifications as a "good neighbor" and a "financially responsible person" are subjective.
The listings you see are, after all, advertisements, and only tell you the good features. Actual closing prices are difficult to find. Square footage has become almost a subjective figure because there are many different ways to measure a space. Go to open houses to see for yourself. Check out StreetEasy.com, OLR.com or NYTimes.com for a list of open houses, usually held on Sundays.
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