Two Loft Mezzanines! Coolest Downtown Los Angeles Condo For Sale Under $500k Just Listed


215 W 7TH ST #1210, LOS ANGELES, CA 90014

Press a button: a 10-ft projection screen rolls down automatically.

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NEW ON THE MARKET!

12th-floor condominium loft in the Bartlett Building has super high ceilings, inspiring character and impressive style. Live/work space maximized by two steel mezzanines. One supports a high office and storage space. The other, atop a spiral staircase, spans thick I-beams to create a second, quieter bedroom upstairs with two spacious closets and glass balustrade overlooking the main living space. Behold dramatic views over leafy Spring Street, through some of the broadest windows of any historic building in DTLA. Exposed brick walls compliment polished concrete floors. High bookshelves accessible by a Harry Potteresque solid oak library ladder that wheels along a brass railing. Lighting upgraded with RH kitchen lighting, studio ceiling lights, warehouse-style lamps and brass nautical wall sconces. Oak storage bed included, with additional furnishings negotiable. Kitchen upgraded with modern subway tile backsplash. Bathroom features a large soaking tub, Carrara marble floor tiles and a marble vanity. Washer / dryer included. 10-foot projection screen automatically deploys from ceiling. Near Whole Foods and popular bars and restaurants. 24-hour security. Mills Act-approved for 68% property tax savings. Request a Viewing. To make an appointment, call 213-880-9910. |  PROPERTY DETAILS

Get a free list of lofts new on the market, just listed. Fill out the online form:

Two mezzanines are better than one.

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

NOTICE TO DOWNTOWN SPECIALIST REAL ESTATE AGENTS: PRE-LISTING NOTIFICATION


Unlisted Live/Work Historic Mills Act Lofts Pre-Notification to Real Estate Professionals

re: 215 W 7th St |  Blog Video

Congratulations to DTLA agents Bill, Roger, Roxanna, Rommy, Thomas, Michael and the others, on your recent transactions in the neighborhood! Before we put it on the MLS, there’s a link to the photos of this Bartlett loft with extra high ceilings and mezzanines. 900 sq ft (650 sq ft + 250 sq ft of mezzanines). Asking price is $495,000. CSO is 2.5%

It will be listed to the public soon. Call for unit number and property details links. Please let me know what day and time you’d like to show the unit to your clients 213-880-9910.

Video tour walkthrough – (Link Coming Soon)

Property Details – (Link coming soon)

Corey Chambers SoCal Home Real Estate Newsletter April 2021

Your Home Sold GUARANTEED or I’ll Buy It*

Corey Chambers
213-880-9910 voice/text
coreychambers@yahoo.com
www.CoreyChambers.com
@coreychambers

P.S. Your Referrals Help The Kids! We are on a mission to raise $25,000 to help the extraordinary kids in need at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. We do this by donating a portion of our income on every home we sell. Help us help Children’s. Who do you know considering making a move that would benefit from the services we provide? Call me at 213-880-9910 with their contact info, or have them contact me. You can also visit http://www.ReferralsHelpKids.com. Thank you in advance!

*Seller and Corey must agree on price and time of possession. Realty Source Inc BRE#01889449

Get a free list of off-market live/work historic Mills Act lofts in Downtown Los Angeles. Fill out the online form:

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Unlisted Bartlett live/work loft tour video coming soon

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Downtown Los Angeles Unlisted Mills Act Live/Work Lofts with Amazing Character – EXCLUSIVE


SECRET INVENTORY:  Easily the Coolest Lofts under $500,000!


With super high concrete-beamed ceilings, higher than those of the penthouse units, these live/work condominium lofts in historic buildings that boast inspiring character and impressive style. The spaces are maximized by separate bed rooms with closing doors, and added mezzanine decks, including added bed areas adorned by cross-laminated timber, heavy steel I-beams, glass balustrade and steel spiral staircase, plus stylishly hand-crafted wood closets. Some mezzanines make perfect offices or additional small bedrooms. Behold dramatic views of the Historic Core neighborhood through some of the broadest windows of any historic building in Downtown Los Angeles. Original exposed brick walls compliment polished concrete floors, along with the convenience and elegance of solid oak sliding library ladders for the book shelves. Perfectly upgraded with theatrical stage lights, antique warehouse style ceiling lamps and nautical antique style wall sconces. Oak storage beds included, and additional furnishings negotiable. The kitchens have been upgraded with modern subway tile backsplash. The bathrooms feature large soaking tubs, Carrara marble floor tiles and marble vanity. Washers and dryers in the units. This special offer expires in less than 48 hours.

HOA includes 24-hour security concierge and an entertaining rooftop deck with panoramic city views. Available parking in the basement. These historically important buildings have been approved for the Mills Act property tax savings up to 68% annually. All just steps away from countless shops, restaurants, bars, pubs and Metro station. 650 to 900 Sq Ft.

These unlisted lofts are exclusive for readers of the Loft Blog, and clients of the Corey Chambers Real Estate Team. In less than 48 hours, this exclusive offer ends. We will begin releasing them to the general public. Take advantage of this exclusive opportunity to see them first.

Get a free list of the most amazing unlisted lofts for sale, along with off-market, pocket listings that are not on the internet, and not listed on the real estate websites. Fill out the online form:

LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP] 

  Lofts For Sale      Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles 

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | Popular | Luxury 
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Corey Chambers ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐


Realtor® ( 5-Star Reviews ) CoreyChambers.net

Corey Chambers, 

Real Estate agent, publisher of the L.A. Loft Blog and founder of Entar real estate and investment technologies, Corey Chambers is a Broker Associate of Realty Source Inc.

FIND OUT HOW MUCH YOUR HOME IS WORTH. Get a free home evaluation online.

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Corey Chambers Team raising $25,000 for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

My heart breaks for many young people and families who will not be able to enjoy this fun time of the year outside in the wonderful Southern California Spring air.

As you know, tragedy falls on many in this life. Tragedies like sickness, cancers and other nasty diseases. We aim to do what we can to help kids who are unable to get out and have fun right now due to these evil health problems.

We are still on a mission to raise $25,000 for Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. We do this by donating to them a portion of our income from homes we sell. As you know Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles does great work in helping kids fight through and survive nasty diseases like cancer, Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, leukemia and others.

Kids under their care are 300% more likely to enter into remission IF they can get into the recovery center. BUT, the Recovery Center survives on Sponsorships and Donations.

So YOUR REFERRALS REALLY DO HELP THE KIDS…

With all my appreciation.

Corey Chambers
213-880-9910

P.S. Do you like stories? Everyone has one. The story of this young person is a really good one. Read with tissue handy.

P.P.S. It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home.
Just call me at 213-880-9910 or pass on my number.


Your Referrals Help the Kids! www.ReferralsHelpKids.com

As one of the Ambassadors of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Corey Chambers is on a mission to raise $25,000 by donating a portion of the income from homes he sells. Fill out the online form:

LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP] 

  Lofts For Sale      Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles 

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | Popular | Luxury 
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking
Alta Lofts, home of the L.A. Loft Blog and the Corey Chambers Real Estate Team

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Unlisted Live/Work Lofts with Amazing Character in Downtown Los Angeles


Historic and industrial condominium pocket listings in L.A.

Ask Corey |  Blog Video

Q: How do I contact 1850 industrial avenue hoa?  A: 1850 Industrial St is Biscuit Company Lofts in the Arts District of Downtown Los Angeles. Front desk phone number is 213-415-1720. Most HOA Home Owners Association phone numbers are listed in the HOA Directory for Downtown Los Angeles at www.HOADTLA.com

Hi, it’s Corey chambers in Los Angeles. Your home sold GUARANTEED, or I’ll buy it. Thanks for taking a minute to read the L.A. Loft Blog. In a moment, I’ll share with you some valuable information about this topic:  Unlisted Live/Work lofts in Los Angeles. If you see any properties that are of interest to you, let us know, and we will gladly send you a property information packet on any loft, condo or house or private preview is available upon request. If you have a home you’d like to sell, you should know that I will guarantee the sale of your present home at a price acceptable to you, or I’ll buy it for cash. This guarantee will allow you to buy your next home without worrying about selling your present home. To find out how much you can sell your home for, call me at (213) 880-9910. Now. 

So live work, loft, live, work lofts — That’s what people have been asking about lately for the past few weeks. So that’s what we’re going to talk about. As long as people want to ask for information about live work lofts, we’ll talk about livework lofts. We’ll talk about living. We’ll talk about working, and we will talk about lofting. We’ve been busy this week showing live/work lofts in downtown Los Angeles. We showed some for lease at the Higgins, building, the Bartlett building, and the Cornell building.

We got a request this week from someone who said that his lender told him that they can actually give them a better deal if he buys a loft, if he buys a place zoned for live work, or in a live work zone. So that’s interesting, because I don’t think I’ve heard that before. I’d like to know exactly what his lender said. I might ask him to, for his lenders phone number so I can talk to them myself and find out exactly what they meant. That way I could be sure to get him the right info, and help the lender, because he wants to get a good deal.

It’s usually the other way around — people usually have to pay a tiny bit more for their loft loans in general because they have unusual issues, and they’re listed as industrial and commercial buildings. They have more commercial properties in the building, which lenders usually don’t like. They usually have a bunch of issues that lenders do not like. So it’s usually the opposite of, of that. As far as lenders go, they usually want you to buy a regular house in a regular suburban neighborhood or a condo in a regular suburban neighborhood or regular condo, but everybody’s different. So that’s why it’s just important to know exactly what his lender said and exactly what his lender meant when they said that they want that he could get a better deal. And, if it’s in a live work zone, So we don’t, we need to know the exact words because between what he’s lender says and what he says and what I say, you know, something can get skewed in that process.

The deal with live-work is that people want to be able to live and work in the same place. That’s one of the reasons why some people get a loft rather than a regular house, a regular condo. A lot of people want to be in a place that has presented to clients as a place that’s more professional. That’s more upscale in a way or more stylish, a place where they can get more work done. The open space allows them to work on like large artworks or just handle have clients coming over to be in a, a larger, a more impressive space, a more professional space. — and for a few other reasons:

People want to have clients over without disturbing their neighbors. And a lot of people feel strange if they’re trying to do work in a residential zoned area. Although the fact is that as far as I know, pretty much every house and even condos, you can do work in there. It varies city by city, sometimes neighborhood by neighborhood. But for the most part, you can work at home, but you just cannot do things in general that disturb your neighbor. So if you haven’t neighbors that are disturbed by you having over, you know, one or two clients a day, those neighbors are probably goofy, but if you’re in a, some small town or suburban neighborhood than your neighbors might, or they might know you and they might, they might be, you know, keeping an eye on you. Whereas in LA it’s, it’s kind of the opposite.

Some people do the wrong thing. There, people doing strange things is normal in Los Angeles, that’s kind of what LA is for and San Francisco. People who want to do strange things, more creative, more unusual setting like New York city. So in these big cities centers of creativity, you would expect people to be doing strange thing has been living and working and working at home or living at work would be, would not stand out as something unusual in these neighborhoods. But nevertheless, people want to feel even more comfortable and have feel like what they’re doing is know sanctioned by the law that is acceptable and expected, and they want to feel comfortable where they are living and they want to feel comfortable where they’re working. So live work allows people to feel comfortable living and working in, in that space and in that building and in that neighborhood.

I have lived and worked in the same place for a big chunk of my life. I have worked at home and a lot of different places. And I have also at work in a lot of places, including to I’ve lived in an office temporarily when I was a teenager, right after high school, before I went in the air force. That was only for about a month or shoe. When I got out of the air force, I lived in my sign shop, created a sign shop with my brother. And I just lived in the work in the sign shop, which was aware an industrial warehouse type of building a modern that building was probably those buildings was probably built in the 1970s or eighties, probably seventies. And then, most recently before I moved to Los Angeles, I was doing eBay consignment had a large industrial unit that I was leasing. That was about 1400 square feet. It was pretty cheap. It was only about a dollar, a square foot, like $1,400 once a month. And I built an apartment, a room inside of the warehouse because the warehouse was really pretty big. So there was room enough to build a large bedroom, and still have a large warehouse to work. At one point, we had a lot of stuff in that warehouse. We were selling for people. But fortunately, it did not make enough money. So I was gave me an incentive to change careers too, to do real estate. So real estate is better, especially when you’re in your fifties. You don’t want to really be schlepping people’s furniture and stuff. When you’re in your fifties, it’s a good exercise. But I started to get pretty tired physically from, from that kind of work. And real estate is good cause you walk sometimes not, you don’t have to walk every day, but I walk every day cause we’re walking the dog right now while I’m recording this. So that’s my experience with live work. And that’s what people want and wants you to live and work in the same spot. Or they just want a place that is, has the aesthetic, that industrial aesthetic, and mostly just live in there and enjoy it, enjoy that style. And there’s other people that just want mostly want to work so recent or re helped a repeat customer who had one of the penthouses at Eastern Colombia where they’re living and working, and then he needed more space to, to work.

But they do want to be able to know to be nearby and to, you know, sleep there if, and when they want to. But it’s mostly for, for work. So Eastern Columbia lofts is a very presentable place for doing anything. That’s where you want to be stylish, want to have a stylish and professional presentation for your work. And so that’s where they got a second law, because then they need thousands of square feet to be able to do that, what they do. So, take a look on the LA Loft Blog, I was busy showing properties and also running around because I had lost my keys, lost my fog Meyer, real estate, supra lockbox fobs. Then forgot, and tried to show some properties today that required the super lockbox fog and we were not able to get in. So that was a reminder that I need to get my father immediately. So I drove, I had to pay like 75 bucks for the fog, then drive to Beverly Hills to pick it up from the MLS goodness. They usually have good service MLS. But they should, they, they are, you’re there for the real estate agents they’re created by real estate agents for real estate agents. The MLS is where your listing, if you sell or rent out here, your loft real estate agents, that’s where we list it for other agents to see. And it also feeds out to Zillow and Trulia and all that for the public to see as well.

I should remind people that we have some pocket listings coming up. You want to know, you have exclusive access to our team’s pocket listings. It’s you get some big benefits when you can see a property and know about the property, find out about it before other buyers and renters find out about it. So we have, what is definitely the coolest live work loft, historic mills act loft in downtown Los Angeles, under $500,000. It’s going to be the biggest and coolest live work loft under $500,000. The largest, because it is has two mezzanines that have been added and it has the highest ceilings in the whole building. It has higher ceilings than, than the penthouse. And then it has two mezzanine, little rooms, little upstairs areas added a small office upstairs and then a bedroom added upstairs. So it has basically two bedrooms and a, and an office has a downstairs bedroom and upstairs bedroom And upstairs office. And it’s got a huge windows, Extra, extra large windows and views in a beautiful historic building across the street. That’s takes up a much of the view of a really beautiful building and then a corner, a street corner where you can watch people walking down the street. In the historic core. It’s got exposed brick and it has a dramatic lighting, sort of film lighting, added camera lighting, which is really cool to highlight the brick. It has a sort of a library added up on top with one of those library ladder ladders. That’s cool. It looks good in lofts, especially when you have the big, huge high, extra high ceilings. So it has all that character that other places do not have, and it’s not 700,000 or a million it’s under $500,000. So that’s rare to find a, a loft, this cool under 500,000. 

You are one of the first! We haven’t even put this on the blog yet. We just, we might’ve barely mentioned part of it once. So you’re getting more of the whole story right now about getting paid to live in one of the most amazing lofts in downtown Los Angeles or anywhere for that matter. The coolest hippest, most stylish, most awesome, all inspiring creativity, creative juice, inducing lofts in more than 10 years that I’ve been working with lofts. So people like to live in a cool loft. And these are among the coolest: 

High Ceilings, super high, extremely high, extra, extra high ceilings — higher ceilings than the penthouses, not as high as the penthouse ceilings — higher! and character, not just character, not a little bit, not a lot, but EXTRA CHARACTER. So, along with super high ceilings, we’ve got the super big walls of exposed original brick with special lighting theatrical stage motion, picture lighting, which this place deserves very appropriate. A bedroom with a door that closes so big open space and a bedroom, a real bedroom with a door that closes. Plus two mezzanines have been added. A bigger bedroom has been added as a mezzanine, the large bed, extra space and hand made wood closets with fantastic, beautiful rich wood clad closets, and a beautiful glass wall, partial wall rail, and metal spiral staircase going up there, washer and dryer in the unit kitchen has been upgraded with white subway tile backsplash covering the whole wall of the kitchen, or at least all the, you know, the wall between the sink and the counter and the cabinets bathroom has been upgraded or has a big deep soaking tub, new marble counter sink and new marble floor tiles in the bathroom. So we got, it’s like having, it’s like a small three bedroom, but with a big open loft. And that was super high ceilings added to it. So wait till you hear the price range, he’s got a whole bunch of other stuff, too many amazing details to even mention huge windows, bigger than huge windows with extra natural light and views downtown Los Angeles, historic core. What’s the price? Sounds like a million bucks or 2 million. It sounds like — but the average loft in downtown is about $500,000 to $600,000, sometimes to $700,000. So you think that this loft is at least going to be above average price? Nope. We’re talking about less, more character, more square footage, a lot more character than the average loft at a lower price than the average lofts lower prices than the average.

Lower price than the average loft. So check it out. www.millsactla.com take advantage of this www.millsactla.com. As I mentioned earlier, a property information packet is available on any loft, condo or house or a private preview. It was available upon request call (213) 880-9910. Cory chambers in Los Angeles. Your home sold GUARANTEED, or I’ll buy it. Thanks for joining me. 

Get a unique list of live/work lofts. Fill out the online form:

LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP] 

  Lofts For Sale      Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles 

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | Popular | Luxury 
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Live/Work Los Angeles Loft Apartments For Sale


READER QUESTIONS

Downtown L.A. Live/Work Lofts Rooftop with Views – Get a list of units for sale or for lease

Blog Video


Q: Where can I find los angeles loft apartments for sale? A: You have found the right place. The L.A. Loft Blog has them listed, along with thousands of posts with helpful information. Loft condominium units for sale are here: 

http://www.laloftblog.idxbroker.com/i/downtown-los-angeles-lofts-for-sale


Q: What are live ans work los angeles? A: Live and work lofts info and properties are at these links:

https://www.laloftblog.com/2016/08/02/livework-lofts-downtown-la-vs-residential-studio-apartments/and live work lofts for sale are here: http://www.laloftblog.idxbroker.com/i/livework-lofts-downtown-los-angeles and for lease here http://www.laloftblog.idxbroker.com/i/livework-lofts-downtown-los-angeles-for-lease-2f

Q:Are there work live lofts los angeles? A: Certainly, see above.

Q:What is available at shiberry lofts los angeles? A: LOL that’s a new way to spell it. I’ve only seen it spelled Shybary Grand, Shy Barry Grand and SB Grand.  Building Details

Q:What are the association fees of a los angeles condominum? A: Downtown Los Angeles loft condominiums HOA dues usually range around $300 to $1,500 per month or so.

Get a free list of live/work lofts for sale or for lease. Fill out the online form:

LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP] 

  Lofts For Sale      Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles 

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | Popular | Luxury 
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking
Downtown Los Angeles Live/Work Lofts Rooftop with Views – Get a list of available units

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Downtown Los Angeles Real Estate Market Report March 2021


REAL ESTATE NEWS

Blog Video

Median urban L.A. home price held steady, but other factors show a strained Downtown property market. March median sold price was $597,500. That’s up just a bit from the same month last year, but the other numbers are not as rosy. Average home price fell down significantly, as homes are taking much longer to sell. Median days on market shot up from 31 last March to 55 days on the market last month. Average days on market was even worse: 80 days. Fewer people attempted to sell, and the total volume of sold homes fell from $44.3 million to just $32.5 million. These figures are from real estate professionals MLS Multiple Listing Service for Downtown and nearby loft neighborhoods 23,42 and 1375. Overall, the numbers indicate pressure for DTLA home prices to fall over the coming months.

Find out how much your neighbor’s condo sold for. Get a free list of recently sold homes nearby or in any neighborhood. Fill out the online form:

LOFT & CONDO LISTINGS DOWNTOWN LA [MAP] 

  Lofts For Sale      Map Homes For Sale Los Angeles 

SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE Affordable | Popular | Luxury 
Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter April 2021 SoCal Home


Your Referrals Help the Kids

Here Comes the Tax Man.  And Here Comes a Tax Break:

TAX Day Delay!! IRS extends tax deadline to May 17, 2021.  I recently read where we were working Jan. 1 through June 30th of each year, just to pay all of our taxes. In Canada, add another month or two. After that, you keep all you make. Prior to that, 100% goes to the government in some form or fashion to pay for some kind of government worker, work program, social program, defense, project, health care, common good, common projects, emergency bailouts etc. Whatever you want to call it, April 15th is usually TAX day; the deadline for filing your federal in-come taxes in the U.S.A. But not this year. #coreychambers #realestate #news 

So, in celebration of this special time of year, let’s talk TAX relief. If you received last month’s letter from me, you will recall our goal of trying to raise $25,000.00 for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, the areas #1 Not for Profit Hospital for Young People. But – we need your help and I believe you can benefit from the TAX relief as well.  #chla #referralshelpkids Just down the street from where I am typing this, CHLA has a full house of kids fighting for their lives. For them and their parents’ taxes are not “top of mind”, health is. Living is. Surviving is. As you may have heard, Children’s Hospital is front and center in the fight against nasty diseases that destroy or cut short the lives of Children. Things like Cancer, Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, Leukemia, as well as leading the way in early diagnosis of autism and miracle working around spinal cord injuries. We are thankful to have such a wonderful facility close by, doing such great work to help heal and save young people.   |   Blog Video

So even though we are trying to figure out how much we owe the tax man, many are simply hoping they can be here to actually pay taxes. This is why we here at the Corey Chambers Team have resolved to do what we can to help.

For every house we sell this year, we are donating a portion of our income to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. Our goal, again, is to raise $25,000 to help them in their quest to Heal, Save, Cure and Comfort Children under their care.This is where we need your help and how you can benefit at the same time…

Charitable contributions are tax deductible to a point. Rather than give your money to the government, you should consider making a donation to a charity. I believe it will somehow come back to you, well beyond a simple tax deduction. A core value at our company is “the size of the hole you give through is directly proportionate to the size of the hole you receive through.”  Either way, your referrals are in good hands and help us contribute to a good cause.  Life moves fast for some and we are eager to make the Home Selling and Buying experience a smooth rewarding one. Over the last two decades of helping thousands of families sell their home and/or buy another, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring people. People like you! So, your referrals, those you know considering a move, that we help – you can rest assured that not only will they get the award-winning service we are known for, but that a solid portion of the income we receive from the transaction will go toward a very worthy cause. It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home. Here are the options again: 1. You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info on line or forward the link to who you know considering a move. 2. Of course you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910.

Why I support Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

I grew up right here in the Greater Los Angeles Area, born in Los Angeles County at St. Francis Hospital. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a nasty disease and getting treated for that at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. It was then that I began to pay closer attention to the work they do at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard-working healthcare professionals, most making their home right here in the Los Angeles area, all coming together for a common cause. That cause is to help young people overcome unfortunate health issues that life sometimes throws our way. Being a Los Angeles Area California native, I take pride in supporting in a way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rallys around our annual goal or raising money and donating portions of our income to help Children’s in their quest to heal young people when they need healing. My team and I are committed to providing outstanding results for buyers and sellers referred to us by our past clients. I have discovered that Children’s Hospital Los Angeles shares similar commitment to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations, we are happy to contribute and proud to support them. 

Sincerely,

P.S. The story of this young person enclosed may cause you to look at your loved ones differently. It did me. Check it out.

It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home.  Here are the Options Again:  Enter their contact information at www.ReferralsHelpKids.com, call me direct or pass my number on:  213-880-9910.

Contact Us

Your Home Sold GUARANTEED or I’ll Buy It*
Corey Chambers Team
200 N San Fernando Rd #119, Los Angeles, CA 90031
(213) 880-9910
coreychambers@yahoo.com
Visit us on the web at www.ReferralsHelpKids.com

A Pair of Daring Heart Procedures Save Preemie Alex’s Life

Combining expertise with ingenuity, a team of cardiovascular specialists fixes a rare birth defect in a premature baby.

Noa stood at the starting line, slightly crouched down, right foot in front of the left. He was so nervous, he was shaking. —  By Jeff Weinstock

Sarah Badran, MD, knows her audience. “Let me know if I lose you, all right?” she says.

An interventional cardiologist at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Dr. Badran starts into a plainspoken description of blood circulation that she keeps for the layperson, whether an anxious parent or an easily baffled writer.

She calls on it here to illustrate the birth defect that led her to perform a virtually unprecedented cardiac catheterization procedure on tiny Alex, born Oct. 26, 2020, at 26 weeks with his lungs unattached to his heart, creating a disrupted blood flow that threatened his life.

She begins with a familiar association to explain how one’s blood moves oxygen from the lungs out to the body: “The blood is like an Uber driver,” Dr. Badran says. By the time she finishes, Alex’s disorder is understood and ready for retelling.

In normal circulation, the lungs load the blood with oxygen and send it through the pulmonary veins to the heart’s left atrium, and then out to the body’s organs through the aorta. Then depleted of oxygen, the blood returns to the right side of the heart before getting pumped back into the lungs, and the whole circuit repeats. Before birth, this exchange is formed anatomically, as the pulmonary veins become anchored to the back of the left side of the heart.

In rare instances—1 in 10,000 births—that attachment doesn’t develop. The pulmonary veins “just get lost,” Dr. Badran says, draining the blood out elsewhere within the body and leaving it without any road back to the heart, a birth defect called total anomalous pulmonary venous return (TAPVR).

“What generally happens is, you have a beautiful little baby, they’re born, and then they turn completely blue. That’s usually a big, big emergency.”

To the liver and back

The condition is not easy to see on a prenatal scan because fetal circulation doesn’t involve the still-developing lungs, but instead draws oxygen from the mother’s placenta, so blood flow tends to appear fine.

Alex’s abnormality wasn’t discovered until a week after he was born, when his breath began to grow short. An echocardiogram revealed he had TAPVR and that his pulmonary veins were depositing blood into his liver. The diagnosis got him transferred to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

Alex’s blood, however, was managing to return to his heart through a blood vessel located in the liver called the ductus venosus. The same vessel is employed in utero, though that’s by nature’s design, as it passes oxygenated blood to the heart after receiving it from the umbilical vein, which extends out of the placenta. Shortly after birth, that ductus venosus typically closes off and a new breathing apparatus, led by the lungs, takes over.

The irregularities caused by prematurity may have saved Alex, as his ductus stayed partially open, allowing blood to stream through it and reach his heart. Once there, the blood would pass from the right to left chamber through a hole called the patent foramen ovale, and then, freshly oxygenated, flow out to the body.

“It was a wackadoodle circulation,” Dr. Badran says, “but that’s how he was staying alive.”

The one chance to save him

That passage through the ductus venosus, however, was on its way to sealing shut, so some intervention had to be made. Dr. Badran and her colleague in CHLA’s Heart Institute, Neil Patel, MD, discussed next steps with cardiothoracic surgeon John Cleveland, MD, who would do the open-heart surgery that Alex needed to fix his congenital defect. They agreed that the operation was too risky for a baby so unstable.

The safer option was to wait until Alex developed more, as close to full term as they could get him, before Dr. Cleveland would operate. In the interim, the plan was for Dr. Badran and Dr. Patel to put a stent into the ductus venosus to keep it open so it would continue to convey blood to Alex’s heart.

That decision meant Dr. Badran and Dr. Patel were faced with trying something that, according to Dr. Cleveland, had only been done a handful of times worldwide, and never at Children’s Hospital: stenting a ductus venosus in a premature baby. The procedure is so unusual because TAPVR, as uncommon as it is across all births, is hardly ever reported in preemies.

Dr. Badran and Dr. Patel were unfazed. They were confident they could apply fundamental techniques and their accumulated expertise to an entirely new predicament.

“The thing about pediatric interventional cardiology is that it’s always like that,” Dr. Badran says. “Everything is so rare we’re always kind of engineering our way through these types of situations. I know everything I need to know about premature babies, and I teach embryology in med school. I know everything there is to know about the ductus venosus system, blood flow, and what the vessels are like, how they’re shaped, and why they close and why they open.

“The only chance to save Alex was to try to stent this open, which would not be fixing the problem. It would just basically be making it like he hadn’t been born yet.”

The day after the determination was made to try to install a stent, Alex’s blood pressure and oxygen levels began to fall, signs the ductus venosus was closing. The doctors were compelled to move Alex, only 17 days old, into the catheterization lab. Dr. Badran recounts the delicacy of the procedure—and exults over its success.

“To take this tiny little person,” she says, “and put an IV in his neck vein and try to find this threadlike thing, thinner than a wire—we almost couldn’t find it—then stretch it with a balloon and put a stent in—it was a technical tour de force. It worked, and it stabilized him.”

Restoring the anatomy

He was stabilized but not safe, and would spend the next several weeks watched by neonatologist Jennifer Shepherd, MD, in the Steven & Alexandra Cohen Foundation Newborn and Infant Critical Care Unit. “When I heard we were getting a baby who was 26 weeks with obstructed infradiaphragmatic TAPVR,” she says, “my first thought was, how are we going to keep him alive? It just was unheard of.”

As they worked to maintain Alex’s circulation until he reached an age and a weight suitable for surgery, Dr. Shepherd and her team had to respond to any unfavorable movement in his oxygen levels or blood tests. “We had a very low threshold to get echocardiograms to make sure that stent was still open.”

Alex made it to 37 weeks in gestational age, but not without needing more time in the cath lab to keep the stented area from closing. At 37 weeks, imaging showed the ductus venosus was again narrowing, so on Jan. 5, Dr. Cleveland brought Alex to the operating room to establish a connection between his lungs and heart. Though Dr. Cleveland had done the procedure often, Alex’s size—still only 4 pounds—added to the risk.

“Repair of total anomalous pulmonary venous return is a routine operation; we probably see six or seven cases a year,” he says. “There’s just less room for error when children are that small.”

With Alex on the bypass machine and his body cooled to about 65 degrees Fahrenheit, Dr. Cleveland removed his heart from his chest and began the repair. He tied off what he calls the “anomalous pathway,” the ductus venosus that had kept Alex’s blood flowing, then sewed the pulmonary veins to the back of the left atrium, where they should have originally attached. He set Alex’s heart back into his chest, warmed his body up and returned him to intensive care.

“Everything went well,” Dr. Cleveland says. “The goal of the operation was to restore normal anatomy, which we did.”

Follow-up scans have all looked good. With Dr. Patel staying on as Alex’s cardiologist, Dr. Cleveland expects his work has ended. “He’ll get echocardiograms because that’s part of the deal, but this should be the only heart operation he needs for this condition.”

It’s not often that open-heart surgery on a newborn is the postscript, but while it culminated Alex’s heart repair, from all accounts what set it apart was the opening act. Stenting the ductus venosus on a preemie that small was not merely delicate but untried.

“From my review of the literature, nobody else in California had done it,” Dr. Cleveland says. “I think it was a California first.”

While exhilarated by the achievement, Dr. Badran saves her strongest, lengthiest accolades for the efforts of the anesthesiologists and the neonatologists and other support staff, “the village that it took,” she says, to keep Alex intact so she and Dr. Patel could do their work.

“To transport such a tiny baby, that sick, get him safely on the cath lab table without dislodging the breathing tube, and give him the right medications, and the way the nurses and the techs all coordinated, and hospital maintenance heating up the cath lab to 82 degrees to make sure he wouldn’t get cold—they somehow managed to keep him alive while we found that vein.

“We had stented tiny things on lots of babies, getting into small little blood vessels and opening them, but the amount of cooperation and collaboration between all the divisions, it was just a beautiful orchestration of teamwork.”

Article and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

How you can help:

Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move:

www.ReferralsHelpKids.com or call Corey at 213-880-9910.

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SEARCH LOFTS FOR SALE  Affordable  |  Popular  |  Luxury  |  Sold Browse by   Building   |   Neighborhood   |   Size   |   Bedrooms   |   Pets   |   Parking

 Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE#01889449 We are not associated with the homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact (213) 880-9910 or visit LAcondoInfo.com  Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

The Rise and Fall of Los Angeles: Transients in Charge


REAL ESTATE NEWS

Violent psychopath treated like a queen; Los Angeles police bow down, disregarding damage and danger

Having the right people in charge is key to a well-run city. Today, we have the opposite. The city is under control of the gangs and criminals, in tacit partnership with the LAPD. Under direct assault, call after call after call by numerous Alta Lofts residents go unanswered, ignored, neglected or downplayed.

Los Angeles Police Sergeant Cruz summed up LAPD policy, “Unless someone is injured, there is nothing we can do.” Another officer comments after repeated harassment, violent attacks and damage done to a residential condo unit door at Alta lofts by a female transient and her male accomplice at Alta lofts. “We need to protect her,” says another officer. Neither officer ever mentions any notion of protecting the public, the innocent victims — the residents of Alta Lofts. Cops have apparently been ordered by politicians to focus on protecting assailants. If the police show up after an emergency call in Central Los Angeles, it often takes about 45 minutes to an hour or more. In other major cities, the response time is closer to 5 minutes. Emergency calls in Los Angeles often take 10 to 20 minutes or longer to initiate after waiting for busy signals, recordings, multiple transfers. If and when they arrive, police now spend the majority of the time observing and tending to the needs of the attackers, while minimizing or refusing to listen to the complaints of the victims, downplaying the complaints, saying “maybe the attack never happened,” eyes blind to property damage.

If the city of Los Angeles and its police really wanted to protect and serve this lady, she would be getting the special shelter and mental help that is appropriate for a violent mentally ill person who insists that she owns Alta Lofts, punches residents repeatedly in the head, demands money and damages Alta property.

Now more than ever, the culture of Los Angeles discourages requests for police assistance, encourages transient and homeless encampment, provides less protection for everyone, with less real law enforcement. When the police demand blood, they get it: In the first 60 days of 2021, Los Angeles Police Department have fielded 88% more reports of shots fired than the same time period in 2020. Gunshot crime reports in L.A. are up 141% compared to last year, and homicides up 39%, according to Crosstown USC Annenberg. Neighborhoods that were once relatively safe are racked with fear amid skyrocketing crime and violence. Many parts of L.A. today resemble third world countries overrun by the criminally insane.

Unsuspecting women and children shopping across the street at the Goodwill store stumble into unexpected danger by the maniacal menace with metal pipe-wielding outbursts. When asked about the lack of police response following recent attacks at Alta, LAPD Senior TSR Feng replied that police cannot respond to every call because there are “not enough officers.” The most tragic part of this story is that that city is rife with similar and worse crimes affecting countless taxpaying citizens of our teetering city.

It’s time for a change. L.A. will rebound after this devastating trend reverses.

Update: The aggressor was eventually arrested after she blocked traffic for several hours, then threw something at police officers.

Is your Los Angeles area building involved in a lawsuit or other issues? Get a free building report. Fill out the online form:

Cops say they can do nothing as dangerous assailants terrorize Alta Lofts residents for days.

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Realty Source Inc, BRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Creating Cryptocurrency, Creating Wealth, Creating The Future

Since the dawn of civilization, man has used various forms of currency in which to represent value and record wealth. Everything from gashes on a stick to sea shells have represented a shared concept of fair trade, leading to the use of gold and paper money. The key to a currency’s success has been consistency and consensus.

According to Coin Market Cap, currently, there are currently over 1,400 cryptocurrencies in operation on popular Crypto exchanges. Of all the cryptocurrencies in circulation, there are already more than 40 cryptocurrencies with a Market Cap of over $1 billion.

In 2013, with a diverse background in technology, economics and payment processing, Los Angeles-based Corey Chambers Real Estate Team, in conjunction with Entar, instantly recognized Bitcoin as a new kind of money, the evolving king of cryptocurrencies, as potentially the most world-changing payment and investment technology since the advent of the internet itself.  

We have since developed a fast and easy, simplified process of creating new altcoins, your own custom version of bitcoin-based blockchain cryptocurrencies, for literally anyone — individuals, companies, agencies — through YourOwnCoin.com, to order (including priority telephone support) for a private Bitcoin type algorithm of cryptocurrency for any company or anyone, including those with little or no technical knowledge. We worked with teams of technical engineers to develop the innovative Entar Coin blockchain in August of 2020, subsequently applying the results to real estate sells and marketing. To date, more than two million Entar Coins have been mined and more than two-hundred-thousand Entar Coins have been transacted. The Entar Core QT Wallet app gives full functionality on Windows, Mac and Raspberry Pi, and offline paper wallets, more economical and energy-efficient than the original Bitcoin.

Benefits of Creating Your Own Cryptocurrency:

  • The “flexible money” is created, stored, and secured without being monitored, tracked, or controlled by traditional institutions, banks, companies, or government interference, requiring no third party.
  • The money programmed to go up in value.
  • Proven technology to store wealth, which has seen growth in value of more than one million percent.
  • If your online business involves international transactions, your own cryptocurrency can save hassles and unnecessary expenditures and helps you reach customers irrespective of their geographical location.
  • Having your own cryptocurrency adds to a brand’s value by giving a much-needed edge over competitors, as customers see a business organization that is futuristic and technologically advanced, enhancing the trust of your customers in your business — with more options in terms of payments.
  • Whether you need initial funding for a business idea project or start a crowdfunding campaign to support a profit or non-profit project which typically requires a good amount of paperwork, clearances etc. Crypto-currency eliminates hassles here as well.
  • Keeping track and recording transactions is easy. This adds up to the savings that you would make at the end of the year. The verification, security and authenticity is built in. There’s no doubt cryptocurrencies will soon become mainstream.
  • The Internet of money — endless opportunities to create new technologies, new marketing methods, new businesses.

Now is the time to take advantage of YourOwnCoin.com special introductory limited time offer.

For assistance in ordering your own blockchain cryptocurrency, call 213-880-9910 or coinhelp@entar.com

Use the YourOwnCoin.com Easy Form to create your own coin, which includes:
SHA-256 (Block Reward 50; Block-Halving 210,000)
Coin Supply 21,000,000
Coin-base maturity 20
Proof-of-Work (Number Of Confirmations: 6, Target Spacing In Minutes: 5, Target Time Span In Minutes: 10)
Name, Ticker, Logo And Icon Of Your Choice
Unique Genesis Block For Main Network And Test Network
Coin-base Key Of Genesis Block (Coin-base Maturity Structure, Maturity Confirmations: 20, Default Wallet Confirmations: 1, Total Maturity Confirmations: 21)
Windows And Linux Wallets
Source Code And Daemon
One Month Of Free Node Hosting (node1.walletbuilders.com, node2.walletbuilders.com)
Priority Technical Support: 213-880-9910 9 AM to 8 PM Pacific; coinsupport@entar.com

YourOwnCoin.com makes history as it makes YOU money.