176 Palm Kitchen
As we wrote this past June:

Listed for $2,995,000 in October 2007, the totally renovated 176 Palm closed escrow in November 2007 with a contract price of $3,100,000.

Back in the market for two weeks without a sale in September 2009 asking $3,100,000, the Jordan Park home is now back on the market in 2010 and listed for $3,150,000.

Withdrawn from the market in July without a sale, as a plugged-in reader notes today, “It’s Baaaack.” And it’s back to being listed for $2,995,000 with just one (1) day on the market and no reductions according to those official industry “state of the market” stats.
∙ Listing: 176 Palm (4/4.5) – $2,995,000 [MLS]
176 Palm: Apples To Apples To Asking In 2009 [SocketSite]
From Couch To Kitchen To BBQ And Back In No Time Flat: 176 Palm [SocketSite]

17 thoughts on “A Jordan Park Apple Returns On Palm (And To Its 2007 List Price)”
  1. Why do they take decoration off the facades of nice old SF houses?
    Why do they take out pocket doors between the entry hall and the living room?
    How can this possibly increase the value of the house?

  2. @R: Thanks for the suggestion. Unfortunately, the pic disappeared before I could try that out. I tried to blow up the previous listing where I had a similar issue and the text was too fuzzy to read.

  3. I really like this place and think it shows well in pictures.
    only thing I can think of that’s “wrong” with it (outside of the price maybe) is that it’s not quite the greatest micro-neighborhood, and may be a bit close to Geary?
    I’d live here.
    the front facade needs a little something but the rest is really well done. My favorite thing is the red tile accent column in the bathroom for whatever reason.

  4. Jordan Park is super nice. I think it is one of the under appreciated neighborhoods in San Francisco.
    This particular house is right across the street from a Middle School though, which isn’t so great.

  5. Jordan Park is super nice. I think it is one of the under appreciated neighborhoods in San Francisco.
    All eight blocks of it.

  6. $3.15m for this, at the edge of Jordan Park.
    $3.525m for 3953 Sacramento, inappropriately modernized, at the edge of Presidio Heights.
    Or just a few months ago…
    the (non-apple) 2507 Pacific for $2.5m, on one of the best blocks of Pacific Heights. Of course to get this, you need to be a close insider, and smart.

  7. 2507 Pacific. That was a 1 in million fixer that will be back for $6M in 2011-2012. Several Jordan Park homes have sold recently in this range. I think at $2.8 both places have a better shot of finding a buyer.

  8. Yes eddy, and never on the open market. The foolish (or deceived) seller could have got a lot more.
    “1 in million” reflects poorly on the real estate “professionals.”

  9. Somehow, I have a feeling you or almost anyone could figure this one out. Anyone except apparently the seller, who is poorer than he might have been by half a million or more.

  10. The listing for 176 Palm has once again been withdrawn from the MLS without a reported sale. Once again, purchased for $3,100,000 in November 2007 and last asking $2,995,000 prior to being withdrawn.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *