FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM   MAY 17, 2018 • LIVING IN HOWARD BEACH • THE QUEENS COURIER 31 
  living in howard beach 
 After tough decade, Howard Beach market rebounds 
 BY RYAN KELLEY 
 rkelley@ridgewoodtimes.com 
 Twitter @R_Kelley6 
 Aft er a decade of uncertainty in the real  
 estate market in Howard Beach, mounting  
 evidence points to a bright future for  
 prospective homeowners in the area. 
 A pair of recent studies have shown  
 that housing values are not only increasing  
 across Queens as a whole, but Howard  
 Beach remains one of the more aff ordable  
 neighborhoods in the borough. 
 Local broker Jerry Fink, owner of Jerry  
 Fink Real Estate, Inc., said that recent  
 sales numbers are as high as he’s ever  
 seen them. 
 “People love the neighborhood because  
 it’s a very quiet neighborhood,” Fink said.  
 “You get off  the Belt Parkway and it’s like  
 you’re living somewhere on Long Island,  
 and it’s a good feeling. I think that’s the  
 appeal, and it’s very close to the water,  
 of course.” 
 But that proximity to the Jamaica Bay  
 brought the market to a halt in 2012,  
 when Superstorm Sandy made its way up  
 the east coast and devastated many homes  
 in Howard Beach. Th  e entire neighborhood  
 was  fl ooded,  with  storm  surges  
 reaching at least a foot deep in some  
 areas, the power was wiped out and sewers  
 were backed up for days. 
 In total, the storm caused an estimated  
 $19 billion in damage to New York City. 
 Before that, the global economic recession  
 in 2008 led to a collapse in the housing  
 market and forced the federal government  
 to bail out several investment banks. 
 According to Fink, however, those who  
 decided to stay in Howard Beach are glad  
 they did, and the real estate market was  
 back on its feet four months aft er the storm. 
 “It’s come back to where it is because  
 people understand that Sandy is a oncein 
 100-year  thing,”  Fink  said.  “It  will  
 probably never happen again in most  
 people’s lifetime.” 
 Th  e demographic of the neighborhood  
 plays an important factor in its current  
 position in the market as well. According  
 to an American Community Survey from  
 2012 to 2016, 94 percent of homes in  
 Howard  Beach  are  one-unit  detached  
 structures, and nearly 90 percent of all  
 homes are owner occupied. 
 Th  at survey also lists the median value  
 of owner-occupied homes in the neighborhood  
 at $667,800. 
 According to a study by Property Shark,  
 that number is on par with the citywide  
 median as of 2017. Th  e same study, however, 
  only took into account the prices of  
 condos and co-ops that were purchased  
 in 2008 and sold in 2017, and it showed  
 that all 11 such units in Howard Beach  
 decreased in value during that period. 
 As a whole, the Property Shark study  
 showed  that  Queens  saw  an  overall  
 increase of 32 percent in prices. 
 Another recent study by StreetEasy said  
 that Howard Beach is the sixth most  
 aff ordable neighborhood out of the 53  
 in the borough. Th  at study only factored  
 in deals made in 2017, and showed that  
 the median price in Howard Beach was  
 $314,950 for those sales, 37 percent lower  
 than the borough median. 
 Still, the diff ering sample sizes in each  
 study may account for the slightly confl  
 icting numbers, but Fink maintains that  
 Howard Beach real estate will soon reach  
 its maximum limit. 
 “Th  ere’s not a lot of homes, but when  
 they do go on the market they sell quickly  
 if priced right,” Fink said. “I see it trending  
 upward, but I don’t think it’s going to  
 go much higher.” 
 File photo  
 Detached homes in Howard Beach 
 
				
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