2557 WILD OAK RD, LOMPOC 2BD/2BA; ±20 acres • $2,300,000 Kristen Maggitti, 805.895.8387
02195648
320
Laura Drammer, 805.448.7500 LIC# 01209580
2480 GRAND AVE, LOS OLIVOS 3BD/2BA; ±.89 acres • $2,300,000
Laura Drammer, 805.448.7500 LIC# 01209580
Karin Aitken, 805.252.1205 LIC# 00882496
2111
Discover boho chic elegance in this beautifully remodeled, 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath + ADU Craftsman cottage! Combining the timeless allure of 1920s architecture with contemporary design, this
was transformed by architects Pamela Ferguson and Brett Ettinger. With premium finishes like Moravian tiles and European oak flooring, this light-filled sanctuary offers an
living space, an elevated lounge, a storage loft, and a detached ADU studio. The backyard is an entertainer’s dream with a fire pit and redwood hot tub. Located just six blocks from State Street and close to East Beach, this is a must-see! www.CoolVintageHome.com
Quick and Easy Ways to Boost Your Home’s Appeal
If you’re thinking about selling your home within the next year or so, you’re probably considering making a few updates to the property. Knowing where to invest your time, money, and energy can be overwhelming, to say the least. Luckily, real estate marketplace company Zillow recently revealed the top home features that boost daily saves and shares on their platform.
Even better, these improvements don’t require major demolition or renovations, so put your DIY hat on and add these features to your home. Then, wait for the buyers (and offers!) to come rolling in!
WINDOW BOX: First impressions matter, so roll out the charm with some window boxes installed on your home’s exterior. Add some freshly planted flowers or succulents and voilà! Homes with a window box can get 48 percent more saves and 52 percent more shares per day on Zillow compared to homes without this feature.
OPEN SHELVING: While adding open shelving in your kitchen or bathroom may take a little bit of work, Zillow notes that homes with this feature get 37 percent more saves and 45 percent more shares per day.
PAINTED BRICK: Even if your home isn’t made of brick, I recommend adding a fresh coat of paint to your home’s interior and exterior. According to Zillow, painted brick can attain 31 percent more saves and 39 percent more shares per day compared to similar homes.
THE STYLE SPECIALIST
OUTDOOR TV AND SOUND SYSTEM: Boost your backyard appeal by adding an outdoor TV. Homes with this feature can receive 28 percent more saves and 26 percent more shares per day, while properties with outdoor sound systems can get 18 percent more saves and 19 percent more shares per day.
PICKET FENCE: Once again, exteriors and first impressions matter! Welcome potential buyers with charming details, such as a picket fence. This feature can bring 27 percent more saves and 31 percent more shares per day.
PERGOLA: Indoor/outdoor living is one of the reasons we call the greater Santa Barbara area home, so be sure to play up any outdoor spaces you have. Adding a pergola and fresh landscaping can help potential buyers envision making your backyard their new home. Properties with a pergola can get 20 percent more saves and 24 percent more shares per day.
FIRE PIT: Again, adding features that get buyers thinking about family time in the backyard can help your home stand out over others. So, toast some s’mores while waiting for the offers to come in! This project can encourage 19 percent more saves and 23 percent more shares per day on Zillow.
I’d love to see your home updates! Tag me on social media @vacayrentaldesign
Christine S. Cowles is the owner of Vacation Rental Design, an interior design company specializing in short-term rental properties. She is a certified Short-Term Rental StylistTM, member of Real Estate Staging Association, and a proud WEV graduate. She can be reached at hello@vacayrentaldesign.com.
NEWLY LISTED: 2015 GREEN LANE, SANTA BARBARA
Chic Cape Cod-style home on a private Upper Eastside lane, offering 4 bedrooms and 3 baths across 2,246 square feet. Surrounded by mature hedges and vibrant foliage, the 1904 home blends English countryside romance with modern charm. Highlights include a natural stone fireplace, casement windows, oak hardwood floors, remodeled kitchen with Wolf range and quartz countertops, and a light-filled dining room. The primary suite offers privacy with a walk-in closet and remodeled bath, while the guest wing includes a spacious den with exterior access. The backyard features a new Trex deck and stone fire pit for outdoor gatherings. A 268-square-foot carriage house offers guest or rental potential with a full kitchen, bath, and private yard. Located near fine dining, the Theatre District, Roosevelt School, and the Mission Rose Gardens, this serene retreat combines Montecito-like prestige with the walkable vibrancy of downtown Santa Barbara.
OFFERED AT $3,350,000 | 2015GREENLANE.COM | OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY 1-3 PM
KENDRICK
Partner | Realtor | DRE #1964065 805.448.4185
805-680-3826 cara@villagesite.com DRE 01766267
805-689-9970
805-296-0662
Bryan Munoz
805-284-5794 bryansbrealty@gmail.com DRE 01892357
317
Rachael Bissig
805-895-4449 rachael@villagesite.com DRE 01517830
Erin Timmerman
Cara M Gamberdella
David M. Kim
THE BEATING HEART OF SANTA BARBARA
NEWLY LISTED: 1104 CASTILLO STREET, SANTA BARBARA
Charming 2-bedroom, 1-bath bungalow in the Peabody School District, just three blocks from downtown Santa Barbara’s dining, shopping, and cultural attractions. This fully enclosed property features a flagstone patio, versatile outdoor space, a one-car garage, and a sun-filled yard perfect for enjoying Southern California weather. Inside, vaulted ceilings, newer flooring, and an updated kitchen with granite counters and high-end appliances create a light and airy atmosphere, while modern amenities like a new furnace with A/C, tankless water heater, and dual-pane windows ensure comfort and efficiency. This simple yet sophisticated lock-and-leave bungalow encapsulates the ideal Santa Barbara lifestyle, offering both a peaceful retreat and easy access to everything downtown has to offer.
OFFERED AT $1,200,000 | 1104CASTILLOST.COM
1-3 PM
Zoofari Celebrates Rich Block’s 26 Years of Leadership
On August 24, a sold-out crowd of 750 guests enjoyed the Santa Barbara Zoo’s annual Zoofari, which raised about $700,000. Guests donned animal prints, safari outfits, and far wilder attire for this Jungle After Dark–themed event. All ages of adults got into the spirit and enjoyed an extended reception, dinner, and dancing on the scenic hilltop. Feted this evening was the widely admired President and CEO Rich Block, who earlier this year announced his retirement, effective next January.
In an interview, Block shared that what he is most proud of is having the S.B. Zoo become a major contributor to conservation on the Central Coast. He quickly and humbly added, however, that “taking credit for any of that is so inappropriate. Everything we have done has been the result of a lot of good people working hard to make things happen.” He lauded especially Director of Conservation & Science Estelle Sandhaus and VP of Animal Care and Health Julie Barnes, calling them the “dynamic duo.”
As impressive as the S.B. Zoo’s conservation work has been under Block’s leadership, the highlight of Block’s legacy may well lie ahead in the zoo’s exciting partnership with CSU Channel Islands (CSUCI), which Block recently instigated. The partnership will integrate CSUCI’s academic programs with the S.B. Zoo’s conservation work, enabling hand-on opportunities for students in conservation. The partnership will also provide students with opportunities in animal care and many other areas.
With the zoo tapped out on space, Block approached CSUCI about building a conservation center on its campus, which led to a Memorandum of Understanding signed last April and lots of planning meetings since. Early next year, fundraising will begin for this new model, the first of its kind, that Block believes will shape the future of conservation on the Central Coast.
The facility, to be built on a 55,000-square-foot site, will be dedicated to propagating and working with species that will be reintroduced to the wild, including rails, snowy plovers, red-legged frogs, and yellow-legged mountain frogs. Block sees a multitude of collaborative opportunities in business, education, theater, and art, using the zoo as a
lab to enrich students’ education. Beyond the obvious areas of animal care and conservation is the nonprofit business side of the Zoo’s operations, as well as its Early Explorer Preschool and its art exhibits, all of which are opportunities for student participation. The zoo can be a great motivator for students, Block related, especially for those who have a passion for wildlife. They can see that there is a professional opportunity for them to do what they love.
The S.B. Zoo has developed a highly regarded and much-sought-after conservation program, working primarily with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, but also with other federal agencies and local partners. On site, it operates its snowy plover program, which takes in abandoned eggs and compromised young birds, incubates and hatches the eggs, nurtures the birds and newborns, and releases them at Coal Oil Point.
The zoo joined the big leagues in conservation in 2002 with its work on the California condor, creating the third exhibit in the world for this species and helping save the species from extinction. The zoo, in collaboration with other organizations over the years, has been monitoring the migration of southern sea otters beyond Point Conception. It has worked with the National Park Service in taking red-legged frog egg masses out of the Santa Monica National Recreation Area prior to heavy rains, hatched and raised tadpoles, and released them back into the natural habitat where they otherwise would have been washed away. The zoo has also been a big player with the island fox conservation efforts, which resulted in delisting from the endangered species list in 10 short years, and the zoo also
does extensive work with monarch butterflies.
Asked about the biggest challenge that the S.B. Zoo now faces, Block quickly replied that it is attracting employees because of the cost of housing. Especially for animal care and other specialized positions, there aren’t experienced people here, and people in other areas don’t want to deal with the high cost of housing. This is true, Block noted, even after a massive investment in payroll, comprising much of the zoo’s increase in its budget from $12.6 million in 2021 to $17.2 million this year. Even at the CEO level, Board Vice Chair Jim Jackson related, they have had candidates withdraw from consideration because of the cost of housing here.
Block emphasized that the time was right for him to step down because the board is in top shape, his senior management team is well-tenured and tested, and the financials, thanks to continued community support, are in great shape.
The S.B. Zoo that Block arrived at in 1998 was in a different state. Under Block’s leadership, it has been transformed, offering stellar guest experiences, animal care, and conservation programs, all of which is especially remarkable given the relatively modest size of the zoo and the city in which it sits. According to Block, “We punch way above our weight class.”
In July, in a tribute to Block, the Rich Block Conservation Center opened at the S.B. Zoo. The center is designed, according to Block, to engage guests through interactive experiences, thereby building appreciation for wildlife and an interest in being part of the solution.
SOCIETY MATTERS Text and photos by Gail Arnold
Board Chair Derek Shue, Tracy Block, President and CEO Rich Block, and VP and incoming board chair Jim Jackson Past board chairs Kelly Jensen, Rhonda Henderson, and Amy Pryor
Chip Turner, Boardmember Betsy Turner, Brooke Costello, and Patrick Costello
Dona Wieckowski and Sponsor Schipper Construction President Paul Wieckowski
Your Mesa Realtors
Rare ocean front estate on the Mesa! This spectacular 4bed/4.5bath ultra-luxury property boasts ~5,100+ sq. ft. of living space resting on over 1/2 acre of prime California coastline. Enjoy unparalleled ocean views from every corner of this contemporary home. Must see in person! 1/2 acre ocean front lot! This is a once in a life time opportunity to purchase a vacant piece of ocean front property located in one of Santa Barbara’s most desirable neighborhoods. Build your dream home to the exact specifications that you desire. Panoramic ocean views! The Richardson Team
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OPEN HOUSES
Goleta
6054 Ashley Place, 2BD, 2BA, Sat 3-5 & Sun 2-4, $1,045,000, Sun Coast Real Estate, Kathy Sweeney / Chris Agnoli 805331-4100 / 805-895-0313, DRE#01391208 / #01132005
38 San Anzio Way, 4BD, 2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,350,000, Sun Coast Real Estate, Mike Agnoli 805-722-0154, DRE#02193882
30 Sonoma Avenue, 4BD, 2BA & 1PBA, Sun 1-4, $1,395,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Darren Levene 646-309-0213, DRE#02093259
145 Walnut Lane, 4BD, 3BA, Sat & Sun 2-4, $1,599,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Ferenc Hodosy 805-452-7516, DRE#01012341
7 Baker Lane, 5BD, 3BA & 1PBA, Sun 2-4, $2,495,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Chris Palme 805-448-3066, DRE#00989478
San Roque
280 N. La Cumbre Rd, 3BD, 2.5BA, Sat & Sun 1-3, $1,350,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Randy Freed & Kellie Clenet 805895-1799 / 805-705-05334, DRE#00624274 / #01434616
3204 Calle Pinon, 3BD, 2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $2,400,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Georgette Owens 805-570-6138, DRE#02172408
The Mesa
628 Juanita Avenue, 3BD, 2BA, Sat 11-4 & Sun 10-4, $2,195,000, Village Properties, Emily McPherson / Kathy Henry / Czeriesa Poonia / Pat Saraca 805-766-6014 / 805-637-4400 / 347453-5337 / 805-886-7426, DRE#02133962 / #01403548 / #02078067 / #01080801
1347 Cliff Drive, 3BD, 1.5BA, Sun 12-3, $2,495,000, Richardson Real Estate Services, Kyle Richardson 805680-3131, DRE#01902531
1812 La Coronilla Drive, 4BD, 3BA & 1PBA, Sun 2-4, $3,125,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Chris Palme 805-448-3066, DRE#00989478
Saturday 9/7 & Sunday 9/8
1804 Lighthouse Way, 4BD, 3BA, Sun 1-3, $3,495,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Ryan Rennick 805886-8860, DRE#02237509 2401 Medcliff Road, 3BD, 2.5BA, Sat 12-4 & Sun 11-2, $3,498,000, Village Properties, Pam Shalhoob / Carly Gribble / Nicole Wesley 805-8959190 / 805-951-7255 / 805448-6858, DRE#02053975 / #02233358 / #02017169
Hope Ranch
4628 Via Huerto, 4BD, 4BA & 3PBA, Sun 1-4 By Appt., $8,495,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Brisaly Balderas / Linda Lorenzen 805-335-4726 / 805-8861842, DRE#02128318 / #00583737
Mission Canyon
841 Mission Canyon Road, 4BD, 3BA & 1PBA, Sat 1-3, $3,760,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Crysta Metzger 805-453-8700, DRE#01340521
The Riviera
900 Las Alturas, 3BD, 2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $4,195,000, Richardson Real Estate Services, Mike Richardson 805-451-0599, DRE#00635254
Santa Barbara
333 Old Mill Road Spc 79, 2BD, 2BA, Sat & Sun 1-4, $315,000, Village Properties, Elise Kahn / Spencer Cole 805-338-6641 / 805-6896673, DRE#02081385 / #02115510
1530 Marquard Terrace, 3BD, 2BA, Sat 1-3, $1,929,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Sunnie Maxwell 805-252-9524, DRE#01463861
3325 Madrona Dr, 3BD, 3BA, Sun 2-4, $2,095,000, Sun Coast Real Estate, Chris Agnoli 805-895-0313, DRE#01132005
1080 Diamond Crest Ct., 3BD, 2.5BA, Sun 1-3, $2,350,000, Sun Coast Real Estate, Matt Vaughan 805689-9351, DRE#00767743
4663 & 4661 Vista Buena Road, 2BD, 1.5BA, & 1BD, 1BA, Sat & Sun 1-3, $2,495,000,
307 Mellifont Avenue, 3BD, 2BA, Sat & Sun 12-2, $1,395,000, Village Properties, David Magid 805-451-0402, DRE#01964710
1310 Olive Street, 4BD, 2BA, Sat 12-3, $2,185,000, Sotheby’s International Realty, Leanna Georges 805-7469006, DRE#02174031
2444 Santa Barbara St., 4BD, 3BA, Sat & Sun 1-4, $4,125,000, Village Properties, Deja Rabb 805-689-3277, DRE#02074885
Montecito
920 Chelham Way, 3BD, 2BA, Sun 1-4, $2,345,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Easter Team Realtors 805-570-0403, DRE#00917775
588 Paso Robles Dr, 4BD, 3.5BA, Sun 1-3, $4,125,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Patrice Serrani 805-637-5112, DRE#01764713
1480 Monte Vista Rd, 5BD, 5BA, Sat 12-2 & Sun 1-4, $4,950,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Sharon Jordano / Joe Stubbins 805280-2055 / 805-729-0778, DRE#02195847 / #01002182 750 Picacho Ln, 4BD, 5.5BA, Sun 1-4, $9,800,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Marcus Boyle 805-452-0440, DRE#02013666
Summerland
2490 Whitney Avenue, 4BD, 3.5BA, Sun 1-3, $2,750,000, Village Properties, John Henderson 805-689-1066, DRE#00780607
Carpinteria
176 Ocean View, 4BD, 3.5BA, Sat & Sun 1-3, $3,795,000, Village Properties, Thomas Johansen 805-886-1857, DRE#01401533
Santa Ynez Valley
435 Farmland Drive, 3BD, 2BA, Sun 12-2, $970,000, Village Properties, Patty Armor 805-350-4038, DRE#01320210
2480 Grand Ave, 3BD, 2BA, Sun 11-1, $2,300,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Daulton Wolf 805757-6797, DRE#02202805 2450 Long Canyon Rd, 4BD, 4BA, Sun 2-4, $3,195,000, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties, Dianna Zlaket 805-390-8382, DRE#01701860
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OUR LOCAL STUDENTS & TEACHERS NEED OUR HELP!
Please join us in our annual School Supplies Drive as we raise funds to purchase the materials our local students need to thrive!
ONLINE DRIVE august 20 - september 20, 2024
WWW.TFSUPPLIESDRIVE.COM
Mike Dickman, Corner Tap, Brittany Lough, Spencer Cole, Alyson Spann, Michelle Glaus, Tim Walsh, Sheela and Mark Hunt, Louis and Susan Manzo, Gregg Leach, Marcia Ribeiro, Sara Beth Cutter, Ruth Ann Bowe, Jena Harris, Patty Armor, Alyssa Jones, Rick Wilson - Cross Country Mortgage, Bob Curtis, Nicole Wesley, David Magid, David McIntire, Lenz Pest Control, Edward Perkins, Erin Timmerman, Judith Eisenhauer, Emily Kellenberger & Associates, Drainmasters
SANTA BARBARA COUNTY SALES
DATE ADDRESS
CARPINTERIA HINKLE CHRISTINE EA
CURTIS VIRGINIA
DENSMORE RICHARD EA
BURNS HEATHER EA
ARTERBURN DAVID PA HOLDINGS
GOLETA RHOADES ROBERT EU WHITE LISA
BURNS HEATHER EA
BRECK CLARENCE EA
SAISUT ROJANA EA
MURDOCK MARLINE
$852,000 8/2,1/24 4422 CATLIN CIR C
$1,206,000 8/2,0/24 1258 CRAVENS LN 1
$1,000,000 8/2,2/24 1377 LINHERE DR
$580,000 8/2,2/24 37 DEARBORN PL 82
$1,360,000 8/2,0/24 71 WARWICK PL
$1,350,000 8/2,3/24 183 SALISBURY AVE
BURMESTER MICHELLE-MARIE STRAIT YI $640,000 8/2,3/24 7630 HOLLISTER AVE 120
LOMPOC GRECO RITA EA
OSEGUERA STEPHANIE EA
ZAMBRANO ROMMELL CHAVEZ MIGUEL EU
VILLAGE MEADOWS DR HOWELL WILLIAM EA SOTO PATRICK EU $618,500
RICHEL
CROWN CIR BROWN CATHERINE EA
BIEKER DENISE EA
ALLY EU
BARKER PASS RD SANTA BARBARA HEYL HARRISON EA JACOBS CHARLES EA
FLIGSTEN MONTE EA
HILDRETH LORI EA
AMY EU
MCCOY JEFFREY HABER JOSH EU
LIMON ALFREDO EA FRANCE EDWARD EU
SALZGEBER CATHERINE EA
HUGHES TERRY EA
WARD KARYN EA
SWIFT ELIZABETH EA
ORTOLAN ANTHONY EA
KIEDE GRANT EU
WINANT HOWARD EA OWEN DAVID
GEORGE EA
$4,400,000 8/2,1/24
8/1,9/24 1276 CLIFF DR
$4,150,000 8/2,2/24 1018 BELMONTE DR
$1,150,000 8/2,2/24 801 W VICTORIA ST
$1,050,000 8/2,3/24 1514 SAN ANDRES ST
$1,710,000 8/2,2/24 1406 MANITOU RD
$2,105,000 8/2,2/24 412 STANLEY DR
JOE EA $6,180,000 8/2,0/24 4602 VIA CARRETAS
8/2,0/24 1265 STALLCUP LN ANTHONY TRAVIS EU
RELOCATION $690,000 8/2,1/24 217 SWEETSAGE CT LOCKHARD ROBERT EA
The Road to Zero Carbon Is Paved with Concrete
The Carbon Problem
The built environment is responsible for 40 percent of all carbon emissions worldwide. By eliminating gas-producing appliances and equipment, and converting our energy uses to renewable, along with highperforming, energy-efficient construc-
tion, we can significantly reduce the operational carbon in the built environment, but we will still have the embodied carbon impact from the manufacturing, transportation, and implementation of building materials and components. The building material with the greatest carbon impact is concrete. Concrete accounts for 8-12 percent of all the man-made greenhouse gases due to the massive amount of concrete being used worldwide today.
The Product
Concrete is really an awesome building material. It starts out in a liquid form and dries to a rock-hard surface. It is mainly used in constructing foundations but is also used to reach great spans for bridges and even greater heights in high-rises structures.
Concrete is made up of cement, rock, sand, admixtures, and water. Cement is the binder that holds the solids together and makes concrete rock-hard after it cures. However, the cement in the mix is the
carbon-producing culprit. To manufacture cement, limestone and other minerals are placed in gas-fired kilns that heat up to 2,000-3,000 degrees. The gas output in this firing process accounts for 40 percent of cement’s greenhouse-gas impact. And the chemical reaction and outgassing of the limestone from this superheating accounts for the other 60 percent of the impact.
The Process
If cement gas-fired kilns were converted to electric and the electric grid was supported by green renewable energy, then the result could eliminate as much as 40 percent of these offensive greenhouse gasses. Carbon capture from the production of cement can also significantly reduce the carbon released into the atmosphere.
The Solution
There have been breakthroughs in the development of cement-free concrete. Companies such as C-Crete Technologies have created a cement-free concrete by
using a mineral compound called zeolite, which can be found throughout the world with almost no carbon dioxide produced during the manufacturing process, while actually absorbing carbon dioxide from the air over time.
Since the cure time and finishing are not a factor, there are many concrete block products that are using higher amounts of fly ash and slag. CarbiCrete, Solidia Technologies, and CarbonBuilt are a few of the block manufacturers that are greatly reducing carbon in their block products.
In Conclusion
These and similar concrete products are now being introduced with the end goal that materials like these become the norm in the very near future, but for now, reducing the cement by 20 percent to 70 percent using the fly ash or slag as cement substitutes, as well as other environmentally materials approved by project engineers, is a big step forward in reducing carbon emissions along with local concrete mixing plants that create similar low-carbon mixes to meet specifications.
Marc Whitman, AIA LEED NCARB, has been a licensed architect practicing sustainable building for the last
the American Institute of Architects’ Santa Barbara chapter.
SANTA BARBARA COUNTY SALES
BUELLTON/ SOLVANG RENAUD MIA EU
CUYAMA REYNOSO JOHNNIE EA
CARDULLO EMILY EU
FURSTENFELD NICOLE EU
GARCIA ROGELIO REAL CODY EU
GOLETA FIREPROOF CAPITAL LLC
SCHIADA GWEN EA
MOHARRAM NANCY EU
CUSHMAN SHANNON EU
CRESPO ELIZABETH EA HAM JONGWOOK EU
WORLEY JOHN EA
SUNDGOT-SMITH JUSTIN EU
HUGGINS DARLENE EA LEE SANG EU
LOMPOC ELLIS LAURA FUNES PATRICIA
MONTECITO GOLDEN STATE HOLDINGS
BRUSTIN MICHELE EA
MCGOLDRICK BIAN EA
FORE HENRIETTA EA
OPATRNY DONLAD EA
HOWE MICHAEL EU
WESTMONT COLLEGE CARLSON BENJAMIN EU
SANTA BARBARA FRANCO RAFAEL EA KIGIN THOMAS EU
$3,000,000 8/12/24 2075 STILL MEADOW RD
$230,000 8/13/24 280 WASIOJA RD
$260,000 8/16/24 4897 MORALES ST
$2,100,000 8/13/24 5200 VISTA BAHIA
$2,300,000 8/14/24 8352 VEREDA DEL PADRE
$1,215,000 8/14/24 7110 PHELPS RD
$982,000 8/16/24 34 ORANGE AVE
$1,425,000 8/16/24 207 SAVONA AVE
$397,000 8/13/24 921 N M PL
$11,000,000 8/16/24 2128 BIRNAM WOOD DR
$11,050,000 8/16/24 2039 BOUNDARY DR
$5,675,000 8/16/24 501 HODGES LN
$266,500 8/16/24 915 WESTMONT RD
$3,500,000 8/13/24 1835 EL CAMINO DE LA LU
TATMAN RANDALL EA WOOD WILLIAM EA $2,450,000 8/13/24 2697 MONTROSE PL
GROENVEVELD WILLIAM EA
PROPERTIES LLC $1,050,000 8/13/24 820 W VICTORIA ST D NEEDHAM ROBERT EA JAZO RUDOLPH EA
COCHRAN ROBERT EA
FREEMAN LESLIE
OWEN DAVID EA
CALDWELL MICHAEL EA
BICARME RUPERT EU
SWEENEY NATALIE EU
8/13/24 3618 ROCKCREEK RD
$1,082,000 8/13/24 705 NORTHVIEW RD
$2,370,000 8/13/24 922 FELLOWSHIP RD
SHAHROUZI SHAHRAM EA $1,670,000 8/14/24 690 LORRAINE AVE
IGLESIAS JOSE EU
CHAPJIAN GEORGE WELSH DALE
BARTHOLOMEW GREGORY EA QUINETTE BRIAN EA
SCHMIDT CRAIG EA
JUMPER ROBERT EU
JACOBSON JULIA EU
LINCH-SUYDAM LISA EU
3021 SAMARKAND LLC WHITE MEGAN EU
KRITZ KIMBERLY EA
JACOB MARGARET EA
WILDE TIMOTHY EU
GARRISON NATHAN
SMITH GREGORY EA
CATTANEO DANIEL EA
SANTA MARIA LOPEZ SAN JUANITA EA MARTINEZ JEFFREY EU
TALBOT RODNEY
PETREVERZIEV NOEL EA
SURATI KHAVALKUMAR EU
HAYS LESLI EA
JARNESKY KYLEE EA
MATAUTIA NICHOLAS EU
KELLY MICHAEL EU
PEREZ HECTOR EA
MURPHY LORENE
MORALES ALBERTO EA
SCIACQUA NICHOLAS E
BARRAGAN SERGIO EU
$1,530,000 8/14/24 4370 MODOC RD
$714,000 8/14/24 1066 MIRAMONTE DR 3
$3,140,000 8/15/24 342 E PADRE ST
$2,447,000 8/15/24 910 SAN ANTONIO CREEK RD
$6,750,000 8/16/24 1615 LA VISTA DEL OCEAN
$2,575,000 8/16/24 3021 SAMARKAND DR
$1,823,000 8/16/24 3668 ROCKCREEK RD
$831,500 8/16/24 346 POR LA MAR CIR
$2,835,000 8/16/24
8/13/24
8/13/24
8/14/24
8/15/24
LA VISTA GRANDE
RICE RANCH RD
VIA ESMERALDA
RONALD PL
IMPERIAL WAY
LISA WAY
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