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R andy and deanna Solakian For details, see page 5
FROM FIRST-TIMERS TO EMPTY-NESTERS
VILLAGESITE.COM SANTA BARBARA REAL ESTATE MADE EASY
HouSe HunTer
Make MySelf aT HoMe
by Sarah Sinclair
S
I
Address: 220 West Yanonali Street Status: On the market Price: $2,400,000 220 West Yanonali Street is currently for sale in Santa Barbara, listed by Ray Benenate of Sotheby’s International Realty. Reach Ray at 448-7988.
3
to survey the overall scene, I keep finding myself distracted by dazzling details. The light fixtures are custom and unique. The flooring, kitchen cabinetry, and backsplash are all varying shades of hardwood and bamboo. But I tear myself away to explore the rest of the upstairs, which includes a bedroom, a bathroom, and two balconies, one of which is big enough to feel like an additional outdoor living room. It has a view over the neighboring rooftops, taking in the variety of mature trees lining the street. I take the outdoor staircase down to see the master bedroom and bathroom, laundry room, and garage on the first floor. When I peek into the garage, I’m told that it is heated. Yes, the garage floor has radiant heating. This is but one of the home’s many energy-saving features, thanks to its biggest claim to fame: LEED platinum certification. The home boasts myriad green details such as solar panels, highly efficient lights, flooring, fixtures, and appliances; recycled materials including denim used as insulation; and an irrigation system using gutter runoff that is collected into an underground cistern. The radiant heat flooring is part of a ductless heating system, which is both efficient and green. This home is technically a condo, part of a five-unit complex called Yanonali Court, designed by Berkus Architects and built by Berkus Construction in 2008. This unit is known as “The Casa,” and it’s appropriate: With no common walls, it feels just like a free-standing home. As I confessed already, for me it was love at first sight of this West Beach casa. All of its special amenities, certifications, and green features galore just sweetened the deal.
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knew it was going to happen sooner or later. I just didn’t expect it to happen in the middle of the afternoon on a sunny Thursday in November. I fell in love again. I’ve lived on the Riviera, the Mesa, and several neighborhoods in downtown Santa Barbara, but I’ve always had a yearning to live in West Beach. I love its variety of architectural styles: 1920s craftsman bungalows, red-tile-roofed Spanish haciendas, cute classic beach cottages, all within a compact nine square blocks. Chock-full of hotels and vacation rentals, West Beach is vibrant and tourist-friendly, with restaurants, the wharf, and the harbor nearby. It even warrants a page in the history books with palm-lined Burton Mound, the site of an ancient Chumash village. And, of course, it’s got the beach. It’s even named after the beach. However, since West Beach does have so many short-term residents, long-term living situations come about very rarely. Over the years, when I’ve been in the house-hunting market for either a rental or a purchase, opportunities in West Beach have been scarce. So when I saw the open-house listing for 220 West Yanonali, I had to drive by. Once I drove by, I had to stop and go inside. And once I peeked inside, I was hooked. The front door opens to a high-ceilinged entryway that invites one upstairs by way of a friendly curved staircase with a swirly wrought-iron railing. This railing was the first of the home’s many distinctive details that caught my eye. Upstairs, the open floor plan combining living room, dining room, and kitchen is at once expansive, comfortable, and beautiful. Stopping at the big kitchen island
november 25, 2015
omewhere along the line, I’ve heard rules for house hunters whispered to me. For instance, you’re supposed to sound savvy, as if you know the pros and cons of, say, 240-volt service versus 120. And you’re not supposed to gush about any house you like. Instead, you’re supposed to say, “Hmm, roof looks dicey.” So when we go house hunting, we try to sound all Curb Appeal but unfortunately tend to come across more Curb Your Enthusiasm. For example, the other day in our ongoing quest, we visited a nice place in San Roque, but something didn’t click. So Connie said, “Just lie on the bed for a second, and let’s imagine we live here.” We did, for exactly one second. Then there was a splintering sound, and the bed crashed to the floor. Turns out it was a staged bed, propped up on little plastic garbage bins. Oops. “They’re called risers,” said Tamara Ruccione of Santa Barbara Staging Solutions after enjoying a hearty laugh.“You’re not the first to do that.” It wasn’t her bed, but she said stagers have to do things like that because of the daunting task of providing furnishings for dozens of homes at once. “Imagine if you’re staging 20 or 30 houses. That would be 60 or 70 beds. You’d need a warehouse just for that.” In fact, Ruccione does have a warehouse or two, necessities for those in the staging game. In them are the many roomfuls of furnishings to make recently emptied homes looked lived-in again for the purpose of selling. What’s more, the stock has to be constantly updated to match trends. All of this makes it a “very expensive” business to run, Ruccione said, listing things I’d never thought of, such as two moving crews, several assistants, seamstresses, art, accent pillows, those warehouses, etc. Most businesses buy furnishings, and they’re good for years. Not so for stagers. “In this business, you’re buying every week,” she said. Ruccione got started in the business by struggling to sell her own empty house. Someone told her the emptiness would cost her many thousands of dollars, so she went to the expense of buying furniture and did all the staging staples (cleaned house, lit the fireplace, baked cookies, etc.) and sold the place in one weekend. She was hooked. Using those first furnishings, she started staging for hire, adding more décor along the way and building a business. People sometimes ask for advice on getting into the field. “It’s a wonderful career,” she said. “But it takes a lot of sacrifice and time and money and years to make it happen.” The biggest change of late is the public’s growing understanding of the need for good staging, Ruccione said. Owners are already spending a lot of money fixing cracks, painting, and what have you to get houses ready for sale. Persuading them to spend more on furnishings used to be difficult. No more. Now, thanks to HGTV and such, owners are completely onboard. And homes in Santa Barbara are selling fast. When she first started eight years ago, houses sometimes languished on the market for as much as a year. “Now we barely get installed, and they’re in escrow,” she said. As for crashing beds, Ruccione has a solution. Instead of real mattresses, she sometimes uses the inflatable version. Yes, the unsuspecting like us might n send them to the ground, but at least they would go quietly.
Charming West Beach Casa
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The Staging Strategy
courtesy
by Jeff Miller
OPEN SUN 2-4
OPEN SUN 2-4
$4,850,000 | 2651 Long Canyon Rd, Santa Ynez | 4BD/4BA Bill Grove | 805.350.3099
$1,195,000 | 2985 Glen Albyn Dr, Mission Canyon | 4BD/3BA Ricardo Munoz | 805.895.8725
$1,075,000 | 876 Windsor Way, Mission Canyon | 3BD/2BA Jason Saltoun-Ebin | 805.364.3070
$939,000 | 415 N La Cumbre Rd, Santa Barbara | 2BD/2BA Sue Irwin | 805.705.6973
$895,000 | 1150 Toro Canyon Rd, Montecito | 2BD/2BA + 10 Acres Jan Banister | 805.455.1194
$895,000 | 8516 Ocean View Rd, Ventura | 20 Acres Kerry L Mormann | 805.689.3242
$895,000 | 5099 Casitas Pass Rd, Ventura | 55 Acres Kerry L Mormann | 805.689.3242
$875,000 | 3756 Greggory Way #1, San Roque | 3BD/2BA Kathy Hughes | 805.448.4881
$579,000 | 363 Terrace Ct, Buellton | 3BD/2BA Mary Bahnken | 805.722.8663
$395,000 | 123 Highway 101, Gaviota | 12+Acres Bill Grove | 805.350.3099
$324,900 | 1200 Jason Dr, Lompoc | 4BD/3BA Mary Bahnken | 805.722.8663
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independent real estate
november 25, 2015
realestate.independent.com
EXTRAORDINARYRESULTS
OPEN SUN 2-4
$505,000 | 218 Entrance Rd #5, Goleta | 2BD/2½BA Jan Banister | 805.455.1194
OPEN SUN 2-4
©2015 An Independently owned and operated franchisee of BHH Affiliates, LLC. CalBRE# 01317331
Visit us online at bhhscalifornia.com Montecito ∙ 1170 Coast Village Road ∙ (805) 969-5026 Santa Barbara ∙ 3868 State Street ∙ (805) 687-2666 Los Olivos ∙ 2933 San Marcos Avenue, Suite 102 ∙ (805) 688-2969
Fabled Gables G. Vince GioVannoni Gio annoni
by G. Vince Giovannoni
1515 de la Vina street T
his one-story wood-frame cottage
1940: Manuel Sampson, a nephew of Peter
Rodriguez, inherited the residence, where he and his wife lived for approximately the next five decades. Early in his career, Sampson worked as a cowboy actor doing one-reelers for the Flying A Studios on West Mission Street. 1989: After Mrs. Sampson died, her caregiver, June Walsh, inherited the home and maintained the residence for nearly a decade.
erty in the spring of 1997, and it has undergone improvements with refined attention to detail during the renovation process.
Original Owner: Elizabeth Noble Estimated Year of Construction: 1887
Based on information from, among other sources, Survivors; Santa Barbara’s Last Victorians, a publication of the Santa Barbara Historical Museum.
Ocean views, gated, 3bd/2.5ba, rOse garden, Hvac, clOse tO sHOpping, scHOOl, and beacH ER
V CO
Y RT
PR
E OP
Near Upper Village Montecito 2+ Acres $6,150,000
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$2,050,000
1997: The current owners acquired the prop-
november 25, 2015
which encompassed the 1500 block of De la Vina Street and belonged to the City of Santa Barbara, was sold to George Maxwell. 1861: The block was acquired by real estate investor Charles Pierce. 1863: The block was purchased by J.E. Goux, a prominent merchant and landowner. 1869: Goux sold the block to H.G. Crane, a lawyer and justice of the peace. 1873: Crane sold the block to John E. Spencer of Morristown, New Jersey, who died the following year, and bequeathed the property to his sister, also a resident of Morristown. She maintained the property for another 13 years. It is believed that she wintered in Santa Barbara and invested in many acres of wooded acreage in Montecito from 1870 to 1880. 1887: Elizabeth Noble purchased the land, where she designed and built a home on the site. 1897: Peter Rodriguez acquired the residence and lived on the property for the next 43 years. He was the gardener for E.P. Ripley, president of the Santa Fe Railroad.
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is enhanced with several architectural details that are evident in both decorative sidings and porch elements. In most circumstances, Victorian homes built in the 1880s were often decorated with fishscale siding, in which wooden shingles are trimmed with a curvature detail on the bottom half and applied as a decorative veneer on the exterior sides of the home. For this residence, the pattern deviates from the standardized fish-scale design and gravitates toward a hexagon pattern, as observed in and around the attic window. Another unique feature to the property is decorative dual arches along the front porch, which are supported by turned posts with knobs. An additional feature is the railing or balustrade posts that are constructed in a flat, sawn baluster style versus circular, spindleladen design. Of all the Victorian-era properties which survived the 1925 earthquake, this property could possibly have the longest chain of ownership stemming back to the 1850s. Here’s the timeline:
1859: The section of land known as “Block 63,”
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Beautifully appointed ocean view home at Cottages at Summerland with 3 bedrooms and 2.5 baths. This gated community, built in 2001, is close to Summerland shopping, parks and the beach. The home features vaulted ceilings, bamboo flooring, tankless water heater, view deck and patio. The kitchen has granite counter tops, stainless steel appliances and walk-in pantry. Totally fenced and a corner lot. A special home.
listing details: www.sothebyshomes.com/Santa-Barbara-Real-Estate/sales/0632400 Dick Mires | (805) 689-7771 CalBRE#: 1168430
Fred Bradley | (805) 689-8612 CalBRE#: 522262
The Premiere Estates of Montecito & Santa Barbara
RANDY SOLAKIAN (805) 565-2208 www.montecitoestates.com License #00622258
DEANNA SOLAKIAN (805) 565-2264 www.montecitoestates.com License#01895788
Exclusive Representation for Marketing & Acquisition Additional Exceptional Estates Available by Private Consultation
888 Cold Springs Rd. | $19,500,000 beds 10 baths 6.5 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
4621 Via Roblada | $16,995,000 4621ViaRoblada.com Riskin/Kendall 805.565.8600
818 Hot Springs Rd. | $15,000,000 beds 6 baths 9 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
FEATURED PROPERTY
5840-5844 Casitas Pass Rd. | $4,500,000 beds 5 baths 6 Carey/Gail 805.689.6262
27 Butterfly Ln. | $13,900,000 beds 5 baths 7 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
660 Hot Springs Rd. | $12,650,000 MagnoliaHouseMontecito.com Tim Walsh 805.259.8808
764 San Ysidro Ln. | $11,950,000 764SanYsidroLane.com Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
4555 Avenue Del Mar | $8,995,000 beds 4 baths 3 Gregg Leach 805.565.8873
424 Meadowbrook Dr. | $8,400,000 beds 7 baths 9 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
2220 Bella Vista Dr. | $7,985,000 beds 4 baths 6 Pippa Davis 805.886.0174
511 Las Fuentes Dr. | $6,450,000 beds 3 baths 4.5 Elberta Pate 805.895.0835
2169 Refugio Rd. | $5,200,000 beds 3 baths 3 Dana Istre 805.451.0033
1464 Bonnymede Dr. | $4,750,000 beds 4 baths 4 Gayle Lofthus 805.689.9011
835 Puente Dr. | $2,975,000 beds 5 baths 4 Brian King 805.452.0471
5152 Foothill Rd. | $2,900,000 beds 2 baths 3 Lynn Gates 805.705.4942
157 Rametto Rd. | $2,795,000 beds 3 baths 2 Wendy Warren 805.585.8830
18 W. Victoria St. | $2,600,000 beds 2 baths 3 Emily Kellenberger 805.252.2773
1037 Estrella Dr. | $2,600,000 beds 4 baths 3 Carla Reeves 805.689.7343
401 Chapala St. | $2,550,000 beds 1 baths 2 Calcagno & Hamilton 805.896.0876
853 Jimeno Rd. | $2,495,000 beds 3 baths 4 Tim Walsh 805.259.8808
1901 Gibraltar Rd. | $2,395,000 beds 3 baths 2 suding//murphy 805.455.5736
1712 Anacapa St. | $2,295,000 beds 3 baths 3 DorÊ/O’Neill 805.947.0608
19 Seaview Dr. | $2,245,000 beds 2 baths 2 Riskin Partners 805.565.8600
4569 Via Clarice | $2,190,000 beds 3 baths 4 Gregg Leach 805.565.8873
909 Laguna St. | $2,150,000 beds 3 baths 3 Louise McKaig 805.285.2008
18 W. Victoria St. #310 | $1,999,000 beds 1 baths 2 Donald/Cecilia 805.895.3833
1319 Plaza De Sonadores | $1,995,000 beds 3 baths 2.5 Patsy Downing 805.895.3766
more online at
villageSite.coM | 805.969.8900 All information provided is deemed reliable, but has not been verified and we do not guarantee it. We recommend that buyers make their own inquiries.
From the coast to the valley
Santa BarBara | Montecito | Santa Ynez
814 E. Pedregosa St. | $1,850,000 Triplex Calcagno & Hamilton 805.896.0876
1836 Hillcrest Rd. | $1,599,000 beds 4 baths 3 June/Christina 805.689.7036
612 Calle Granada | $1,595,000 beds 3 baths 3 Emily Kellenberger 805.252.2773
150 Eucalyptus Hill Circle | $1,550,000 beds 3 baths 3 Mary Lu Edick 805.452.3258
421 Seaview Rd. | $1,549,000 beds 2 baths 2 Grubb Campbell 805.565.8879
239 Cordova Dr. | $1,549,000 beds 4 baths 2.5 Toni Mochi 805.636.9170
FEATURED PROPERTY
1746 Prospect Ave. | $1,995,000 beds 3 baths 4 Jeff/Julie 805.895.9498
52 Olive Mill Rd. | $1,495,000 beds 3 baths 2.5 Cecilia/Donald 805.895.3834
1526 East Valley Rd. | $1,485,000 beds 2 baths 2 Mitchell Morehart 805.565.4546
3823 Sunset Rd. | $1,395,000 beds 3 baths 3 Louise/Sam 805.285.2008
754 El Rodeo Rd. | $1,349,000 beds 4 baths 3 Louise/Sam 805.285.2008
3971 Foothill Rd. | $1,325,000 beds 4 baths 3 Cara Gamberdella 805.680.3826
1859 Eucalyptus Hill Rd. | $1,315,000 beds 3 baths 2 Kevin & Lesley Hall 805.451.9998
1269 Mountain View Rd. | $1,199,000 beds 4 baths 2 Grubb Campbell 805.565.8879
403 Alameda Padre Serra | $1,195,000 beds 3 baths 3 Emily Kellenberger 805.252.2773
2519 Emerson St. | $1,175,000 beds 3 baths 2 Jim Witmer 805.448.3921
3703 Dixon St. | $1,099,000 beds 3 baths 3 Christine Salvetti 805.705.4040
5014 Whitney Court | $1,075,000 Single Level, 3BD/2.5BTH Elberta Pate 805.895.0835
718-720 W. Arrellaga St. | $1,050,000 Investment Property Toby/Lynette 805.570.3573
133/135 Juana Maria Ave. | $929,000 Duplex, two 2BD/1BTH units Kelly Knight 805.895.4406
895 Cheltenham Rd. | $879,000 beds 2 baths 2 David M. Kim 805.296.0662
161 Por La Mar Cir. | $869,000 beds 2 baths 2 Phil Shirinian 805.637.8722
7755 Jenna Dr. | $839,000 beds 4 baths 2 Carla Reeves 805.689.7343
331 Santa Rosalia Way | $799,000 beds 3 baths 2 Bob Curtis 805.683.7333
1116 N. Milpas St. | $775,000 beds 4 baths 3 Jeff/Julie 805.895.9498
2740 Miradero Dr. | $729,000 beds 2 baths 2 Sheela Hunt 805.698.3767
4039 Primavera Rd. #3 | $619,000 beds 2 baths 2 Loyd applegate 805.570.4935
more online at
VILLaGESITE.COM | 805.969.8900 All information provided is deemed reliable, but has not been verified and we do not guarantee it. We recommend that buyers make their own inquiries.
From the coast to the valley
SaNTa BaRBaRa | MONTECITO | SaNTa YNEz
Santa barbara county SaleS area
Seller
buyer
price
date
addreSS
carpinteria
pOrter aLan r
SteaDFaSt carpinteria SeniOr
$10,750,000
11/10/15
5464 carpinteria aVe
BOrreLLO antOinette trUSt
FrencH BarBara trUStee
$799,000
11/10/15
5529 caMeO rD
artner cHarLeS trUSt
FOrD MicHaeL a eU
$750,000
11/12/15
5521 canaLinO Dr
cOrBani canDace c trUStee
aMHerSt eXcHange cOrp
$2,000,000
11/12/15
4760 caLLe caMaraDa
FeFOS LLc
peninSULar reaLtY LLc
$4,700,000
11/10/15
5955 caLLe reaL
BUtLer JOe W ii trUStee
VeLa iSaBeL J ea
$850,000
11/10/15
5772 HOLLiSter aVe
cUnning DeVin M trUStee
MarBUrY aLBert Jr
$344,000
11/10/15
29 DearBOrn pL 9
BartLett StepHen a trUStee
crr inVeStOrS LLc
$6,940,000
11/10/15
6300 LinDMar
FarringtOn MarY JO
HerZOg aMY L
$339,500
11/10/15
7054 MarYMOUnt WaY
crancer cLYDe L
pippin anDreW B eU
$745,000
11/13/15
670 arDMOre Dr
KUSHnerOV VaLerie
BODenHaMer JereMY eU
$995,000
11/12/15
6544 caMinO VentUrOSO
MacKer JOHn a trUStee
Henrie MarK c eU
$929,000
11/12/15
6430 carOLDaLe Ln
crane patricK e trUStee
LOng carLa a trUSt
$970,000
11/10/15
7956 WincHeSter cir
WOODHeaD Darren
HULSeY garY M
$80,000
11/12/15
204 n c St
irOnS eDna L trUStee
aLLen JaY r trUStee
$345,000
11/12/15
1112 n F St
aDaM FaMiLY trUSt
Wine cOUntrY HOSpitaLitY inc
$425,000
11/13/15
1200 n H St
MeDina JaVier eU
HiLL aarOn g eU
$270,000
11/09/15
916 W cHerrY aVe
SMitH DaViD D trUStee
HarriS raYMOnD r eU
$250,000
11/10/15
1301 W prUne aVe
LUnDegarD DaViD L trUStee
111414 LLc
$13,037,000
11/12/15
27 BUtterFLY Ln
StUtZ OSKar trUStee
WinFOrD JaY a trUSt
$1,485,000
11/12/15
23 cHaSe Dr
StraUB carL c Jr eU
ScHULMan MicHaeL D
$1,100,000
11/10/15
649 VerDe Mar Dr a
KnOWLtOn cHriStOpHer eU
DOtY rOSWeLL F Jr
$2,900,000
11/12/15
1051 arBOLaDO rD
LearMOntH gLYn S eU
StranD tiMOtHY a eU
$1,015,000
11/09/15
2643 DOrKing pL
aarOnSOn JeFFreY eU
cLaaSSen MarY e eU
$1,850,000
11/13/15
714 MiSSiOn parK Dr
Vining Kent M trUStee
graY DarreLL J trUStee
$1,520,000
11/13/15
408 LaS rOBLeS Ln
ingaLLS W DaViD
FrieDMan eDWarD trUStee
$926,000
11/09/15
1929 BatH St
KOranDa Lee B trUSt
gaULtiere Brianne e eU
$600,000
11/13/15
323 W peDregOSa St
raMOS annaMarie
ScHOWe rOBert t trUStee
$970,000
11/12/15
424 DOnZe aVe
rOtH tHOMaS a
aLVareZ gaSpar eU
$1,650,000
11/13/15
818 e gUtierreZ St
LOng carLa a trUSt
eZeLL Sean
$1,800,000
11/10/15
453 ViSta De La pLaYa
SarKOWSKY MarK eU
St geOrge eDWarD
$1,260,000
11/13/15
618 caStiLLO St
rOgerS VernOn trUStee
BUDinger SUSan M trUStee
$1,250,000
11/10/15
24 W gUtierreZ St
ScOLeS WaYne D
SteVenS DOnaLD ea
$418,000
11/13/15
1026 1/2 BatH St
craWFOrD geraLDine M eState
BrOWn patricK M eU
$1,000,000
11/13/15
120 MeSa Ln
cLaYtOn eVerett M iii trUStee
aSHLanD arOn W
$1,295,000
11/12/15
2413 caLLe anDaLUcia
FULLer LaUren B ea
BraDFOrD JeFFeerY L ea
$857,000
11/12/15
1906 giLLeSpie St
KUeHn KLaUS K a trUStee
tantri LLc
$1,831,000
11/13/15
208 OceanO aVe
iMHOFF HarrY r eU
eLLenBerger DaViD J eU
$1,800,000
11/12/15
1401 SHOreLine Dr
eSpOSitO Vincent ea
KUSHnerOV VaLerie
$790,000
11/12/15
293 caLLe eSperanZa
tUrnBULL paUL a ea
gOULD eLiZaBetH ea
$872,000
11/10/15
585 LOrraine aVe
cHapMan geOrge a trUStee
LOncKi ScOtt eU
$1,550,000
11/13/15
Via trepaDOra
gOLeta
MOntecitO Santa BarBara
Santa Maria
reYnOLDS traViS J eU
paZ JOSe D eU
$474,000
11/13/15
4551 HUMMeL Dr
DietricH JeraLD a trUStee
tHOMaSOn geraLD L eU
$452,500
11/10/15
4888 caMeO Dr
gaYDa tiMOtHY g ea
SMitH rUtH a ea
$540,000
11/12/15
335 W cLarK aVe
SnYDer garY J trUStee
HaYeS rOBerrt g eU
$328,000
11/12/15
4565 FOXenWOOD Ln
crOUccH JOanne trUStee
rOJO MattHeW D ea
$323,000
11/12/15
3717 ZiOn pL
FOXLeY FaMiLY trUSt
MUSUMeci tracie
$390,000
11/13/15
400 HarSin Ln
gUtierreZ JOSie g
MOtO Maria ea
$340,000
11/13/15
138 rOSS Ln
BieLY MicHaeL e trUStee
FaULKner MarK eU
$255,000
11/12/15
420 parKVieW nOrtH
OUiMet ranDY L eU
JacOBS Dean
$401,000
11/10/15
1224 WOODMere rD
OrOpeZa ULYSSeS a eU
SeXtOn LeOna r
$350,000
11/12/15
4196 BreeZY gLen Dr
cHOi iSaBeLa M
rice aarOn J ea
$320,000
11/10/15
4162 HarMOnY Ln
cOrrente tUSSY
cOLMan triS eU
$337,000
11/13/15
280 MOOn Dance Dr
Mann 2006 FaMiLY trUSt
Mariani rOBert p
$243,000
11/13/15
1918 eLMWOOD Dr
OgLeeSBY SOnJa M trUSt
FLOreS ricarDO eU
$565,000
11/13/15
4326 SnOWHiLL ct
gaMBriL ricK eU
KinirY Brian J eU
$1,800,000
11/10/15
525 S BLOSSer rD
KreiSS, tiMOtHY e
HOFFMan paMeLa J
$405,000
11/09/15
1823 S MODeLLO aVe
cpH HarVeSt gLen LLc
MeDina JaVier Z
$400,500
11/10/15
903 W eLaine aVe
cpH HarVeSt gLen LLc
DOMingO reXOr a eU
$386,000
11/13/15
929 W eLaine aVe
cpH HarVeSt gLen LLc
paDiLLa MicHaeL a eU
$371,000
11/10/15
935 W eLaine aVe
cpH HarVeSt gLen LLc
Vea ernie eU
$407,500
11/13/15
1846 S OLYMpia Dr
cpH HarVeSt gLen LLc
MenDOZa anDreW eU
$394,000
11/09/15
839 SW eLaine aVe
aLegre JOSepH M ea
MicHeL YeSenia
$305,000
11/13/15
1018 n cOLLege Dr
gOMeZ DaViD W eU
BeLtran MarcO a eU
$305,000
11/13/15
225 S SUperiOr St
BUrrOW Sean
UrBanO JOSe O ea
$345,000
11/13/15
444 rOBLe St
Santa YneZ
MeHraBian rOBert trUStee
cOrSO ricHarD F trUStee
$1,865,000
11/10/15
5300 BaSeLine aVe
UnincOrpOrateD
LUgLi rUSSeLL V trUStee
LOWer DOnOVan LLc
$1,500,000
11/12/15
Santa rOSa rD
Spanne anDra L trUStee
951 San paSQUaL LLc
$1,150,000
11/09/15
951 San paSQUaL rD
8
independent real estate
november 25, 2015
realestate.independent.com
LOMpOc
This data is provided to The Santa Barbara Independent by an outside third-party source and represents a partial list of recorded residential sales in Santa Barbara County on the dates listed. While this information is public record, The Santa Barbara Independent cannot guarantee the accuracy nor the completeness of this list.
history 101
nEighBorhooDs
by Michael Redmon dusk donahue photos
santa barbara historical museum
by Dusk Donahue
how was
Area highlights The Neighbors
Families of all shapes and sizes, retired couple, young professionals, and renters. Market
Lifestyle
Gardening in your front yard, barbecues in the back, and attending the various festivals at Earl Warren, Oak Park, and MacKenzie Park. You’ll Love
Being home base for your friends when the annual Old Spanish Days Fiesta comes to MacKenzie Park and the ethnic fests come to Oak Park and being able to walk to late-night sushi, gourmet Mexican, or French bistro casual. Perfect For
Young families, retired couples, and professionals who want suburban peace amid the city.
Around the Area
The quaint Samarkand neighborhood, which rises above Mission Creek and Oak Park and extends to the Santa Barbara Municipal Golf Course, is named for a white-walled, carefully manicured
Michael Redmon is the director of research at the Santa Barbara Historical Museum.
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Single-family homes, often with second units, some duplexes and triplexes, and condos on the fringes.
property that was originally home to The Samarkand Persian Hotel, which opened in 1920 but had to close by 1937. Today, the sprawling complex is a home for senior citizens, and the community around it is known as a great place to live away from the hassles of the city and yet within blocks of everything one needs. Most of the properties are singlefamily homes, but there’s a smattering of condo units, apartment complexes, and duplexes, as well, not to mention a number of rental properties divided up into multiple units with separate entries. Just down the hill is the stretch of De la Vina that locals call The Wishbone for where it connects with State Street, and this commercial corridor is home to a surprising array of restaurants, stores, coffee shops, bars, and other offerings. The Samarkand is bound on most sides by parks, from Oak Park (where ethnic festivals, barbecues, birthday parties, and horseshoes happen all year long) to MacKenzie Park (where Old Spanish Days Fiesta comes in August and lawn bowling can be enjoyed whenever it’s sunny) to the Santa Barbara Municipal Golf Course (which is also home to a driving range and great café called Mulligan’s) to Earl Warren Showgrounds (home to concerts, rodeos, and fairs of all sorts).
T
included the Harbor Restaurant, the Yacht Club, and a second restaurant. The era of Saunders’ ownership was a stormy one. Charges flew that sewage from the wharf was polluting the beach and surrounding waters, but Saunders balked at the cost of fixing the problem. Yet in 1948 the city gave a new 25-year operations lease to Saunders. Wrangling over repairs continued, with city and state authorities demanding progress. Saunders did commission some work, but he continued to complain about costs. In 1955, Saunders relinquished control of the wharf, and a new group purchased the franchise. One of the major partners was George Castagnola, whose fishing operation called the wharf home. The new franchise holders realized that major repairs could no longer be delayed. The first new pilings arrived in the spring of 1955, and by 1972 the group had spent some $1 million in upgrades. Recreation continued to play a growing role. Moby Dick’s Cof Coffee Shop opened, and the Castagnola group bought the Harbor Restaurant and poured more than $200,000 into improvements. Fishing operations moved from the wharf to the harbor’s Navy Pier in 1961. The oil industry arrived on the wharf; the first offshore oil rigs began operations in 1958. The 1969 oil spill and the 1973 fire which consumed the Harbor Restaurant together began yet another era in the wharf’s history. After an eight-year closure, the wharf reopened in 1981 under the auspices of the City of Santa Barbara, its commercial purpose relegated to history. The wharf now became one of the most popular tourist destinations in the city and remains so today.
realestate.independent.com
Named after a resort-turned-senior-living-home that sits at the peak of this hilltop neighborhood, the Samarkand is like a mini-suburbia of mostly single-family homes bordered by Oak Park, Mackenzie Park, the Santa Barbara Golf Course, and Earl Warren Showgrounds. It’s quiet and quaint yet right in the middle of the action, with multiple stores and restaurants located just a few minutes away.
he years following World War II saw an evolution in the use of Stearns Wharf. Previously, the wharf had served as the city’s primary commercial shipping center as well as the headquarters of the area fishing industry. In the postwar years, recreation and tourism would play an ever more important role. For the first two and a half years of the war, the wharf was closed to the public and was under the control of the U.S. Navy and then the Coast Guard. The movements of the area fishing fleet were curtailed due to concerns over sabotage and fifth columnists. Initially, boats could not stay out overnight; by 1943, boats were allowed out five nights. Stearns Wharf was reopened to the public in the spring of 1944. In October 1945, a syndicate that included film actor James Cagney bought the wharf franchise for some $200,000. The group intended to emphasize tourism and recreation over commercial activity. There were problems. The wharf had not been maintained, and the pilings and deck were in disrepair. The new owners were shocked to learn that to bring the wharf back into shape would cost more than the purchase price and would require more than 10 million board feet of lumber. This price tag plus squabbling within the group caused another sale of the wharf in the spring of 1947. The purchaser was area furniture dealer Leo Saunders. By this time, less than half of the wharf was being used commercially, although three fishing companies still used it as headquarters. The days of the wharf as a primary commercial shipping center were virtually at an end. Tenants of the wharf now
november 25, 2015
Area Description
of the 20th century?
independent real estate
samarkand
stearns Wharf used during the second half
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independent real estate
november 25, 2015
realestate.independent.com
OPEN HOUSES Carpinteria
The Mesa
4902 Sandyland Road #241, 1BD/1BA, Sun 11-2, $599,000, Sotheby’s, Carolyn Wood Friedman 805-886-3838
2112 Cliff Drive, 4BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,375,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Linda & Jeff Havlik 805451-8020
3375 Foothill Road #933, 2BD/2BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-3, $850,000, Village Properties, Susie Maybery 805 684-3415
1642 Shoreline Drive, 3BD/3BA, Sat 1-4 Sun 1-4, $1,995,000, Sotheby’s, Gene Archambault 805455-1190
Downtown Santa Barbara
Mission Canyon
1116 North Nopal Street, 3BD/1BA, Sun 1-4, $649,900, Berkshire Hathaway, The Santa Barbara Group, Joe Parker 805-8865735
18 West Victoria Street #208, 1BD/2BA, BY APPT, $1,180,500, Village Properties, Tim Walsh 805259-8808 18 West Victoria Street #204, 1BD/2BA, BY APPT, $1,465,000, Village Properties, Tim Walsh 805259-8808 2109 Chapala Street, 3BD/2.5BA, Sat 2-4 Sun 1-3, $1,495,000, Village Properties, Toni Mochi 805-636-9170 Deb Archambault 805-455-2966 531 Chapala Street #A, 1BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,995,000, Berkshire Hathaway, JoAnn Mermis 805-895-5650 18 West Victoria Street #308, 2BD/3BA, BY APPT $2,600,000, Village Properties, Tim Walsh 805259-8808
876 Windsor Way, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $1,075,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jason S. Ebin 805-3643070
967 Cheltenham Road, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,125,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Bob Ratliffe 805448-6642 2985 Glen Albyn Drive, 4BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,195,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Ricardo Munoz 805-895-8725 1836 Hillcrest Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 2-4, $1,599,000, Village Properties, June Laula 805-689-7036
Montecito 1220 Coast Village Road Unit 110, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $1,069,000, Sotheby’s, Toni Sutherland 805-618-1886
1526 East Valley Road, 2BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $1,485,000, Village Properties, Mitch Morehart 805-689-7233
Goleta
2320 Sycamore Canyon Road, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $1,795,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Joyce Enright 805-570-1360
216 Moreton Bay Lane Unit 5, 2BD/1.5BA, By Appt., $432,000, Sotheby’s, Mike Pearl 805-637-6888 Gail Pearl 805-637-9595
462 Toro Canyon Road, 4BD/3BA, Sat 2-4, $2,395,000, Berkshire Hathaway, JoAnn Mermis 805-895-5650
218 Entrance Road 5, 2BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $505,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jan Banister 805-455-1194
352 East Mountain Drive, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $3,199,000, Sotheby’s, Toni Sutherland 805-6181886
331 Santa Rosalina Way, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-4, $799,000, Village Properties, Chris Salvetti 805705-4040
1424 East Valley Road, 3BD/3BA, Sat 1-4, $3,200,000, Reeves & Associates, Jeff Reeves 805689-2058
7608 Newport Drive, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $969,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Madhu Khemani 805252-0625
2355 East Valley Road, 5BD/9BA, Sun 1-4, $4,500,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Joe Stubbins 805-729-0778
Hope Ranch
975 Mariposa Lane, 4BD/4BA, BY APPT, Sun 2-4 PM, $4,995,000, Village Properties, Natalie Grubb 805-895-6226
4178 Creciente Drive, 4BR/3BA, Sun 1-4, $3,995,000, Stones Real Estate, Team Eric and Mary 805-6826090
1709 Overlook Lane, 5BD/4.5BA, Sun 1-4, $5,250,000, Sotheby’s, Frank Abatemarco 805-450-7477
Saturday 11/28 & Sunday 11/29 923 Buena Vista Drive, 6BD/6.5BA, Sun By Appt., $5,495,000, Sotheby’s, Frank Abatemarco 805-450-7477
3744 Greggory Way Unit 4, 3BD/3BA, Sat 2-4, $885,000, Sotheby’s, Linda Brown “Brownie” 805-666-9090
2225 Featherhill Road, 6BD/6.5BA, Sun 1-3, $6,995,000, Sotheby’s, Lauren Stewart 805-6186007
3823 Sunset Road, 4BD/3BA, Sun 12-2, $1,395,000, Village Properties, Louise Mckaig 805-2852008
1522 East Mountain Drive, 5BD/3.5BA, Sun 1-3, $7,495,000, Sotheby’s, Wade Hansen 805-6899682
3132 Calle Mariposa, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 1:30-4, $1,649,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Robert Johnson 805-705-1606
Noleta 754 El Rodeo Road, 4BD/2.5BA, Sun 2:30-4:30, $1,349,000, Village Properties, Louise Mckaig 805-2852008
Riviera 30 North Santa Ynez Street #D, 4BD/2BA, Sun 1-3, $795,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Mary Whitney 805-689-0915
841-861 East Alamar Avenue, 1BA, Sun By Appt., $1,995,000, Sotheby’s, Robert Heckes 805-6370047 5117
Summerland 2210 Calle Culebra, 3BD/3BA, Sun 12-3, $1,850,000, Sotheby’s, Jason Siemens 805-455-1165
Upper East Santa Barbara
403 Alameda Padre Serra, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,195,000, Village Properties, Gary Welterlen 805-895-4744
2621 State Street Unit 3, 2BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $649,000, Sotheby’s, Robert Heckes 805-6370047
49 Cedar Lane, 3BD/2BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-4, $1,250,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jessica Stovall 805-6989416 James St. James 949-547-1860
34 East Pedregosa Street, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $1,350,000, Berkshire Hathaway, John Comin 805-689-3078
139 Loma Media Road, 2BD/2.5BA, Sat 11-4 Sun 11-4, $1,385,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Isaiah J. Polstra 805-722-5085
2414 Santa Barbara Street, 3BD/3BA, Sat 2-4, $2,295,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Jan Banister 805-455-1194
3 Las Alturas Road, 4BD/2.5BA, Sat 1-3 Sun 1-3, $1,599,000, Village Properties, John Bahura 805680-5175 1746 Prospect Avenue, 2BD/3.5BA, Sat 1:30-4 Sun 1:304, $1,995,000, Village Properties, Priscilla Bedolla 805-680-7146 1010 Roble Lane, 3BD/2.5BA, Sun 2-4, $2,249,000, Sotheby’s, Linda Brown “Brownie” 805-6669090
Samarkand 440 Stanley Drive, 3BD/2BA, Sun 1-4, $1,447,000, Santa Barbara Brokers, Troy G Hoidal 805 6896808
Santa Ynez Valley 5 Six Flags Circle, 2BD/1BA, Sat 10:30-12, $335,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Karin Aitken 805-2521205
96 Six Flags Circle, 3BR/2BA, Sun 1-4, $525,000, Ranch & Country RE, Randy Stone 805-2526087 3640 Willow Street, 3BD/3BA, Sat 2-4, $734,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Rhoda Johnson 805-7058707 197 Manzanita Drive, 5BR 4BA, Sat 1-3, $775,000, Ranch & Country RE, Randy Stone 805-252-6087
San Roque 616 Calle De Los Amigos, 3BD/3BA, Sun 1-4, $815,000, Sotheby’s, Krista Vickers 805-4535117
3756 Greggory Way 1, 3BD/2BA, Sun 2-4, $875,000, Berkshire Hathaway, Michelle Madril 805-453-0927
Submit your open house listings to gustavo@independent.com Tuesday by 3pm to be included in this directory.
Water-Saving tip of the Week
green your crib
We invite readers and businesses to send us their water-saving strategies to share by emailing WaterSaver@independent.com.
ElizabethWagner
Santa Barbara Native
THANK YOU
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to my family, my friends, and my clients for your support over the past 11 years. Being born in Santa Barbara has been a blessing and my husband and I are thankful to be raising our family here too.
realestate.independent.com
Some people worry about the irregular nature of construction employment. There is some truth to this: Construction jobs took a big hit during the recent recession, the biggest since the depression of the 1930s. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, however, projects the annual employment rate in construction to grow by 2.6 percent between 2012 and 2020, a creation of 1.6 million jobs over this eight-year period. This expansion is the most of any sector of the economy, except for the health-care sector, which is projected to grow slightly more. According to the Bureau’s statistics, 290,000 construction jobs were added in 2014 and a similar number will be added this year. These days, fewer young people are by Dennis Allen choosing a career in construction as parents and school officials promote high-tech careers. Consequently, the construction workforce is getting progressively older. Many of the job openings will be to replace retiring tradespeople. There is already an acute shortage of competent, skilled, motivated workers. There exists a myth that those who work in a blue-collar industry like construction don’t earn much money. Many, probably most, construction workers in this region earn between $50,000-$120,000 per year, an income often accompanied by a good benefits package, as well. This is frequently higher than what some of the high-tech fields pay, such as computer systems analysts. And the skill gap between these sectors is narrowing. Today, having computer skills, an analytical aptitude, and a problemsolving bent, together with the traditional manual-trade skills, helps one gain a good position in construction and advance up the career ladder rapidly. It used to be that companies hired from project to project, but now the norm is for companies to hire for the long-term. Increasingly, the term “profession” is being associated with work in construction. And because of the tangible nature of the work, there still exists a strong element of pride in the craftsmanship that workers bring to projects. A recent survey of 30,000 employees among 12 distinct industries reported that construction workers are the happiest. Good relationships with peers and colleagues turned out to be a big part of trade-worker satisfaction. Santa Barbara offers the added advantage of working outside year-round and most of the time in great weather. Hammer the nail true, saw the line straight, watch the pieces come together, and enjoy good camaraderie, all the while getting exercise outdoors in the sunshine. What is there not to like? With a shrinking middle class in America, school officials and parents need to reevaluate the advantages of working in construction and start getting the message out that this is a cool track to the middle class.
A
residential Hot Water Recirculating Pump can keep water from being wasted while you wait for the tap to run hot. Using the bathroom faucet connections, these pumps circulate water back to the water heater until it reaches the right temperature (usually 120 degrees). Then the thermostat turns off the pump, and you —Steven Lefler have nothing but hot water and no waste.
november 25, 2015
R
ecently I wrote about women in construction and the many high-paying career opportunities that are now available in this field. The positive aspects of construction employment that I listed— listed seeing tangible results, interesting, varied and challenging work, and good pay— pay apply to men, as well.
recirculating pump eliminates Water Waste
independent real estate
construction as path to Middle class
Happy Thanksgiving, from Nate, Elizabeth, Wyatt and Crosby Wagner
ELIZABETH WAGNER 805.895.1467 » elizabeth@villagesite.com elizabethwagner.com » CalBRE #01440591
Dennis Allen is chair of Allen Construction, an employee-owned company committed to building and operating sustainably. He also serves as chair of the Dean’s Council at the Bren School of Environmental Science & Management at UCSB and as a boardmember of the Community Environmental Council. All information provided is deemed reliable, but has not been verified and we do not guarantee it. We recommend that buyers make their own inquiries.
Eliz