The Leucadia 101 Main Street Association is proud to present the Taste of Leucadia, Food for Thought on April 2 from 5:30pm-8:30pm. Join the community in celebrating the culinary flavors and local libations that make our downtown Leucadia district so unique. The Taste of Leucadia, Food For Thought will highlight our local restaurants, retailers, craft brewers and local vintners. The town will come alive as we celebrate with food, music, and poetry.
Each ticket to the event is $20 in advance ($25 the day of) with Sip Stops (craft beer/wine tasting included) prices are $33 in advance ($40 the day of).
There will be 18 Leucadia Restaurants participating this year and those include:
Bull Taco, Captain Keno’s, HapiFish, Sugar Coffee & Tea, Fully Loaded Micro Juicery, Pannikin Coffee & Tea, Vigilucci’s, Trattoria Italiana, Priority Public House, Peace Pies, Pandora’s Pizza, Kotija Jr. Taco Shop, Taste and Sea Cakery, Solterra Winery & Kitchen, Coffee Coffee, Le Papagayo, Jupiter Cold Brew, and Fish 101 Restaurant.
They shouldn’t have any trouble blowing these out, thanks mostly to the expert staging. They pay commissions, so take a realtor with you on your first visit and get free help – take me!
Here’s a new take on the house video tour – I’m not sure of the floor plan though, and I feel a little dizzy:
From the MLS: The “Crescent” is a world famous Wally Cunningham design that combines the symphonic resonance of the sea by curvilinear architectural elements. The 6,500 square foot masterpiece sprawls over a double oceanfront lot, capturing the energy, essence, movement and calmness of the Pacific in every living space. Outdoor spaces meld into the interior seamlessly, allowing peaceful travel to another world.
The two big Pardee tracts in Carmel Valley haven’t disrupted the resale market – instead, with deliveries being so far out, they have probably helped resales which have a more-immediate occupancy.
Leucadia might be different – Shea is building enough new mid-range homes that the resale market might feel it next year.
At this location off Vulcan, Shea is building 39 houses from 2,520sf to 3,041 sf (which hopefully should start under $1,000,000), and 30 townhouses from 1,276sf to 1,575sf. They decided not to use my suggested Train Track Estates:
This is one of the few places where you can find newer, larger one-story homes on good-sized lots. No wonder it blew of the market in the first few days, and over list price!
The flippers have been on a remarkable run in 2012 – will it continue? Or will 2013 be the year that buyers start to hesitate when they calculate flipper profit vs. upgrades?