Monthly Archives: July 2011

Rockport Country Club

When one thinks of Rockport, many visions of Aransas Bay, Island Style (stilt houses), and waterfront  come to mind. But have you considered residential real estate as your primary or second home in Rockport Country Club?  Prices range from around $200,000 to over $2,000,000 for houses and condos start at around $60,000. Several condo/townhome units are sprinkled throughout the country club and many offer fairway views.

Single residential homes in the neighborhood are situated on large lots ranging in size to half an acre and vacant lots are available from around $45,000 with higher prices being the norm for fairway lots. The “Country Club” offers the ambience of a top end facility in any major city, yet the quaintness of small town living. Restrictions call for 1800 sq. ft. minimum home size and exterior of rock, brick or stucco. Most homes are beautifully landscaped and many incorporate the “Texas Tropical” look including many varieties of palm trees.

Rockport Country Club is only a couple of miles from everything the water sport enthusiast may want, yet offers the ambience and amenities of a truly upscale country club. Many folks move top Rockport to be on the water and eventually move into RCC. Most of the homes here are shaded by the abundant windswept oaks and offer a little more shelter from the “salt air” than to homes that are situated right on the water.

The amenities include a beautiful setting and players praise this par 71, 18 holes championship golf course.  Designed by Bill Coore, with golf great Jimmy Demaret as consultant have created this superb 6500 yard championship course. The swirling contours are reminiscent of some of the world’s most famous links and courses. Fairways wind through graceful knolls and large sand dunes set about by dense clusters of coastal live oak. Sixty-five acres of inter-connecting lakes and ponds play host to abundant wildlife.

Rockport Country Club offers 4 lighted tennis courts. There are regular tournaments and summer tennis camps for children 5 and up.

The main dining room with overlooks the golf course and Texas Stele Fountain by Jesus Moroles. If you are looking for great food you stopped at the right place. Rockport Country Club offers a large variety of fine foods and serves fresh seafood right out of the gulf. Also, our beef is certified angus and the filets are said to be the best in town.

Whether you are thinking of a permanent of secondary residence, don’t let the opportunity to explore RCC slip away.

http://www.rockportcountryclub.net/events.html.

 

For More Information, Please Contact Steve Vincent

South Rockport- a unique area of Rockport, Texas

South Rockport is a unique area of Rockport that lends itself to just about any lifestyle, for anyone interested in a second home or permanent residence. These range from 1950’s chic/shabby cottages to million dollar plus homes situated on Aransas Bay, most with private piers.

The area consists of homes that are bordered by Aransas Bay to the east, Business Hwy. 35 to the west and everything south of FM 1069. My wife and I bought our first beach house “get away” in South Rockport, a small 2-1 which we remodeled and stayed in when we would come down from the Austin area. When we moved here permanently, we moved into a stilt (island style) house with views of Aransas Bay (Still in South Rockport). Even if you are not “on” the water in this area, there are plenty of opportunities to buy or build a home with water views. The degree of the glimpse you get of the water is a major factor in determining the value of any given house or vacant lot.

Water Street and Shell Ridge Rd. homes are “on the water” and comprise about 2 miles of water front in South Rockport. Of course the further you are from the water, the less value of any given property. There are homes that are 4-5 blocks from the water that offer good views and some have just “sneak peeks” of the bay. Although you may not be able to see the water from your home, you are only a short stroll or bike ride from the bay front where you will find folks walking their dogs, or just taking in the beautiful sweeping views of the bay.

Shell Ridge Rd. has an area that is accessible to kayak and wade fisherman that offers excellent fishing for speckled trout, redfish and flounder. I often opt to leave the boat at home and drive a quarter mile to this fishing hole. The bottom is hard and there are plenty of sea grass and oyster shells that hold fish. Some of your best fishing experiences will be in your own back (front) yard.

One of the most desirable characteristics of South Rockport is the fact that it’s so close to Old Town Rockport which offers unique restaurants, galleries and eclectic shops. It also is often a short walk or bike ride depending where in the area you plant yourself. City Park and Rockport’s certified “Blue Wave” beach are also a very short distance from any South Rockport location.

Many people own second homes in South Rockport and all of them are allowed to put their property in short term rental pools when their families are not occupying it. There are many rental agencies in town that will handle all aspects of your home with respect to rentals and the fees to do so are among the least of any resort/vacation area in the U.S. They will coordinate everything from bookings, cleanings, repairs, maintenance and lawn care.

Having lived in 2 homes in this neighborhood over the past five years, I have learned the area well. Come on down and let me show you this area, it may be just the place to tickle your fancy.

 

For More Information, Please Contact Steve Vincent

 

Our Whooping Cranes

 

John Martell, Photographer

 

Winter home of the endangered whooping crane, Aransas Wildlife Refuge sits
on the Lamar Peninsula just north of Holiday Beach. The whooping crane
is the largest bird found in North America standing at 5 ft. tall with a
wing-span of 9 ft. They can be found in many areas in Lamar, St. Charles
Bay and the barrier islands. Now numbering 279, their population is
monitored closely and has fluctuated recently due to drought in the area.
These majestic white birds are the tallest in North America. They live in
family groups and frequent marshes, shallow lakes, and lagoons. Cranes
feed by foraging with their bills and gobbling up plants, shellfish,
insects, fish, and frogs.

John Martell, Photographer

 

 

John Martell, Photographer

 Lee Couch, REALTOR, CNS, ABR
Cell (361) 463-3975
leecouch@texasbeachbuys.com
www.texasbeachbuys.com
Why Not Work With Someone
Who Loves Her Job?

For More Information, Please Contact Lee Couch

Neptune Harbor, Rockport Texas

Neptune Harbor, a canal community on the Lamar peninsula, north of the
Copano Bay causeway (near Rockport, Texas), was named in honor of a ship that was docked in the
area during the late 1800’s. Two of the early settlers bought a ship
named the Neptune in New Orleans and brought it to the area with plans of
using it to bring goods from larger ports to this area. Unfortunately,
their plans never took off and the ship sat in the bay and eventually
rotted and fell apart. When the developers of the canal community near
Goose Island State Park were searching for an appropriate name they
discovered the story of the Neptune and named their new community “Neptune
Harbor”.  This is a great community in the Rockport area and makes for a perfect second home.
The home for sale at 55 Magnolia in Neptune Harbor also brings the history
of the area to mind. As you enter the home the Spanish and Mexican
heritage of the area surrounds you. It features Mexican tile, 2 kiva
fireplaces and two complete living spaces including separate kitchens.

Lee Couch, REALTOR, CNS, ABR
Cell (361) 463-3975
leecouch@texasbeachbuys.com
www.texasbeachbuys.com
Why Not Work With Someone
Who Loves Her Job?

For More Information, Please Contact Lee Couch

Horseshoe Bay, TX Gets Grocery Store!

Check out the news ! If you’re interested in more Horseshoe Bay Lifestyle go to www.horseshoebaytownandcountry.com. If you’re interested in a Horseshoe Bay Real Estate tour or Texas Hill Country Real Estate tour call Jay Turner 830-220-2441.

 

From Statesman.com

Horseshoe Bay set to get first full-service grocery
By Gary DingesAMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

Published: 8:43 p.m. Friday, July 8, 2011

Members of a Houston family with more than a century in the grocery business have set their sights on Horseshoe Bay, announcing plans to open the area’s first full-service supermarket.

Work on Jamail’s Fresh Market, 9710 W. RM 2147, should start next month and wrap up by late spring 2012, according to developer Mike Walsh, who has spent several years working to bring a grocer to the area.

Walsh, also the developer of the Trails of Horseshoe Bay community and the Landing at Lake Marble Falls office and retail complex, said Horseshoe Bay residents and visitors now drive as long as 30 minutes one way to shop in Marble Falls or 45 minutes each way to hit stores in Bee Cave and Lakeway.

“It just all came together this year,” Walsh said. “What we’re offering is a neighborhood store that will have the finest in fresh products, right here in Horseshoe Bay.”

The 15,800-square-foot grocery, which will cost about $5 million to build, will anchor a shopping center that could eventually reach 40,000 square feet, Walsh said.

Jim and Kathy Jamail, along with daughter Paige and her husband, Micah Barnes, will move to the Horseshoe Bay area to operate the market, which will also have a wholesale division serving area restaurants and caterers.

While new to Central Texas, Jamail’s — once called the best grocery store in America by Texas Monthly magazine — was a player in the Houston area for decades, with customers who included big-name Hollywood celebrities, U.S. presidents and even British royalty.

“We want to emphasize that the Jamail reputation has been built on fresh products,” Jim Jamail said. “That’s our hallmark, and it’s how we’re going to operate the new Horseshoe Bay market.”

gdinges@statesman.com; 912-5987

 

 

Austin # 1 Next Boom Town !!

Jul. 6 2011 – 2:38 pm | |By JOEL KOTKIN
 
What cities are best positioned to grow and prosper in the coming decade?

To determine the next boom towns in the U.S., Forbes, with the help of Mark Schill at the Praxis Strategy Group, took the 52 largest metro areas in the country (those with populations exceeding 1 million) and ranked them based on various data indicating past, present and future vitality.

We started with job growth, not only looking at performance over the past decade but also focusing on growth in the past two years, to account for the possible long-term effects of the Great Recession. That accounted for roughly one-third of the score.  The other two-thirds were made up of a a broad range of demographic factors, all weighted equally. These included rates of family formation (percentage growth in children 5-17), growth in educated migration, population growth and, finally, a broad measurement of attractiveness to immigrants — as places to settle, make money and start businesses.

We focused on these demographic factors because college-educated migrants (who also tend to be under 30), new families and immigrants will be critical in shaping the future.  Areas that are rapidly losing young families and low rates of migration among educated migrants are the American equivalents of rapidly aging countries like Japan; those with more sprightly demographics are akin to up and coming countries such as Vietnam.

Many of our top performers are not surprising. No. 1 Austin, Texas, and No. 2 Raleigh, N.C., have it all demographically: high rates of immigration and migration of educated workers and healthy increases in population and number of children. They are also economic superstars, with job-creation records among the best in the nation.

 

Perhaps less expected is the No. 3 ranking for Nashville, Tenn. The country music capital, with its low housing prices and pro-business environment, has experienced rapid growth in educated migrants, where it ranks an impressive fourth in terms of percentage growth. New ethnic groups, such as Latinos and Asians, have doubled in size over the past decade.

Two advantages Nashville and other rising Southern cities like No. 8 Charlotte, N.C., possess are a mild climate and smaller scale. Even with population growth, they do not suffer the persistent transportation bottlenecks that strangle the older growth hubs. At the same time, these cities are building the infrastructure — roads, cultural institutions and airports — critical to future growth. Charlotte’s bustling airport may never be as big as Atlanta’s Hartsfield, but it serves both major national and international routes.

Of course, Texas metropolitan areas feature prominently on our list of future boom towns, including No. 4 San Antonio, No. 5 Houston and No. 7 Dallas, which over the past years boasted the biggest jump in new jobs, over 83,000. Aided by relatively low housing prices and buoyant economies, these Lone Star cities have become major hubs for jobs and families.

And there’s more growth to come. With its strategically located airport, Dallas is emerging as the ideal place for corporate relocations. And Houston, with its burgeoning port and dominance of the world energy business, seems destined to become ever more influential in the coming decade. Both cities have emerged as major immigrant hubs, attracting on newcomers at a rate far higher than old immigrant hubs like Chicago, Boston and Seattle.

The three other regions in our top 10 represent radically different kinds of places. The Washington, D.C., area (No. 6) sprawls from the District of Columbia through parts of Virginia, Maryland and West Virginia. Its great competitive advantage lies in proximity to the federal government, which has helped it enjoy an almost shockingly   ”good recession,” with continuing job growth, including in high-wage science- and technology-related fields, and an improving real estate market.

Our other two top ten, No. 9 Phoenix, Ariz., and No. 10 Orlando, Fla., have not done well in the recession, but both still have more jobs now than in 2000. Their demographics remain surprisingly robust. Despite some anti-immigrant agitation by local politicians, immigrants still seem to be flocking to both of these states. Known better s as retirement havens, their ranks of children and families have surged over the past decade. Warm weather, pro-business environments and, most critically, a large supply of affordable housing should allow these regions to grow, if not in the overheated fashion of the past, at rates both steadier and more sustainable.

Sadly, several of the nation’s premier economic regions sit toward the bottom of the list, notably former boom town Los Angeles (No. 47). Los Angeles’ once huge and vibrant industrial sector has shrunk rapidly, in large part the consequence of ever-tightening regulatory burdens. Its once magnetic appeal to educated migrants faded and families are fleeing from persistently high housing prices, poor educational choices and weak employment opportunities. Los Angeles lost over 180,000 children 5 to 17, the largest such drop in the nation.

Many of L.A.’s traditional rivals — such as Chicago (with which is tied at No. 47), New York City (No. 35) and San Francisco (No. 42) — also did poorly on our prospective list.  To be sure,  they will continue to reap the benefits of existing resources — financial institutions, universities and the presence of leading companies — but their future prospects will be limited by their generally sluggish job creation and aging demographics.

Of course, even the most exhaustive research cannot fully predict the future. A significant downsizing of the federal government, for example, would slow the D.C. region’s growth. A big fall in energy prices, or tough restrictions of carbon emissions, could hit the Texas cities, particularly Houston, hard. If housing prices stabilize in the Northeast or West Coast, less people will flock to places like Phoenix, Orlando or even Indianapolis (No.11) , Salt Lake City (No. 12) and Columbus (No. 13). One or more of our now lower ranked locales, like Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York, might also decide to reform in order to become more attractive to small businesses and middle class families.

What is clear is that well-established patterns of job creation and vital demographics will drive future regional growth, not only in the next year, but over the coming decade.  People create economies and they tend to vote with their feet when they choose to locate their families as well as their businesses.  This will prove   more decisive in shaping future growth   than the hip imagery and big city-oriented PR flackery that dominate media coverage of America’s changing regions.

 

Brand New Waterfront Kingsland,TX

Check out this brand new waterfront home built by Scott Cherry Builders in Kingsland,TX. For a private tour or more information call Jay Turner at 830-220-2441.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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JAY TURNER – cell: (830) 220-2441
 
Shoreline Real Estate – HSB
Water
City
Sewer
Mud
County
Burnet
# of Residences
1
Approx. # of Acres
0.12
Approx. Lot Size
74X71
Lot Size Source
 
Approx. Lot SQFT
 
Zoning
 
Flood Zone (Y/N/UK)
 
Restrictions (Y/N/UK)
Yes
Subdivision
Paradise Point
School District
Marble Falls
Approx. Year Built
2011
Approx. Heat/Cool SQFT
3200
SQFT Source
Floor Plan
Single Level Living (Y/N)
No
 
 
 
 
Water Front Type
Open Water
Waterfront Footage
74
Owned to Water (Y/N/UK)
Yes
MLS #
Price
$1,110,000
Class
RESIDENTIAL
Type
Single Family/Site Built
Address
109 PARADISE POINT
City
Kingsland
Area
Kingsland Area
Status
Active
Water Front
Lake LBJ
# of Bedrooms
4
# of Full Baths
3
# of Half Baths
1
# of Stories
3+
Golf Course Lot
No
FLOOR
Carpet, Hard Tile, Hardwood/Parquet
GARAGE-CARPORT
2 Car Attached Garage
HEAT
Central, Electric
INTERIOR EXTRAS
10ft Ceiling, Audio System, Crown Molding,
Elevator, Granite Counter Tops, Recessed Lighting, Walk In
Closet(s)
ROAD FRONTAGE
Paved, Private
ROOF
Composition
VIEW
Hill Country, Lake, Panoramic
WATER AMENITIES
1 Stall Boat Dock w/ Elec, Jet Ski Lift
 
FANTASTIC LAKE LBJ MAIN BODY WATERFRONT HOME ! COMPLETION ESTIMATE AUG. 1. 4 BEDROOM 3 1/2 BATH OPEN PLAN VIEWING
LAKE LBJ AND HILL COUNTRY VIEWS FOR MILES ! STEP OUTSIDE LIVING AREA TO DECK AND BOAT DOCK. OUTDOOR LIVING AREA
FEATURES LAKESIDE FIREPLACE, WATERS EDGE RELAXING, FLATSCREEN TV AND MORE. TOP OF THE LINE BOAT DOCK WITH PARTY
PATIO ABOVE.
APPLIANCES TO CONVEY
Dryer Connection-Electric, Garbage
Disposal, Microwave, Water-Heater Electric, Cooktop
ASSOCIATION FEES INCLUDE
Road Maintenance
COOLING
Central
EXTERIOR
Stone, Stucco Masonry
EXTERIOR FEATURES
Balcony, Covered Deck, Covered Porch
/Patio, Open Concrete Areas, Open Patio, Sprinkler System
FIREPLACES
One Fireplace
FOUNDATION
Slab
This information is deemed reliable, but not guaranteed.
Map
CLIENT HANDOUT
 
 
 

Scott & White Hospital Marble Falls,TX Update

Check out this news article via the local Highlander News. If you want to tour the real  estate market in Marble Falls,TX or Horseshoe Bay,TX surrounding the new hospital call Jay Turner at 830-220-2441. Looks like the Texas Hill Country may be the perfect place to retire or purchase a second home.

Scott & White Healthcare has officially submitted a zoning application for its state-of-the-art Lake of the Hills Regional Medical Center, which will be located in Marble Falls west of the SH 71 and US 281 intersection.

Completing the zoning application will help ensure construction of the 50,000 square foot clinic that will serve as the medical center’s anchor begins this fall, said Kevin Leeper, Scott & White chief executive officer for the Hill Country Region.

“We’re on target to hopefully break ground on Nov. 1,” Leeper said. “I’ve had a chance to review the plan and weigh in on the design. We’re still planning to get it started in November.

“It’s been a long time coming, and you can’t get it finished until you get it started.”

The clinic is expected to open in the first quarter of 2013. The inpatient hospital facility is slated to open in 2017.

For the full story, see Friday’s Highlander

Contact Jay Turner for more information