Posts Tagged ‘cultural’



Neighborhood Quick Sketch: Santa Fe’s Historic Eastside

Authentic old adobes on winding dirt roads, mature trees, bountiful gardens and seasonal water from the acequia or Santa Fe River: this is Santa Fe’s Eastside. A mesh of grand estates, modest adobes, condos, and galleries, the Eastside is a comparatively pastoral, tranquil slice of Santa Fe, walking distance from the cultural bounty of the city’s historic heart.  The Eastside is Santa Fe’s oft depicted, photogenic ambassador. Many homes are over 100 years old, but whether historic or new, the residences weave together to create an engaging, Old World, feel.

Location and character make homes on the Eastside a perennially popular purchase.  The stats below reflect the current state of the market;

Eastside Area Snapshot

Residential Listings (6/30/10)
Active: 124
Pending: 14
Sold: 53*
Average DOM: 201*
Average Listing Price: $712,840*
Average Selling Price: $668,177*
% of List Price: 94%*

*Sold (7/01/09-6/30/10)

Days on Market (DOM)
Eastside Area – Residential Sold*

Selling Price: % of List Price
Eastside Area – Residential Sold*

MLS Comparison, Sales Year To Date
Eastside Area – Residential – 2009 v. 2010
(1/1/09-6/30/09) – (1/1/10-6/30/10)

~*~*

Our listing at 645D East Palace Avenue is emblematic of the area’s offerings.  Originally built in late 1800s, this home plus guesthouse was thoroughly renovated with a French Provençal flair. The double adobe main house, fully surrounded by walls and gate, has an inviting brick patio lushly landscaped with flowers, herbs and trees. The interior is comfortably luxurious. The gourmet kitchen has ample room for a 6-8 person dining room table. The cozy living room with wood-burning fireplace is well-lit from a skylight and duet of casement windows. Adjacent to the living room is a bright bonus room, lined with bookshelves, that could be configured as a library, den, office or guest bedroom. The detached 1 bedroom, 1 bath guesthouse charms with its sweet, private patio, dormer window and radiant heat. Both structures have pitched roofs.  MLS# 201003505

At Peace With Differences

Prejudice cannot see the things that are because it is always looking for things that aren’t. –Anonymous

Recently we had an tipping point experience that coalesced a lifetime of observations and encounters into a need to speak.  A woman who has Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) contacted us to help her buy a home in or around Santa Fe. According to MultipleChemicalSensitivity.org, people with MCS have acute sensitivity or allergic-like reactions “to a variety of chemical pollutants and chemical substances including solvents, VOC’s (Volatile Organic Compounds), perfumes, petrol, diesel, smoke, “chemicals” in general and [may have] problems with regard to pollen, house dust mites, and pet fur & dander.” At present, the cause and complete nature of MCS is not fully understood–words that were once said of other medical conditions such as Epstein-Barr, Lyme disease, and Fibromyalgia. Some, including Quackwatch.com dismiss the symptoms as psychologically based.  When we called one agent to ask her the roster of screening questions we need to pose to see if the house might be a fit (presence of mothballs, herbicides, pesticides, petroleum products, carpet, etc.) the agent said, “Sounds like…You just have a difficult client.”

Last year, we took a National Association of Realtors’ Course entitled, At Home With Diversity (ATWD). ATWD aims, among other objectives, to help agents “examine cultural stereotypes, assumptions, and biases to increase awareness of such thoughts and attitudes, and learn how to value individual differences.” Although much of the course’s material focuses on ensuring compliance with Fair Housing Laws and tapping into the growing multicultural market, that sentence is more a call to shift one’s consciousness than a marketing or legally protective strategy.

Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry and narrow-mindedness –Mark Twain

My curiosity and drive to explore diversity, born of extensive travel, life abroad and early inculcation by my parents that differences were interesting, rather than repulsive, is part of why I chose to get involved in real estate and to live in the small but broad-spirited town of Santa Fe.  Real estate expands our human horizons.  We never know who’s going to roll up on our doorstep. But we ALL have biases and blind spots.  We’ve learned so much in the week we’ve been working with this client.  For example, just because a house is a Green build doesn’t mean it will be a suitable home for someone with MCS. Our client cannot tolerate a wood stain made by a company that states that its products are free of harmful chemicals and toxins. Until she told us, I would have thought the product would be safe.

We’re not here to paint ourselves as righteously superior. We, too, have our notions and our limitations.  The point for all of us who claim to be professionals is to “~ examine [our] cultural stereotypes, assumptions, and biases ~ to increase awareness of such thoughts and attitudes, and ~ learn how to value individual differences.”

Comfort with a difference is an ongoing process; new opportunities arise with every human encounter. Being at peace with difference starts with an open and curious mind.

Santa Fe Real Estate
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