Eagle County (Vail and Beaver Creek) Real Estate: September 2006

Friday, September 29, 2006

www.searchinvail.com Make your dream a reality! Search the MLS for thousands of real estate listings. Real Estate in Eagle County, Colorado (Vail Colorado real estate, Beaver Creek real estate, Bachelor's Gulch properties, Wildridge Realtors, Avon Real Estate, Eagle-Vail Realtors, Minturn real estate, The Vail Valley, Cordillera, Wolcott, Gypsum, Eagle, Edwards real estate and more) has been very active over the past couple of years. Finding a good Realtor in the Vail Valley is imperitive when attempting to obtain a desireable property. www.SearchinVail.com has teamed up with Keller Williams in Edwards, Colorado to help cleints get the service they desire. Using the best technology to search the Vail MLS for real estate and properties has never been more enjoyable and rewarding. Go to www.searchinvail.com in order to obtain a Realtor in the Vail Valley who is interested in assisting your real estate search and get some results. With cutting edge technology and a team of insprired locals, www.searchinvail is the place to find your Vail and Beaver Creek area Realtor who can assist you needs in all of Eagle County. With fairly quick moving inventory and aggressive buyers, you need a pro-active Realtor to assist your Vail, Colorado and Beaver Creek, Colorado area real estate needs.

Thursday, September 28, 2006

www.searchinvail.com As per vaildaily.comVail returns to No. 1 in ski poll— You can say it again: Vail is No. 1.The resort returned to its familiar spot as the top ski resort in North America in this year’s SKI Magazine readers’ poll.It is the 14th time in 19 years that Vail’s has had the top spot. Last year, Vail was No. 2 and Deer Valley in Utah was No. 1. The two resorts swapped places this year.Beaver Creek was ranked eighth, down from sixth last year.Who cares what a magazine says? Well, Matt Carroll, general manager of Double Diamond Ski Shop in Lionshead, said the poll is great publicity for Vail.“I think, to some degree, it adds a certain amount of credibility saying you’re No. 1,” Carroll said. “Some of it is nebulous, but overall, it’s a good place to be.”Tom Neyens, owner of the Ski Valet in Lionshead, said he doesn’t think it makes much of a difference whether Vail is one or two in the rankings.“But if we were to ever drop out of the top three, I think it would be a big hit for Vail from a marketing standpoint,” he said.The top 101. Vail 2. Deer Valley, Utah 3. Snowmass 4. Whistler/Blackcomb 5. Park City, Utah 6. Breckenridge7. Aspen8. Beaver Creek9. Steamboat10. Sun Valley, IdahoImportance of being No. 1From Vail Resorts’ marketing department to Town Hall to local bars, folks in Vail seem to take the No. 1 ranking seriously.After Vail dropped to No. 2 last year, politicians running for Vail Town Council pondered how Vail could get back to the top spot. The rankings even came up during this summer’s Crossroads election, with both sides considering how the proposed building would help or hurt Vail in the vaunted rankings.Mayor, real estate mogul and Vail pioneer Rod Slifer said the rankings force Vail to try to keep improving.“I think you’ll hear it at Town Hall during conversations during the year,” said Mayor Rod Slifer. “Someone will say, ‘We’re No. 1, and we want to stay there.’”Though disappointed that Vail placed a mere sixth in the apres ski category — compared to Aspen’s top spot — Red Lion owner and apres ski fixture Phil Long said the rankings portend a good season.“People who get those ski magazines nationally and internationally make a decision about which resort to go to,” he said. “There’s a lot of spontaneity to it.”SKI magazine says 6,000 readers took part in its ski resort survey. Some in Vail take the results pretty seriously.SKI magazine/Special to the DailyBrowse Vail Daily PhotosA cross-sectionKendall Hamilton, editor-in-chief of SKI Magazine, said the poll’s participants are a good cross-section of skiers. About 6,000 readers participated this year, a record, he said.“Our readers are not ski-town locals,” he said. “They are folks from all over the country who come to ski resorts.”Poll-takers are asked to rate resorts they’ve visited over the last two years.Hamilton said he thinks the poll affects resorts’ success for the upcoming season. Ski resorts should take the result seriously, and Hamilton believes many of them do, he said.“Any resort that wants to be a big destination resort can look to this survey as a valuable indicator,” he said.SKI Magazine readers rank resorts in 18 categories. Vail was in the top 10 in: snow (ninth), grooming (ninth), terrain/variety (second), lifts (second), service (eighth), weather (seventh), lodging (10th), dining (sixth), apres ski (sixth), off-hill activities (eighth), terrain parks (10th), overall satisfaction (sixth) and on-mountain food (eighth). Beaver Creek was in the top 10 in five categories: grooming (sixth), lifts (ninth), weather (eighth), dining (ninth) and on-mountain food (sixth).Vail Resorts’ five ski mountains ranked in the top 20 among Western resorts. Besides Vail and Beaver Creek, Breckenridge was sixth, Keystone was 14th and Heavenly at Lake Tahoe was 17th.Copper Mountain, just east of Vail, ranked 19th.The rankings issue of SKI magazine comes out Sept. 26.Staff Writer Edward Stoner can be reached at 748-2929 or estoner@vaildaily.com.Vail, Coloradohttp://www.searchinvail.com/ Search the MLS for homes in Vail, Lionshead, Cascade, Avon, Beaver Creek, Eagle-Vail, Minturn, Leadville, Wolcott, Red Cliff, Eagle, Edwards, Cordillera, Gypsum, Bachelor Gulch, Arrowhead, Singletree, Berry Creek Ranch, and more! http://www.searchinvail.com/
www.searchinvail.com As per vaildaily.comVail returns to No. 1 in ski poll— You can say it again: Vail is No. 1.The resort returned to its familiar spot as the top ski resort in North America in this year’s SKI Magazine readers’ poll.It is the 14th time in 19 years that Vail’s has had the top spot. Last year, Vail was No. 2 and Deer Valley in Utah was No. 1. The two resorts swapped places this year.Beaver Creek was ranked eighth, down from sixth last year.Who cares what a magazine says? Well, Matt Carroll, general manager of Double Diamond Ski Shop in Lionshead, said the poll is great publicity for Vail.“I think, to some degree, it adds a certain amount of credibility saying you’re No. 1,” Carroll said. “Some of it is nebulous, but overall, it’s a good place to be.”Tom Neyens, owner of the Ski Valet in Lionshead, said he doesn’t think it makes much of a difference whether Vail is one or two in the rankings.“But if we were to ever drop out of the top three, I think it would be a big hit for Vail from a marketing standpoint,” he said.The top 101. Vail 2. Deer Valley, Utah 3. Snowmass 4. Whistler/Blackcomb 5. Park City, Utah 6. Breckenridge7. Aspen8. Beaver Creek9. Steamboat10. Sun Valley, IdahoImportance of being No. 1From Vail Resorts’ marketing department to Town Hall to local bars, folks in Vail seem to take the No. 1 ranking seriously.After Vail dropped to No. 2 last year, politicians running for Vail Town Council pondered how Vail could get back to the top spot. The rankings even came up during this summer’s Crossroads election, with both sides considering how the proposed building would help or hurt Vail in the vaunted rankings.Mayor, real estate mogul and Vail pioneer Rod Slifer said the rankings force Vail to try to keep improving.“I think you’ll hear it at Town Hall during conversations during the year,” said Mayor Rod Slifer. “Someone will say, ‘We’re No. 1, and we want to stay there.’”Though disappointed that Vail placed a mere sixth in the apres ski category — compared to Aspen’s top spot — Red Lion owner and apres ski fixture Phil Long said the rankings portend a good season.“People who get those ski magazines nationally and internationally make a decision about which resort to go to,” he said. “There’s a lot of spontaneity to it.”SKI magazine says 6,000 readers took part in its ski resort survey. Some in Vail take the results pretty seriously.SKI magazine/Special to the DailyBrowse Vail Daily PhotosA cross-sectionKendall Hamilton, editor-in-chief of SKI Magazine, said the poll’s participants are a good cross-section of skiers. About 6,000 readers participated this year, a record, he said.“Our readers are not ski-town locals,” he said. “They are folks from all over the country who come to ski resorts.”Poll-takers are asked to rate resorts they’ve visited over the last two years.Hamilton said he thinks the poll affects resorts’ success for the upcoming season. Ski resorts should take the result seriously, and Hamilton believes many of them do, he said.“Any resort that wants to be a big destination resort can look to this survey as a valuable indicator,” he said.SKI Magazine readers rank resorts in 18 categories. Vail was in the top 10 in: snow (ninth), grooming (ninth), terrain/variety (second), lifts (second), service (eighth), weather (seventh), lodging (10th), dining (sixth), apres ski (sixth), off-hill activities (eighth), terrain parks (10th), overall satisfaction (sixth) and on-mountain food (eighth). Beaver Creek was in the top 10 in five categories: grooming (sixth), lifts (ninth), weather (eighth), dining (ninth) and on-mountain food (sixth).Vail Resorts’ five ski mountains ranked in the top 20 among Western resorts. Besides Vail and Beaver Creek, Breckenridge was sixth, Keystone was 14th and Heavenly at Lake Tahoe was 17th.Copper Mountain, just east of Vail, ranked 19th.The rankings issue of SKI magazine comes out Sept. 26.Staff Writer Edward Stoner can be reached at 748-2929 or estoner@vaildaily.com.Vail, Coloradowww.searchinvail.com Search the MLS for homes in Vail, Lionshead, Cascade, Avon, Beaver Creek, Eagle-Vail, Minturn, Leadville, Wolcott, Red Cliff, Eagle, Edwards, Cordillera, Gypsum, Bachelor Gulch, Arrowhead, Singletree, Berry Creek Ranch, and more! www.searchinvail.com

Monday, September 25, 2006

www.searchinvail.com Real Estate in Eagle County, Colorado (Vail Colorado real estate, Beaver Creek real estate, Bachelor's Gulch properties, Wildridge Realtors, Avon Real Estate, Eagle-Vail Realtors, Minturn real estate, The Vail Valley, Cordillera, Wolcott, Gypsum, Eagle, Edwards real estate and more) has been very active over the past couple of years. Finding a good Realtor in the Vail Valley is imperitive when attempting to obtain a desireable property. www.SearchinVail.com has teamed up with Keller Williams in Edwards, Colorado to help cleints get the service they desire. Using the best technology to search the Vail MLS for real estate and properties has never been more enjoyable and rewarding. Go to www.searchinvail.com in order to obtain a Realtor in the Vail Valley who is interested in assisting your real estate search and get some results. With cutting edge technology and a team of insprired locals, www.searchinvail is the place to find your Vail and Beaver Creek area Realtor who can assist you needs in all of Eagle County. With fairly quick moving inventory and aggressive buyers, you need a pro-active Realtor to assist your Vail, Colorado and Beaver Creek, Colorado area real estate needs.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

www.searchinvail.comIf you are looking to purchase real estate (homes and/or land) in Eagle County, Colorado (Vail, Beaver Creek, Bachelor's Gulch, Eagle, Gypsum, Eagle-Vail, Minturn, Vail Valley, Eagle Ranch, Brightwater Club, Lionshead, Vail Village, Edwards, Cordillera, Arrowhead and more)...go to www.searchinvail.com and one of the pro-active Realtors will quickly respond to your real estate and MLS search requests. The Realtors at www.searchinvail.com are here to assist you in obtaining the perfect property to match your Vail and Beaver Creek real estate needs.www.searchinvail.com(Vail Real Estate, Beaver Creek Real Estate, Vail Colorado Real Estate, Beaver Creek Colorado Real Estate and all of Eagle County, Colorado Real Estate)www.searchinvail.com

Thursday, September 21, 2006

www.searchinvail.com
As per vaildaily.com
Vail returns to No. 1 in ski poll— You can say it again: Vail is No. 1.The resort returned to its familiar spot as the top ski resort in North America in this year’s SKI Magazine readers’ poll.It is the 14th time in 19 years that Vail’s has had the top spot. Last year, Vail was No. 2 and Deer Valley in Utah was No. 1. The two resorts swapped places this year.Beaver Creek was ranked eighth, down from sixth last year.Who cares what a magazine says? Well, Matt Carroll, general manager of Double Diamond Ski Shop in Lionshead, said the poll is great publicity for Vail.“I think, to some degree, it adds a certain amount of credibility saying you’re No. 1,” Carroll said. “Some of it is nebulous, but overall, it’s a good place to be.”Tom Neyens, owner of the Ski Valet in Lionshead, said he doesn’t think it makes much of a difference whether Vail is one or two in the rankings.“But if we were to ever drop out of the top three, I think it would be a big hit for Vail from a marketing standpoint,” he said.The top 101. Vail 2. Deer Valley, Utah 3. Snowmass 4. Whistler/Blackcomb 5. Park City, Utah 6. Breckenridge7. Aspen8. Beaver Creek9. Steamboat10. Sun Valley, IdahoImportance of being No. 1From Vail Resorts’ marketing department to Town Hall to local bars, folks in Vail seem to take the No. 1 ranking seriously.After Vail dropped to No. 2 last year, politicians running for Vail Town Council pondered how Vail could get back to the top spot. The rankings even came up during this summer’s Crossroads election, with both sides considering how the proposed building would help or hurt Vail in the vaunted rankings.Mayor, real estate mogul and Vail pioneer Rod Slifer said the rankings force Vail to try to keep improving.“I think you’ll hear it at Town Hall during conversations during the year,” said Mayor Rod Slifer. “Someone will say, ‘We’re No. 1, and we want to stay there.’”Though disappointed that Vail placed a mere sixth in the apres ski category — compared to Aspen’s top spot — Red Lion owner and apres ski fixture Phil Long said the rankings portend a good season.“People who get those ski magazines nationally and internationally make a decision about which resort to go to,” he said. “There’s a lot of spontaneity to it.”SKI magazine says 6,000 readers took part in its ski resort survey. Some in Vail take the results pretty seriously.SKI magazine/Special to the DailyBrowse Vail Daily PhotosA cross-sectionKendall Hamilton, editor-in-chief of SKI Magazine, said the poll’s participants are a good cross-section of skiers. About 6,000 readers participated this year, a record, he said.“Our readers are not ski-town locals,” he said. “They are folks from all over the country who come to ski resorts.”Poll-takers are asked to rate resorts they’ve visited over the last two years.Hamilton said he thinks the poll affects resorts’ success for the upcoming season. Ski resorts should take the result seriously, and Hamilton believes many of them do, he said.“Any resort that wants to be a big destination resort can look to this survey as a valuable indicator,” he said.SKI Magazine readers rank resorts in 18 categories. Vail was in the top 10 in: snow (ninth), grooming (ninth), terrain/variety (second), lifts (second), service (eighth), weather (seventh), lodging (10th), dining (sixth), apres ski (sixth), off-hill activities (eighth), terrain parks (10th), overall satisfaction (sixth) and on-mountain food (eighth). Beaver Creek was in the top 10 in five categories: grooming (sixth), lifts (ninth), weather (eighth), dining (ninth) and on-mountain food (sixth).Vail Resorts’ five ski mountains ranked in the top 20 among Western resorts. Besides Vail and Beaver Creek, Breckenridge was sixth, Keystone was 14th and Heavenly at Lake Tahoe was 17th.Copper Mountain, just east of Vail, ranked 19th.The rankings issue of SKI magazine comes out Sept. 26.Staff Writer Edward Stoner can be reached at 748-2929 or estoner@vaildaily.com.Vail, Coloradowww.searchinvail.com Search the MLS for homes in Vail, Lionshead, Cascade, Avon, Beaver Creek, Eagle-Vail, Minturn, Leadville, Wolcott, Red Cliff, Eagle, Edwards, Cordillera, Gypsum, Bachelor Gulch, Arrowhead, Singletree, Berry Creek Ranch, and more! www.searchinvail.com

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

www.searchinvail.comWhen looking for a Realtor in the Vail Valley (Beaver Creek, Avon, Eagle, Eagle-Vail, Edwards, Gypsum, Minturn, etc) a lot of people are finding that the internet can be a good place to find a Realtor and also, sometimes, a bad place to try and get information. If a client chooses to go to www.searchinvail.com, they have found the right place to search for all of their real estate needs. With cutting edge technology and quick responses from the Realtors, clients can expect the internet real estate service that they deserve. Real estate in Vail, Beaver Creek and the surrounding areas moves quickly. Requesting to receive listings they day they are listed is a great way to start. Working with your Realtor, a client needs to let the Eagle County Realtor know what they desire from the beginning. There are many different areas that fit many different personalities. Log on to www.searchinvail.com to find your Realtor for Vail, Beaver Creek, Eagle-Vail, Avon, Eagle, Gypsum, Minturn and all of Eagle County, Colorado.www.searchinvail.com

Monday, September 18, 2006

As per vaildaily.com
Vail returns to No. 1 in ski poll

— You can say it again: Vail is No. 1.The resort returned to its familiar spot as the top ski resort in North America in this year’s SKI Magazine readers’ poll.It is the 14th time in 19 years that Vail’s has had the top spot. Last year, Vail was No. 2 and Deer Valley in Utah was No. 1. The two resorts swapped places this year.Beaver Creek was ranked eighth, down from sixth last year.Who cares what a magazine says? Well, Matt Carroll, general manager of Double Diamond Ski Shop in Lionshead, said the poll is great publicity for Vail.“I think, to some degree, it adds a certain amount of credibility saying you’re No. 1,” Carroll said. “Some of it is nebulous, but overall, it’s a good place to be.”Tom Neyens, owner of the Ski Valet in Lionshead, said he doesn’t think it makes much of a difference whether Vail is one or two in the rankings.“But if we were to ever drop out of the top three, I think it would be a big hit for Vail from a marketing standpoint,” he said.
The top 10
1. Vail 2. Deer Valley, Utah 3. Snowmass 4. Whistler/Blackcomb 5. Park City, Utah 6. Breckenridge7. Aspen8. Beaver Creek9. Steamboat10. Sun Valley, IdahoImportance of being No. 1From Vail Resorts’ marketing department to Town Hall to local bars, folks in Vail seem to take the No. 1 ranking seriously.After Vail dropped to No. 2 last year, politicians running for Vail Town Council pondered how Vail could get back to the top spot. The rankings even came up during this summer’s Crossroads election, with both sides considering how the proposed building would help or hurt Vail in the vaunted rankings.Mayor, real estate mogul and Vail pioneer Rod Slifer said the rankings force Vail to try to keep improving.“I think you’ll hear it at Town Hall during conversations during the year,” said Mayor Rod Slifer. “Someone will say, ‘We’re No. 1, and we want to stay there.’”Though disappointed that Vail placed a mere sixth in the apres ski category — compared to Aspen’s top spot — Red Lion owner and apres ski fixture Phil Long said the rankings portend a good season.“People who get those ski magazines nationally and internationally make a decision about which resort to go to,” he said. “There’s a lot of spontaneity to it.”
SKI magazine says 6,000 readers took part in its ski resort survey. Some in Vail take the results pretty seriously.SKI magazine/Special to the DailyBrowse Vail Daily Photos
A cross-sectionKendall Hamilton, editor-in-chief of SKI Magazine, said the poll’s participants are a good cross-section of skiers. About 6,000 readers participated this year, a record, he said.“Our readers are not ski-town locals,” he said. “They are folks from all over the country who come to ski resorts.”Poll-takers are asked to rate resorts they’ve visited over the last two years.Hamilton said he thinks the poll affects resorts’ success for the upcoming season. Ski resorts should take the result seriously, and Hamilton believes many of them do, he said.“Any resort that wants to be a big destination resort can look to this survey as a valuable indicator,” he said.SKI Magazine readers rank resorts in 18 categories. Vail was in the top 10 in: snow (ninth), grooming (ninth), terrain/variety (second), lifts (second), service (eighth), weather (seventh), lodging (10th), dining (sixth), apres ski (sixth), off-hill activities (eighth), terrain parks (10th), overall satisfaction (sixth) and on-mountain food (eighth). Beaver Creek was in the top 10 in five categories: grooming (sixth), lifts (ninth), weather (eighth), dining (ninth) and on-mountain food (sixth).Vail Resorts’ five ski mountains ranked in the top 20 among Western resorts. Besides Vail and Beaver Creek, Breckenridge was sixth, Keystone was 14th and Heavenly at Lake Tahoe was 17th.Copper Mountain, just east of Vail, ranked 19th.
The rankings issue of SKI magazine comes out Sept. 26.Staff Writer Edward Stoner can be reached at 748-2929 or estoner@vaildaily.com.Vail, Colorado

www.searchinvail.com Search the MLS for homes in Vail, Lionshead, Cascade, Avon, Beaver Creek, Eagle-Vail, Minturn, Leadville, Wolcott, Red Cliff, Eagle, Edwards, Cordillera, Gypsum, Bachelor Gulch, Arrowhead, Singletree, Berry Creek Ranch, and more! www.searchinvail.com
AS PER VAIL DAILY:Plans for Roost Lodge approvedVAIL — A scaled-back version of the Roost Lodge redevelopment was approved Tuesday.The project, first submitted to the town 12 month ago, was reduced in size after the planning commission and neighbors said it didn’t fit in with the neighborhood. Nearby residents said it was too big and tall.The project will be a four-story Marriott Residence Inn and have 101 hotel rooms, 28 condos, three employee housing units and 169 parking spaces.The planning commission approved the project, 7-0.“The development has come a tremendously long way from what we first saw a year ago,” said commissioner Rollie Kjesbo.Last November, the developer was proposing 129 hotel rooms and 39 condos. The proposal’s height was also reduced.The project found its way into the debate over the Solaris redevelopment, which was ultimately approved in a townwide election last month. Friends of Vail Village, which opposed “overdevelopment” in Vail, said the Roost Lodge proposal was evidence of redevelopment that is too big and tall.The developer of the site, Timberline Roost Lodge LLC, filed suit against the group, citing misinformation in its campaign materials. “We’ve had discussions regarding the settlement of the lawsuit,” Kevin Deighan, one of the members of the development team, said after the project was approved Monday. “I think it’s a shame we had to file a lawsuit to get this group to act with integrity and ethics.”A couple residents who live near the Roost Lodge said Monday they are still concerned about the size of the project.“To me, it still seems like a very large building and it affects a large area,” said West Vail resident Greg Bemis.Demolition of the Roost Lodge, which was built in the early ’70s, is scheduled for May. The new building is scheduled to be completed by the fall of 2008.The Roost Lodge has 77 hotel room and has long been one of the most inexpensive lodges in Vail.Staff Writer Edward Stoner can be reached at 748-2929 or estoner@vaildaily.comVail, Coloradowww.searchinvail.com Search the MLS for thousands of Listings-Avon-Beaver Creek, Vail, Eagle, Minturn, Eagle-Vail, Wolcott, Edwards, Gypsum, Eagle.

Friday, September 15, 2006

www.searchinvail.comAs per www.vaildaily.comVail real estate boom moving westVAIL, Colo. — With huge redevelopment projects changing the skylines in Vail Village and Lionshead as part of the resort’s billion-dollar “New Dawn,” planners, developers and real estate experts are now looking westward.The town of Vail is amending its master plan for a new part of town —“West Lionshead,” roughly half a mile of land west of the Vail Marriott Mountain Resort & Spa between Interstate 70 and Gore Creek — with the ultimate goal being a third village of sorts, complete with a new, high-speed chairlift, new retail and entertainment establishments and, of course, new luxury homes.All this talk of a new village in Vail, with shopping, dining, mountain access and other resort amenities, has owners and brokers of existing properties on West Forest Road, a quiet street with a dozen or so homes overlooking Gore Creek and West Lionshead, realizing they’re sitting on some pretty hot property. Until now, they’ve been relatively isolated, especially in winter; in a few short years, however, residents of West Forest Road will have all of that just a short walk away.Alan Goncharoff, a local developer and a partner in White Rock Real Estate, recently remodeled and listed a spacious four-bedroom, five-bathroom home at 736 W. Forest Rd., about a hundred yards from the bridge over Gore Creek. He says it won’t take buyers long to realize a great investment.“This neighborhood on West Forest Road is going to be a fabulous place to live, and for now it’s still a bargain,” he says, adding prices already have nearly doubled on West Forest Road since he purchased the original, three-bedroom home a couple of years ago with plans to remodel. “You have a quiet street overlooking Gore Creek, views across the valley and West Lionshead out your front door. In back, you look up through the aspens to the ski mountain.”Luxury homesLeading the way is Gore Creek Place, a luxurious new enclave of private residencies by Vail Resorts Development Company nearing completion on the banks of Gore Creek, with a main entrance on West Forest Road. Buyers snapped up these properties almost immediately after they hit the market last summer, and all of the 3,500- to 4,400-square-foot homes are scheduled for completion by the end of this year. As well, Vail Resorts continues to work on plans for the Ritz-Carlton Residences, Vail, a luxurious development where West Forest Road meets South Frontage Road, formerly a parking structure and surface lot for resort employees. In the ski company’s most recent announcements, the Ritz-Carlton Residences, Vail, will include 107 private, wholly owned luxury homes — from two-bedroom apartments to six-bedroom penthouses — adjacent to the new, proposed chairlift. These residencies have not yet been offered for sale.“West Lionshead is a unique opportunity in many ways,” says Jack Hunn, senior vice president of development for Vail Resorts Development Company. “It accomplishes the town’s goals of increasing bed base and retail space; it can extend the currently perceived western boundary of Lionshead; and it will be a large, planned section that will adhere to the standards currently being set by projects like the Marriott renovation and The Arabelle at Vail Square.”A new liftMeanwhile, Vail Resorts also has announced plans to build a new high-speed chairlift that will deliver skiers and snowboarders from West Lionshead to the bottom of the Pride Express Lift, Chair 26, which continues on to Eagle’s Nest, at the top of Vail Mountain. The ski company already has purchased several properties at the bottom of the new chairlift, where preliminary plans call for a new parking structure and transportation center. If these moves pan out, West Lionshead will be a fifth portal to the ski mountain, relieving pressure on existing mountain-access points at Golden Peak, Vail Village, Lionshead and Cascade Village.“It’ll be a very good transit link, reducing demand at the other portals. Traffic, skier drop-off, mass-transit — the whole scenario will be much better,” says Jim Lamont, who works with planners from the town and Vail Resorts as executive director of the Vail Village Homeowners Association.Lamont also is lobbying for nightclubs and other entertainment venues — as well as affordable housing — to be included in the plans. “I see it as an entertainment center for all age groups, especially young adults. In general, a lot of fun, high-end stuff will be coming to West Lionshead.”Lamont says there’s even discussion of realigning South Frontage Road to parallel I-70, creating a pedestrian-friendly village within West Lionshead, as well as a “Simba Run Underpass” linking South Frontage Road with its counterpart north of the interstate.Hunn says all these concepts and ideas have “gelled” over the last nine to 12 months.“But there's still a long way to go,” Hunn says. In addition to finalizing plans, there are processes to go through with the town, CDOT, neighbors and the community before we can put a shovel in the ground.”Bright futureJoni White Taylor of Sonnenalp Real Estate, who’s been listing properties in Vail for 26 years, has a new, 3,617-square-foot, four-bedroom, four-bath home at 798 W. Forest Rd. on the market for $4.6 million, or about $1,270 per square foot. She expects values to rise dramatically in the next few years as West Lionshead evolves — rivaling prices between Lionshead and Vail Village on East Forest Road and Beaver Dam Road at more than $2,000 per square foot.“It looks like there’s going to be a whole new village just down the street, with restaurants, shops, a high-speed lift. And everything’s going to be brand new. It should be beautiful,” White Taylor says. “The future for this neighborhood is very bright.”For more information on West Lionshead and real estate opportunities on West Forest Road, call White Rock Real Estate at 970-827-5600 or Sonnenalp Real Estate at 970-477-5300, or visit www.whiterockrealestate.com or www.sonnenalprealestate.com.Vail Coloradowww.searchinvail.com

Thursday, September 14, 2006

www.searchinvail.comWhen looking for a Realtor in the Vail Valley (Beaver Creek, Avon, Eagle, Eagle-Vail, Edwards, Gypsum, Minturn, etc) a lot of people are finding that the internet can be a good place to find a Realtor and also, sometimes, a bad place to try and get information. If a client chooses to go to www.searchinvail.com, they have found the right place to search for all of their real estate needs. With cutting edge technology and quick responses from the Realtors, clients can expect the internet real estate service that they deserve. Real estate in Vail, Beaver Creek and the surrounding areas moves quickly. Requesting to receive listings they day they are listed is a great way to start. Working with your Realtor, a client needs to let the Eagle County Realtor know what they desire from the beginning. There are many different areas that fit many different personalities. Log on to www.searchinvail.com to find your Realtor for Vail, Beaver Creek, Eagle-Vail, Avon, Eagle, Gypsum, Minturn and all of Eagle County, Colorado.www.searchinvail.com

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

www.searchinvail.com Real Estate in Eagle County, Colorado (Vail Colorado real estate, Beaver Creek real estate, Bachelor's Gulch properties, Wildridge Realtors, Avon Real Estate, Eagle-Vail Realtors, Minturn real estate, The Vail Valley, Cordillera, Wolcott, Gypsum, Eagle, Edwards real estate and more) has been very active over the past couple of years. Finding a good Realtor in the Vail Valley is imperitive when attempting to obtain a desireable property. www.SearchinVail.com has teamed up with Keller Williams in Edwards, Colorado to help cleints get the service they desire. Using the best technology to search the Vail MLS for real estate and properties has never been more enjoyable and rewarding. Go to www.searchinvail.com in order to obtain a Realtor in the Vail Valley who is interested in assisting your real estate search and get some results. With cutting edge technology and a team of insprired locals, www.searchinvail is the place to find your Vail and Beaver Creek area Realtor who can assist you needs in all of Eagle County. With fairly quick moving inventory and aggressive buyers, you need a pro-active Realtor to assist your Vail, Colorado and Beaver Creek, Colorado area real estate needs.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Monday, September 11, 2006

As Per Vail Daily-Edwards on list of U.S. ‘dreamtowns’EDWARDS — It’s still true. When it comes to places to live and work, it’s all about location.Edwards’ location in the middle of the valley has made it a popular, bustling area. Now Edwards has a new location, in the middle of a list of the top 10 best small cities and towns in the United States.The list was compiled by Bizjournals.com, an Internet publication owned by the same company that owns the Denver Business Journal and similar newspapers around the country.The recognition of Edwards as a special place to live is something Carol Williams has hoped for, and worked for, for decades.Williams and her husband, Bill, got into Edwards early, developing Old Edwards Estates in the 1970s and ‘80s, the Morning Star townhomes in the early 1990s, and, later, the Riverwalk complex.All those projects were bets that Edwards would eventually be what it’s become, a bustling area with crowded restaurants, busy shops, and the year ‘round vibrancy for which Vail Village strives. “This is what we’d hoped would come to fruition,” Williams said of the national recognition. “It’s what all our hopes and desires and dreams had been aiming for.”Because it was put together by a business publication, the criteria used to create the list included the growth of small businesses and the number of small businesses per 1,000 residents. Other factors in the survey included income growth, the property tax burden, and the education level of the local population. The survey also measured housing affordability.Business in the bustleSo, what do Edwards business owners think of the area as a place to do business?The top 10“America’s Dreamtowns,” according to Bizjournals.com1) Bozeman, Mont.2) Jackson, Wyo.3) Durango, Colo.4) Easton, Md.5) Laramie, Wyo.6) Edwards7) Kill Devil Hills, N.C.8) Pierre, S.D.9) Silverthorne10) Los Alamos, N.M.Both Linda Hill and Raymond Bleesz are glad they set up shop in the mid-valley.Bleesz, co-owner of Brush Creek Dry Goods in Riverwalk, bought a small space nearly eight years ago.“The timing and the location was right at the time,” Bleesz said. Since buying his first 965-square-foot space, he’s bought three more units. He’s expanded the store into those adjacent storefronts and now rents out the original shop space.“I’m putting all my money into Riverwalk right now,” he said. “It’s been a very good investment.”When Bleesz first opened in Riverwalk, the place didn’t have near the bustle it does now, he said. “It’s turned out to be a great place to be,” he said. “There are locals, second-home owners, and we get some of the bedroom and condo people in Vail coming down to shop.”And the folks who live in Edwards, many of whom are well-educated with plenty of disposable income, are just the kind of people to whom Brush Creek Dry Goods caters.“We sell lifestyle clothing,” store co-owner Faith Bleesz said. “People here are playing golf, fishing, biking, and really enjoying it.”Edwards also attracts people whose businesses don’t use cash registers.The professional setLinda Hill, owner of Hill and Company, a local advertising and marketing agency, was one of the first business owners to buy a space in Riverwalk in 1995. It’s been a good move.“We first moved here for the opportunity to purchase our space,” Hill said. “But we saw the scope of Riverwalk and Edwards, and saw it could become a hub. We could live close to where we work, and have entertainment here.”Hill said the education level of residents helps her find people with the skills needed to work in her office. Even if those professionals live in Avon or Eagle, Edwards’ location makes it easy for them to get to work.For Hill, Edwards’ location is about her own people and her customers.With clients on the Western Slope the Front Range and in other states, Hill said Edwards is a good place to be.“We have to think about access to the airport,” she said. “And the driveability to the Western Slope and the Front Range is good.”And, Hill said, Edwards is also a good place to bring clients, since there are now several restaurants and catering companies in the neighborhood.“It’s a very good place to do business,” she said.Convenience, convenience, convenienceAs Edwards has grown and businesses have come, the people who live in the area find life more convenient all the time.“It’s a convenient lifestyle in a very nice place,” Singletree resident Mitch Perry said.Perry and his family live on a street that reflects what much of Edwards has become. There are real estate agents, doctors, school teachers and retired people in his neighborhood. Shopping and restaurants are moments away, and much more is just a few minutes farther by car.“Anywhere you go there’s an amenity,” he said.Dana Maurer and her family moved to Homestead about 10 years ago. They ended up in Edwards kind of by accident, she said.“Now we wouldn’t live anywhere else,” Maurer said. A decade ago, Edwards was just starting to catch fire, and there was much less going on in and around Riverwalk. That was a little tough for a young family that had just moved west from Chicago.“Now, we can drive, bike or walk down the hill and have it all,” she said. “We have fabulous restaurants now. We used to go to Vail or Beaver Creek for special occasions, and now we don’t need to.“And there’s great shopping,” she added. “I still can’t shop for the kids here, but if I need an outfit or a gift, it’s right there.”Besides what’s in the middle of Edwards, the Maurers’ neighborhood is chock-full of kids.“We’ve made some great friends,” she said.Besides families, Edwards has become a Mecca for people like Gary Charbrand. A business owner in Jacksonville, Fla., Charbrand had come to Vail to ski a few times, but hadn’t been to the valley in the summer.A few years ago, he came to play in a golf tournament at Singletree organized by a group from Jacksonville.“We came out on a Friday and bought a house on Sunday,” Charbrand said. “I love it out here. We come out for the summer, do a little work, and try to enjoy the summer.“There are about eight couples from (Jacksonville) who’ve bought homes in Edwards,” he added. “We’re taking over.On the Netbizjournals.com/edit_special/41.htmlStaff Writer Scott N. Miller can be reached at 748-2930, or smiller@vaildaily.com.Vail Daily, Vail Colorado

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Friday, September 08, 2006

www.searchinvail.comReal Estate in Eagle County, Colorado (Vail Colorado real estate, Beaver Creek real estate, Bachelor's Gulch properties, Wildridge Realtors, Avon Real Estate, Eagle-Vail Realtors, Minturn real estate, The Vail Valley, Cordillera, Wolcott, Gypsum, Eagle, Edwards real estate and more) has been very active over the past couple of years. Finding a good Realtor in the Vail Valley is imperitive when attempting to obtain a desireable property. www.SearchinVail.com has teamed up with Keller Williams in Edwards, Colorado to help cleints get the service they desire. Using the best technology to search the Vail MLS for real estate and properties has never been more enjoyable and rewarding. Go to www.searchinvail.com in order to obtain a Realtor in the Vail Valley who is interested in assisting your real estate search and get some results. With cutting edge technology and a team of insprired locals, www.searchinvail is the place to find your Vail and Beaver Creek area Realtor who can assist you needs in all of Eagle County. With fairly quick moving inventory and aggressive buyers, you need a pro-active Realtor to assist your Vail, Colorado and Beaver Creek, Colorado area real estate needs. www.searchinvail.com(Vail Colorado real estate, Beaver Creek Colorado real Estate, Cordillera real Estate, Vail real estate, Beaver Creek real estate, Bachelor's Gulch real estate, Avon real Estate, Avon Colorado real estate, minturn Ginn project area real estate, Vail Valley real estate, Vail, Beaver Creek, Avon, Gypsum Colorado real Estate, Eagle real estate)www.searchinvail.com

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

www.searchinvail.com As Per Vail Daily-
Development and winery one step closer in Wolcott
— Wolcott will probably change forever soon. Edwards will stand pat, at least for a while.The Vines at Vail, a project that includes townhomes, commercial space, a winery and a lodge at Wolcott, moved one step closer to groundbreaking Tuesday. Two hours later, the Eagle County commissioners put off for a month a decision about the West End, a proposed development of a 4-acre property near the main intersection in Edwards.
Vines at Vail by the numbers
22 rental and price-capped units.7 single-family homes.24 market-priced townhomes.30 rooms at the lodge.1 winery.The Vines at Vail will bring what the developer called a “resort” kind of project to Wolcott. It will also include a fairly new idea in the valley: Housing for people who work in the shops and offices there. The plan includes 11 rental units and 11 for-sale units that will be restricted in price, both for the first sale and the next buyers.The project also includes 24 townhomes to be sold at market prices. Those homes will be above shop and office space on the ground floor. Those spaces will be sold separately, but developer Patrick Chirichillo said he expects at least some home buyers to also buy commercial space below.At an earlier hearing, several Wolcott residents and property owners spoke in favor of the project. Tuesday, the only member of the public to speak was Fred Green, president of the Eagle Springs country club just upstream from the Vines at Vail property. Green said he didn’t want to testify about the winery project, but asked the commissioners to delay approval of the Vines at Vail project until a comprehensive plan was finished for the Wolcott area.
West End by the numbers
65 possible market-priced condominiums.30,000 square feet of retail space.4.25 acres of developable land.Plan for the future“You need to plan for the future carefully, with great detail,” Green said. “The process under way here today undercuts that process.”Commissioner Peter Runyon shared his opinions, though, calling the project incompatible with surrounding land uses, and saying Chirichillo and his development team hadn’t provided enough information.Commissioners Tom Stone and Arn Menconi disagreed and sent the project along to its next step, a hearing for final approval. Menconi praised Chirichillo for providing as much employee housing as he did.The West End project, just west of the main intersection in Edwards on the north side of U.S. Highway 6, is much earlier along in its county approval process.While the commissioners sounded interested, they sent the developers, Midtown Development of Longmont, back for more information.One of the neighboring property owners has his own worries about the plan, especially the part that could shut down one of his access points to Highway 6 and send traffic through one of the West End’s parking lots.
How they voted
- Vines at Vail: 2-1, with Peter Runyon opposed.- West End: 3-0 to delay the hearing until Oct. 10.“How many of us like to drive through a parking lot?” Kurt Vogelman said. Vogelman, who owns the land just west of the West End property, also said he’s worried about putting more traffic into an area that already has plenty, and he didn’t care for the idea of putting a four-story building near his eastern property line.“Traffic is nerve-racking today,” Vogelman said.Speaking to Midtown partner Brian Bair, Stone said he doesn’t see many good answers for the traffic problems around that intersection, adding that the best answer might be a roundabout.Menconi asked for more information about the West End’s housing plan for employees.The Midtown partners will take another shot at their first commissioners’ approval Oct. 10.
Vail Daily Staff Writer Scott Miller can be reached at 748-2930 or smiller@vaildaily.com.
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Monday, September 04, 2006

www.searchinvail.com Make your dream a reality! Search the MLS for thousands of real estate listings. Real Estate in Eagle County, Colorado (Vail Colorado real estate, Beaver Creek real estate, Bachelor's Gulch properties, Wildridge Realtors, Avon Real Estate, Eagle-Vail Realtors, Minturn real estate, The Vail Valley, Cordillera, Wolcott, Gypsum, Eagle, Edwards real estate and more) has been very active over the past couple of years. Finding a good Realtor in the Vail Valley is imperitive when attempting to obtain a desireable property. www.SearchinVail.com has teamed up with Keller Williams in Edwards, Colorado to help cleints get the service they desire. Using the best technology to search the Vail MLS for real estate and properties has never been more enjoyable and rewarding. Go to www.searchinvail.com in order to obtain a Realtor in the Vail Valley who is interested in assisting your real estate search and get some results. With cutting edge technology and a team of insprired locals, www.searchinvail is the place to find your Vail and Beaver Creek area Realtor who can assist you needs in all of Eagle County. With fairly quick moving inventory and aggressive buyers, you need a pro-active Realtor to assist your Vail, Colorado and Beaver Creek, Colorado area real estate needs.