Please Don't Stop The Music

Please Don’t Stop The Music — Rihanna

When I first moved to Irvine, I lived in Oak Creek. It is still one of my favorite neighborhoods. My wife has given me her parameters for what she desires in a home, and today’s featured property perfectly fits her description (now if I could just afford it…) It is in Oak Creek near the elementary school, it has a large yard, it is an open plan, the wood is a medium tone, and the surfaces are a medium tone granite, there is a downstairs den/bedroom, and the home itself is spacious. When prices get to the affordability range, this is the kind of property I will be bidding on.

Today’s featured property is a story of of the Ponzi Scheme / Musical Chairs aspect of the real estate bubble coming to an end. The owner of this property is the one without a chair. I suspect she wishes the music would not have stopped playing.

2 Palmwood Kitchen

Asking Price: $999,999IrvineRenter

Income Requirement: $249,999

Downpayment Needed: $199,999

Monthly Equity Burn: $8,333

Purchase Price:
$1,194,000

Purchase Date: 4/11/2005

Address: 2 Palmwood, Irvine, CA 92618

Short Sale

Beds: 4
Baths: 3
Sq. Ft.: 3,029
$/Sq. Ft.: $330
Lot Size:
Property Type: Single Family Residence
Style: Other
Year Built: 1999
Stories: 2 Levels
Area: Oak Creek
County: Orange
MLS#: S536411
Source: SoCalMLS
Status: Active
On Redfin: 5 days

Gorgeously upgraded home located at end of cul-de-sac on extra large
lot in Oak Creek Village in Irvine. Gated Community w/ 3 pools,
clubhouse, parks, and neighborhood elementary school. 3 spacious
bedrooms, including large master suite w/ great walk-in closet and
bathroom. Bonus room upstairs. Large den downstairs as well as living
and dining room, and family room w/ fireplace. Plantation shutters, new
hardwood floors and custom moding on entire first floor….vaulted
ceilings….upgraded carpet. Spacious and functional kitchen w/ kitchen
nook, double ovens, large island, built in refrigerator, granite
counter tops, and stainless steel appliances. Wrought iron staircase,
crown molding, decorator paint, and a 3 car garage. Very close to
Spectrum Center in Irvine. Easy to access I-5 and I-405

moding?

Check out the sales history of this property:

Date Price Appreciation
Jul 08, 1999 $551,500

Mar 30, 2004 $1,035,000

14.2%/yr

Apr 18, 2005 $1,194,000

14.6%/yr

The first owners doubled their money in 5 years. Now that is timing the market.

The second owners made $159,000 in less than one year of ownership. Great trade!

The third owner… well, she didn’t get quite so lucky. She purchased the property in 2005 with a $955,200 first mortgage, a $119,400 second and she put 10% down. She managed to refinance into an Option ARM for $1,088,000 just before the credit crunch in early August 2007. Brilliant move, refinancing into an Option ARM — not. I suspect her plan was to lower her payments and wait out this “minor correction.” Unfortunately, the music is not going to play again, and she either cannot make the payments, or she has realized it is hopeless, and she is getting out of the transaction. Either way the $119,400 she has in the property is gone, and this is going to be a short sale, so her credit is gone too. If this property sells for its asking price, the total loss on the property will be $254,000. I guess the distress in the market is not just at the low end.

Another day, another quarter million dollar loss.

.

Please don’t stop the music, music, music, music, music, music.
Please don’t stop the music, music, music, music, music, music.

RihannaIt’s gettin late
I’m making my way over to my favorite place
I gotta get my body moving shake the stress away
I wasn’t looking for nobody when you looked my way
Possible candidate (yeah)
Who knew
That you’d be up in here lookin like you do
You’re makin’ stayin’ over here impossible
Baby I must say your aura is incredible
If you don’t have to go don’t

Do you know what you started
I just came here to party
But now we’re rockin on the dance floor
Acting naughty
Your hands around my waist
Just let the music play
We’re hand in hand
Chest to chest
And now we’re face to face

I wanna take you away
Lets escape into the music
DJ let it play
I just can’t refuse it
Like the way you do this
Keep on rockin to it
Please don’t stop the
Please don’t stop the music

Please Don’t Stop The Music — Rihanna

139 thoughts on “Please Don't Stop The Music

  1. rkp

    I think afford is the wrong word. I obviously don’t know your financial situation but I know many people who sat out of the housing bubble and now have hefty down payments. I could put my down payment funds towards this house and the loan amount would be 3x our pre-tax income and I am not unique. Basically people can *afford* this house but it’s financial suicide.

    Maybe its just me but I hate the word afford. One of my biggest qualms of this bubble is this constant view of not being able to afford a house because I choose to rent.

    1. no_vaseline

      There is a post on the forum where somebody breaks down the per capita income.

      If you have $250K to put down and make $250K a year, you are in the top 2% of Irvine and the top 1% of all US citizens.

      You, sir, are in rare air. Congrats!

      That said, there are very few people like you.

      1. Perspective

        I agree with the stats, but if you went to grad school, you probably married someone with a graduate degree and have many local friends/coworkers with graduate degrees. And it certainly “feels” like there are plenty $250k households with sufficient liquidity. Just an observation…

        1. Priced_Out_IT_Guy

          Just because you hang out with a lot of people making 250K doesn’t mean they’re everywhere.

          I imagine some McMansion sellers have this myth floating in the back of in their mind to justify their WTF asking price.

          The *majority* of people working in the fancy Irvine corporate buildings are likely making beans. My girlfriend is an accountant and works for one of the top nominees for OC Metros “Best places to work in OC”, who happens to be in Irvine, and the salaries for the majority of their staff aren’t much higher than our neighbor of the sun, Phoenix.

          Which is why, IMO, if you’re on the bottom of the pay scale in OC, you’re probably impoverished considering the high cost of living. I mean heck, a one bedroom rents for a MINIMUM of $1450 in Irvine, a movie ticket is $15, and a frozen yogurt at Golden Spoon is $4.50 with just one topping! Renting and eating ice cream is about all you can do in Irvine if you make under 50-55K per year. Get out if you can!

          Another hidden cost of living in a high cost area such as Irvine is you get pummeled on state and local taxes. I would pay about 15-18k/year in taxes when I made 50K because the gruberment doesn’t take into account your cost of living as a W2 employee. I find it ironic that our tax code pummels low wage earners in high cost of living locations since the whole purpose of the progressive tax structure in this country is to tax people what they can “afford” to pay. Why the government believes everyone can “afford” to pay the same rate while living in different areas of the country is beyond me.

          1. AZDavidPhx

            I would be interested to know what all of these 250K high wage earners do (job titles) and what companies they work for.

            When I see the “I know lots of people making blah blah”, I have to assume it is a gross exaggeration as the average salaries for Irvine do not correlate well with those statements.

            I also think that people are generalizing couples income and stating it as though a single person’s income. They may know a couple where the one person earns 150K and the other earns 100K and then they say “Oh I know lots of people who earn 250K”.

          2. Perspective

            “Just because you hang out with a lot of people making 250K doesn’t mean they’re everywhere…”

            Um, I said I agree with the stats…

            “…They may know a couple where the one person earns 150K and the other earns 100K and then they say “Oh I know lots of people who earn 250K”…”

            Um, I said “there are plenty $250k households.”

          3. Roo

            Principals at my company probably make $200k+. If their spouse work, they can top the $250k. With that said, there are a lot more people making way less than them. Top few % of earners.

          4. the good ole days

            [i]I would be interested to know what all of these 250K high wage earners do (job titles) and what companies they work for.[/i]

            During the bubble years (aka 2005-2006), it was not uncommon to find high school graduates (and dropouts)and even ex-felons making $10,000/month in the Orange County mortgage industry.

          5. Hormiguero

            ” the whole purpose of the progressive tax structure in this country is to tax people what they can “afford” to pay. ”

            Not really – the whole purpose of the tax structure (especially prop 13 and high income taxes in california) is to give wealthy baby boomers a free ride while young families and the cities and schools that serve them go broke. Why? Because the boomers and AARP are designed to make that happen. And they do.

          6. Formerbanker

            Prop 13 didn’t bother me the last 15 years as a homeowner because I figtured that some day 30+ years down the road, I would ultimately get the benefit of it…then again, it’s probably going to be like social security – a benefit that generations before me had that I’ll never see. But hey, who said life was fair ? You don’t like taxes here, go to a state back east (like N.J.) where the RE tax rate often exceeds 3%…oh, and home values in your town get reassessed every 7 years so your taxes can literally double overnight…then as housing values plummet, you can spend years trying to get a refund. Should people really have to sell a home they’ve lived in for a lifetime just because of RE tax increases ? Or how about the states where there’s a ‘transfer’ tax of like 1% of home value when you sell it ? I’m not sure there’s a fully equitable R.E. tax system out there…

          7. kind of anon

            I post on here from time to time, but I am doing it
            anonymously this time because I don’t want to discuss my personal finances in public.

            I am an analog circuit design engineer with Broadcom.

            I make approximately $225k a year.
            My wife is an admin at UC Irvine, makes about 55k
            So together we make 280k.

            There are probably at least several dozen people in my group at work in a similar situation.

            For the record, I have a Ph.D. in electrical engineering.

          8. Mike7

            Yes, that true. Some of my looser friends would come up to me and brag about someone they know in the mortgage industry making tones of money. 20k, 30k, 40k a month. These mortgage industry sales people would be screwing home buyers over selling them loans they could not afford. Many of them told me they would lie on loan apps. saying it was “industry standard practice” and “you would have to lie on the applications in order to get them approved”. They didn’t care about there costumers, they didn’t care about the banks they were representing and they didn’t care about the future business they were loosing. All they cared about is there “rips” (commissions). And now 90% of these guys are out of jobs. On a recent hire in my company I received around 200 resumes. I automatically threw out all the resumes of the people who were involved in the mortgage business after 1999. That tells you allot about a person.

        2. three sheets

          In most cases graduate degrees = serious debt which overshadows any increased income gleamed from the degree.

          In fact, most of the granduate degree holders I know, after taking into consideration educational debt, are much closer to insolvancy than holders a college degree who have worked since graduating.

          1. Matt

            Define “graduate degree”

            PhD: yes, certainly. I have one, and I could be making much more with much less debt.

            MBA/JD: no way. You’ll end up borrowing as much as a PhD does, but the pay to a JD or MBA can easily be double.

          2. three sheets

            I have a JD. Fortunately, I was lucky enough to get a full ride and land a good job. However, the vast majority of JD holders don’t make the big $s and have a crippling amount of debt. Even those who do land the big firm jobs often take a decade or more to pay back their loans. Add that to the federal government’s wonderful alternative minimum tax system, and, all of a sudden, making $200k+ a year doesn’t really buy you the life everyone assumes it would.

            I also have a good number friends who hold MBAs, and personally, I don’t think they’re worth the paper they’re printed on. The market is saturated with MBAs and JDs and very few $150k+ jobs – but that hasn’t stopped the graduate degree mills from enrolling itchy-palm dreamers.

          3. Soapboxpolitico

            Well stated. For the past several years, I’ve wondered when the philosophy of our higher educational institutions changed. The very value of an advanced degree is now effectively nothing. I must admit I only hold a BS in Architecture (dropped out of the MS program a yr from completion due to debt) but I’ve seen scores of universities hawking MBA’s promising riches. They churn out graduates like it’s a business model and since when did that become a prime motive? I had always thought education was a noble enterprise not something to be marketed and spun. I tell younger people fresh out of college considering grad school to acquire experience first, get a few years under the belt then consider grad school. Just my two cents.

            On the home … very nice house, very nice indeed. A little cliche (ie: pergraniteel) but nothing a clever paint scheme can’t fix. My only real concern would be the proximity to the 405’s fumes.

      2. Chris

        Ok, I have close to 1.5 in net worth but I’m making only $128k a year. I guess I’m not in the top 1% but rather the top 10% then.

        What you make a year doesn’t mean crap. It’s the net worth that counts. Try saying what you make a year counts to those laid off BSC folks 🙂

          1. Chris

            Nope, I’m doing it in San Jose. We have the same housing problem although not as severe as Irvine (yet). Private sector (engineering) although I’ve heard from various folks that this pay is rather below avg for senior engineer.

        1. Roo

          Your net worth based on your age. Hope you are not 50 and planning to retiree at 55, but if you are 35 you are in GREAT shape!

          1. Chris

            I’m not 50 yet but I’m above 35. I do feel lucky to be in this shape.

            I used to live in Irvine and frankly made some $$ selling before this crash. I’m hoping to get back in around 2012 when the dust settles. I’m sure by then housing price would have either bottomed out or close to reaching bottom (for those that still don’t think 2012 is the year of the bottom).

            92606 and 92618 would be 2 great zip codes 🙂

    2. Perspective

      “Afford” is a huge sliding scale that’s very subjective. When I use “afford” I qualify it; e.g. “People who bought homes they could afford (2.5x income & below 28/33% DTIs) in the past few years are not in hopeless horrible situations.”

      1. Laura Louzader

        Your comment is completely on target. I have met many people in the $50K-75K a year bracket who have a decent financial situation, complete with healthy savings accounts, little or no debt, and substantial equity in property because they exercised caution and self-control.

        On the other hand, I know way too many people, including a few relatives, who’d be broke no matter how high their incomes were. These are people who’ve made in excess of $200K a year for 30 years trailing, and yet have managed to blow through every dollar and pile up staggering debt loads in the process.

        There is NO amount of money you can’t blow through, and have completely nothing to show but a bankruptcy filing, if you make a career out of consuming. Ask any lotto winner! I promise you that I could, if asked, get rid of $5MM on Michigan Ave in any one afternoon, making no more than 7 stops. It takes no brains or thought to shoot money.

    3. Tom

      You may know “many”, but that is not representative of the masses. There has been an ongoing negative savings rate in the country. Actually I beg to differ quite a bit — I’ll bet there are less than 1,000 people in Orange County “who sat out the housing bubble and now have hefty down payments”. One thousand would be 0.03% of OC’s population. Plus, “hefty” is very subjective. I know of very few people who are patiently waiting on the sidelines, entirely out of the local real estate market, with hefty down payments ready to go. Not in Santa Ana, and not in Newport Beach.

    1. buster

      At $600,000 I would PASS. In fact, I wouldn’t live here at any price (well, maybe SOME price).

      It backs to Alton (literally, your back wall is on Alton), so you have cars wizzing by 24/7, along with the roar of trucks and the diesel fumes. Yes, resort like setting unless you’re in the upstairs bedroom. Then the car beams in your windows all night long are like searchlights looking for Allied bombers over Germany.

      Of course, all that noise right in your back yard will drown out the constant drone of the 405 freeway just 100 yards away. And the fumes / carbon monoxide will kill enought brain cells so you won’t even notice after a week or two.

      Call me a snob, but for a cool million I expect much, much better.

      1. picflight

        [quote]Call me a snob, but for a cool million I expect much, much better. [/quote]

        I am with you on this one.

      2. Jim Jones (aka Angry Renter)

        “Then the car beams in your windows all night long are like searchlights looking for Allied bombers over Germany.”

        Too funny…

        Hey, its only a million bucks. You expect something on a quiet street?

      3. Mike7

        This house is worth more that $600K right now. In fact I’ll buy it for $700K.
        Real estate dose eventually go up, especially in Irvine. Plus you guys haven’t even thought about inflation. The dollar isn’t worth what it was back in 1999 for example.
        What cost $425000 in 1999 would cost $538499.87 in 2007.
        So the 2500 sq foot house I bought in 99 would coast me about 540k now. With inflation in mind, a 3000 sq foot house is worth more than 600K. Plus the market has gone up.
        You guys have to be realistic. Irvine is one of the best places to live in the world. The house is overpriced at 1 mill, but come on.

        Do you guys remember Jim Carrey in Ace Ventura: Pet Detective when he bends over and talks out of his a$$.

  2. cara

    So what price do you think this will be at the bottom? What price would you pay?

    Both $250 sq/ft and 4% appreciation since 1999 lead to a current “worth” of around $775k or a little over that. That’s about 22% more to drop from here. Does it seem realistic that this will really happen? Will the option ARM fallout really work that way? Maybe the severity in SoCal will make it so, but other places I’m not so sure…

    It should, I know. But in D.C. right now there’s a heck of a lot of kool-aid knife catchers who wouldn’t even think of buying the bottom of the market that’s already close to rental parity (and priced but not moving for $200k–$280k), but are snapping up the $450k townhomes like hotcakes (previously $550–$600k, generally 5 years newer and with a garage). This season there look to be enough knife catchers out there, such that if you’re willing to sacrifice your 20% down now, you can get out of your over priced home before it resets. It’s batty and frustrating. People really seem to think the next tranch up is immune. And if there are enough knife catchers, maybe it will be…

    1. AZDavidPhx

      http://www.hyattluxuryproperties.com/irvine.html

      According to year 2000 census (right about when this property was first built and purchased)

      Demographics
      The median income for a household in the city is $72,000, and the median income for a family is $85,000.

      This puts the 1999 median house value in the neighborhood of (85,000 * 4) = 340,000 if you use a 4x income as a means of calculating affordability.

      Therefore, the 1999 purchase price of 551,500 was roughly 551,500 / 340,000 = 1.62x the median house price.

      Assuming that Irvine maintains its 2006 reported family income of 103,604, the median house price will bottom out around 103,604 * 4 = 414,416 using 4x income as a measure of affordability.

      Multiply that 414,416 by the 1.62 ratio from the 1999 semi-pre-bubble purchase and you get a bottom call of 414,416 * 1.62 = 671,353.

      This is assuming that median incomes remain at their 2006 levels (highly unlikely).

      I’m hedging my bet that median Irvine income will be dropping over the next few years. If it drops back down to 85K to 90K then you can expect the value of this house to return to the 550K to 580K range.

      90 * 4 * 1.62 = 583,000
      85 * 4 * 1.62 = 551,000

    2. CK

      My bet is that IR would pull out his checkbook for this one at $750k. Am I close, IR?

      Of course he would be late to the party — because I’d already haved lock this down when it hit $800k. But those numbers are pointless in 2008, because a more talented knifecatcher will probably cough up at least $950k this summer.

      1. shortsailor insider

        I live in the community and have some insider information. 4 offers at or very near full purchase price as of last week. IR, short sales don’t shoot down your credit depending on your situation. If you have a proven hardship and are current in all your obligations, you can expect around a 15 point drop to an 80 point max depending on the lender. A short sale shows up as a closed account, and if you keep paying off your bills in a timely manner, it is recoverable. Lenders look back 12 months at your credit history, and if you wait and rent for more than 12 months it is not likely they are even going to see it. How many months you are delinquent on your payment affects your credit, not necessarily the short sale itself.

  3. Sunfell

    I’m looking at that place, and thinking what sort of place the mere -downpayment- would get me here in the wilds of Arkansas.

    I know exactly what $199,000 would get me out here:

    The very same home- paid in full.

    :hugs backwards ol’ Arkansas:

    1. Agent#777

      oooooooo….look out!

      They don’t like it when those comparisons are made on this blog!

    2. Quincy k

      Truly amazing isn’t it? You can buy a comparable home for $250k in some violence/traffic-free high-end resort town in the midwest, buy a condo in some S/E resort town for $100k to reside in the winters, and still have some 300k left over even after this Irvine home eventually bottoms out.

      In regards to retiring baby boomers, the SoCal lifestyle is so overrated.

      1. Roo

        Obviously So Cal is not the answer for everyone, but there’s a reason why people choose to live here.

      2. buster

        Yes, So.Cal. is sooooo overrated. By the way, I biked to work today in the cool, dry, 68 degree weather. My gas bill is about $60.00 per month tops. Tonight it’s BBQ night out on the covered patio – no bugs here. And I don’t bother to lock up my bike because it’s Irvine (I think crime is against Association rules, but I’m not sure).

        Yes, Irvine is expensive, but you can’t compare it to Arkansas.

        1. AZDavidPhx

          That’s great, Buster. However, you are failing to mention any of the issues that people might find uninviting about Irvine.

          Little bit of “confirmation bias” in your post suggesting that Irvine is superior to all areas of Arkansas.

          1. movingaround

            agreed – people on this blog just love to sing the praises about so ca. without mentioning all the negatives aboout it – of which there are many – lets start with traffic traffic traffic. In my travels I have come to believe that most people (regardless of whether they live in so. ca. or somewhere else) have to find reasons to *believe* that they are living in the best spot in the world – guess it is that competitive human nature.

          2. CK

            Most of the people in Arkansas or Arizona who like to come to IHB to crap on Irvine and OC are always screaming how much more house they can buy for the $$ in ______. That’s great, and if a big house is your calling you are in the right place. For others, climate and coastline (and maybe family) are bigger factors than indoor sq ft. So they may prefer So Cal. Neither is right or wrong, live and let live.

            But for reference, please recognize this is the Irvine Housing Blog. When IR changes the name of the blog and starts profiling properties in Arkansas, I will STFU (and probably log off, because it will cease to be relevant to me). But until then, please understand that people who are focused on Irvine and OC really could give damn what it costs in your town. We all know that its cheaper out there, we don’t live in a complete vacuum. Yet about 20 million people choose to stay in So Cal for many reasons, despite the cost. I know, hard for you to believe, but true. And understand that its probably hard for us to imagine living in Arkansas — but if you are happy, that’s what its all about.

          3. movingaround

            I don’t think it is irrelevant at all – so many people I know continually justify the housing prices by talking about how everyone wants to move here – which is just not true. If people in california did not live in a vacuum to some extent – I don’t think prices would have gone where they did.

            I like to be reminded of what others can buy – especially when I see a nice house like the one posted today – being reminded about what life was like outside of CA keeps me sober.

          4. AZDavidPhx

            CK –

            When you see a mangled car flipped over upside down on the freeway, do you say to yourself “Ah, it’s not relevant to me – I’m not going to look”?

          5. CK

            movingaround — I don’t like it any more than you, but those things they say ARE true, there are people out there who will want to come here — not everyone, but enough. You have noticied how many more people are here than out there? How’d that happen?

            Yes — SoCal is WAY overvalued for what you get now, and if I did not live here I would NEVER dream of moving here in 2008. BUT, once prices fall back to earth (they will) and it becomes only marginally cheaper to live someplace like Minnesota — a guy is going to be sitting there in 30 below zero weather on New Year’s Day, having just shovled his driveway for the 10th time in the week — and flip on the Rose Bowl game. And he is going to say “I’m outta here”. Not everyone one there will say that, but some will. And our bubble pattern will start all over again. You are from here, you know the history. It is bound to repeat itself.

          6. CK

            AZ — I pay a premium to live in Irvine so I don’t have to get on the freeway. But as I drive up Main St every morning during my 4.2 mile commute, I do look at all those new apartment complexes under construction and think “that’s relevant, because soon those are going to house a bunch of transplants from Arizona”. 😉

          7. movingaround

            ok – but here is my truly serious question to which I have yet to get a good statistical answer – are they here because of a simple lifestyle choice – or because of jobs, jobs, jobs. I went around with this once in one of the forums and got the feeling that people don’t think it matters why people come but I do think it matters. We are back here because of a job – fact is for me many of the jobs are here in ca.

            You also forget that many, many people are sitting there in the snow thinking “hmmm – want to just pop out to the ski resort around the corner?” 🙂

          8. CK

            “ski resort around the corner”. You’ve never been to Minnesota (or Wisconsin, or Iowa, or Michigan, or Illnois, or Ohio, or Nebraska, or North Dakota, or South Dakota and so on). Unless you are talking about a cross-country ski resort, Irvine is much, much closer to a mountain ski resort than any of those places. They are COLD and FLAT.

            Further to the point of the desireablity of ski resort areas, I wonder if income fundamentals support housing prices in places like Park City or Vail? I’ll bet no. Some places are unique, and will command a premium.

          9. Genius

            Tell me you didn’t just compare Vail to Irvine… I bet income fundamentals there are less out of whack than they are in Irvine, and I bet their median income is a lot higher.

            *waits for someone to post census information making me look like an idiot*

          10. BHC

            as a software/IT guy living in Irvine and working in Santa Ana (8 mile commute… could almost bike, if i wasn’t such a fat sluggard :D) I can say that it’s both.
            Other non-financial restrictions applied, such as family:
            1) Wife’s industry is so limited we had only 2 companies to choose from at the onset, one in Ventura, and one in deep-south OC. Irvine is the nicest area in OC that’s midway between where she works and where I used to work (downtown LA)
            2) Metrolink made my commute up to downtown LA a… well, I wouldn’t say a breeze, but it wasn’t too bad. Ride the train means reading for 2 hours each day to improve my mind… or something. 🙂
            3) Family members – to paraphrase a bad translation of yore: all our families are belongz to SoCal. That includes multiple aunts and uncles. They’re all within 1 hour drive from us, which might seem like a lot (I mean, an hour drive can get you across 3 national borders in Europe, IIRC) but isn’t too bad.

            But, thinking back, the reason we’re here is mainly because of #3, which lead to the limited job selection of #1. And it’s pretty hard to change #3

          11. BHC

            that was supposed to be a response to movingaround’s q: “ok – but here is my truly serious question to which I have yet to get a good statistical answer – are they here because of a simple lifestyle choice – or because of jobs, jobs, jobs.” not sure why it didn’t attach to the right astute observation. mea culpa

          12. movingaround

            BHC – your situation is very similar to most of the people I grew up with – wanted to stay in CA for family – lucky enough to find a job to fit the area. Yet, those exact same people – even knowing there own situation – have told me numerous times over the past 10 years how everyone wants to come here.

            On the other hand, I also know a lot of people who are gypsys because of job and many of them do not want to be in CA – how would they feel if the cost of living was equal country wide – who knows. My bet is that most people would prefer to stay close to where they grew up.

          13. mmg

            hey CK, you know I always like to get on you case 😆

            without getting defensive about what others say, if you look at it from the point that while Irvine is special 😯 there is a certain premium to what people should or can pay, the sky is not the limit, look above at AZDavid’s post which if very good on how to estimate where a house should cost based on median price and incomes. Otherwise we be drinking koolaid like most others before us just less toxic 😆

          14. CK

            Agree 100% MMG. In the case of today’s house, $999k is insano. But IMO $750k ($247 sq ft) would be a fair price reflective of this market. Yep, still more than Phoneix or Arkansas, but fair for here.

            But I’m going to guess you this baby at about $600k?

          15. IrvineRenter

            I lived in Arkansas for 10 years. My parents still live there. I would say that Irvine probably is superior to almost every area in Arkansas. The climate is far superior, and with the exception of a few isolated neighborhoods, the community planning and aesthetics of the built environment is awful.

          16. BHC

            movingaround: ethnicity might have something to do with it too.

            I don’t have any hard data, but I fear that non-anglosaxon family of asian decent might have a hard time adjusting to, say, Arkansas or Virginia.

            (I was just at Virginia and IIRC, the ‘ethnic’ restaurant there was called “Oriental Food”… then again, one could argue that if I want Chinese food so much, why don’t I move to China. *shrug*)

            So, even if I don’t want to be in CA anymore, given that I’m non-Anglo… I’d probably be told “Go back to [Asian Country they might think I’m from]” or “uh oh, the [racial epithet] are moving in, there goes the neighborhood” anywhere else. 😀

            Heck, we got that same treatment originally back in the 80’s from certain less-than-welcoming neighbors in the suburbs of Los Angeles.

          17. movingaround

            I know its really not that funny but the ‘oriental food’ made me laugh!

            I definetely think you are right – many people might not want to live in certain areas due to lack of ethnic diversity.

            If I was of an Asian or even Middle Eastern ethnicity I could definetely see loving this area. For that matter I myself love the 99 market and that other market – can’t remember the name – where they have five different kinds of feta. Last place we lived there was one Chinese grocery store and it was the size of a postage stamp!

            Thanks for reminding me to broaden my anglo-saxon viewpoint – excellent point!

          18. CK

            My wife is Asian and the critcal mass of Asian culture in So Cal (not to mention all the family ties) keep us very grounded here. I doubt there are too many Buddhist temples in Arkansas — but we can walk to one from our home in Westpark if we want to.

            That’s why its annoying when these dorks come here and pop off about how great *fill in the blank* place is, and how stupid people are to live in So Cal. There is a lot more to life choices than just the price of a home.

          19. movingaround

            ok, I agreed with the cultural issue – but fact is this is the very first time someone has brought this ethnicity issue up in a discussion like this of which I have been apart – and I am obviously one of those ‘dorks’ you seem so annoyed with – even though I live here.

            Most often the reasons given for Ca desirability is about the sun, sand, blah, blah, blah explaining to me why ‘everyone’ wants to live here and that is why the housing prices are so high. The ethnic argument is actually the only argument that holds any ground in my experience with people living outside of CA – in fact, thinking about it the ONLY people I have known in all the places I lived back east who actually wanted to move to CA were Chinese.

          20. CK

            movingaround — I didn’t think you were one of those dorks at all :). I think you said you moved back here because of family, despite the flaws you see in So Cal. I too see many flaws here, but ultimately the reasons to be here outweigh the reasons to leave. I don’t dispute that other places have a lot of merit — just dispute there is any point in comparing the two markets, because there is not a comparison between Irvine and Arkansas…Not that either is better, just that they don’t compare.

            For instance, if I were to purchase a 2,000 sq foot house in Woodbury, would I present a recent sale of a 2,000 sq foot house in Mud Creek, AR as justification of my price? Not that there is anything wrong with Mud Creek, but its a pointless comparison.

            And for some reason the people who like to dump on Orange County seem to have such a disdain for this place and the people here. I wonder if they have ever been here, or know any real people here — or is all they know what they saw on “The OC”?

          21. movingaround

            yes, I have encountered that disdain for California. I remember living overseas and feeling like people just couldn’t grasp that there were actually normal families living in So. ca.

            However, in the exact same way, people here in CA brush off the discrepency in housing prices between other places in the US and here by immediately responding with an attitude of – “well, it is just so much better here and everyone wants to come here.” That clearly shows their ignorance in that they don’t realize how much other places have to offer nor do they realize that in fact a lot of people don’t want to come here.

            I have heard it for so long from friends and family living here while I wasn’t here that it now makes me sick – if it really was true that home prices were going up because everyone wanted to come here then I really, really wish someone would show me the statistics from the past 5-10 years to prove it – the only stats I keep hearing are those about people leaving Ca.

          22. BHC

            I think I saw a pie chart somewhere showing about a 33% Asian population in Irvine. Maybe it was a chart of students at the various schools.

            Incidentally, it was around the same in San Marino and Arcadia (two other places that I saw an influx of Chinese (Republic and ex-British ones, if you catch my drift) that bumped those two markets somewhat out of proportion as far as I could tell. Like gathers around like, and the richer of those who were trying to get away from Monterrey Park and Montebello ended up in SM & A. Again, from anecdotal evidence, it seems like that influx also bumped those two school districts up, causing more people to flux in for the ‘better schools’.

            So, at least from an empirical standpoint, I don’t think it was people fleeing the rest of the USA, but globally, that really bumped things up a couple of artificial notches.

            So, when SM&A;became saturated, somehow Irvine caught the fever (probably since it’s school district was already doing well)

            One more disclaimer, this is all anecdotal and has not statistics behind it, but it’s the kind of discussion I heard as a kid growing up.

            A sample of the dialog I heard from friends of family: You’re paying how much for private school for your two kids? Why don’t you just move to San Marino?

            I don’t imply one ethnicity is better or smarter than any other, just the kind of (mis)information I heard growing up in a previous bubble (where my family got burned)

  4. AZDavidPhx

    You have got to love the hubris on the part of the seller and people like them who manage to scrounge up 119,000 (most of which is likely coming from the sale of a previous house that requires a first time buyer to leverage themselves further than they had to).

    A buyer with 119K in cash deluded into believing that he/she is in the market for million dollar homes.

    A 119K down payment sets your affordability limit around 500K (assuming you can make the payments on the remaining balance for 30 years) – certainly not 1 million.

    Nice house though. It will bottom out around 550K.

      1. gman

        Exciting and/or interesting? Eichler homes in Orange, pre-war homes in Long Beach, homes in Floral Park, custom homes with quality craftmanship in Laguna Beach, etc.

    1. Priced_Out_IT_Guy

      Because they’re all built cheap cheap cheap. Its difficult to justify artisans, skilled carpenters or masonries when land is so expensive.

    1. Patience

      Amen, brother!
      What is the point of having wood floors/tile/etc. just so you can put area rugs down over them?

    2. Genius

      I like carpet. The problem is that my beverages, especially red wine, like it even more than I do.

      Mops are cheaper than steam cleaners.

  5. TheNumbersNeverLie

    IR,
    Given the inflationary cycle we are currently in, isn’t the effective loss on this house considerable more than 256k?

    I would like to see a “Breakeven” date for each house listed. If things proceeded as typical for the real estate market (increase of 4% a year with 3% inflation) people who bought at the peak are probably looking at 10 years or so to break even. However, given the 8% inflation we are experiencing, and another 25% correction for homes like today’s listing, the breakeven point is what, 2025 maybe 2027 for today’s listing at its asking price?

    Could you imagine buying a home today and waiting until 2025 just to get your money back?

    1. Perspective

      Not sure I’m following you. If you bought at the peak (2005) with a fixed rate mortgage, then the dollars you borrowed are “fixed” to their 2005 value.

      If we suffer through 8% inflation for a decade, then wages will lag, but they will catch-up, and they’ll bring along housing prices. If that’s your scenario, then the peak buyer won’t have to wait very long to “break-even.”

      Also, a renter in this scenario isn’t hedged for the inflation with their housing cost adjusting every year to account for inflationary pressures.

      1. TheNumbersNeverLie

        If you bought at the peak, even with a fixed rate, your breakeven point is way out in the distant future. How exactly does your fixed rate to 2005 value make up for the massive loss sustained at the end of this correction? Paid 999k, it is worth 650k 6 years later and takes another 10 years to get back to 999k – hardly a short period of time to wait. And these numbers don’t account for inflation. Renter have the luxury of not actually losing money with a plummeting housing market. People who bought at the peak, and put money down, are looking at decades to recover their money.

        1. Perspective

          “…Renter have the luxury of not actually losing money with a plummeting housing market…”

          Renters lose the rent! There are no freebies. A peak homebuyer loses the equivalent rent + the extra costs (since we haven’t been near rent/own parody for years). The peak homebuyer is also losing equity, but a lot of housing market bears like to view all increased equity as illusory; if it is, then lost equity is illusory as well until it’s realized.

          A home you live in should not be viewed as an investment. The peak homebuyer who paid $1 mil in 2005 is losing a lot of money. If this same family rented the same $1 mil house, they’d be losing a lot of money – less money lost, but still a lot of money.

          Then again, money is relative. If your household income is $400k (the minimum necessary to consider the purchase of a million dollar home), then the amount you’re losing by buying or renting isn’t too great.

    2. IrvineRenter

      Realistically, if you bought anywhere near the peak (and including now) you will not get back to breakeven in inflation adjusted dollars unless be build another bubble. Eventually, inflation will bring people back to breakeven in nominal dollars, but in real dollars, they will never get there. If you pay more than 10% over fundamental value, you don’t get much of a return on investment. When you start paying 100% over fundamental value (which people were doing at the peak,) the purchase is always a loser.

      1. Perspective

        If by “breakeven” you mean the value has returned to the purchase price, then yes, I agree.

        If you consider “breakeven” to be when the:

        value = purchase price – equivalent rent

        Then you reach breakeven much sooner. i.e. I don’t think you should ignore the current rent you pay, nor the prospective rent you’d pay for the home you want to buy.

        1. TheNumbersNeverLie

          Well then you completley missed the original point which was the homeowner reaching breakeven – period.

          No matter how bullish you are, you have to admit nobody is getting into a home to be breakeven 22 years from now?

          1. Perspective

            I’m not bullish. I think prices will eventually fall around 30% from peak in Irvine. I just try to add “color” to comments that appear too conclusory.

            If you buy a house less than 2.5x your income that you can reasonably expect and want to live in for 10+ years, and keep your DTIs below 28/33%, then I wouldn’t worry today too much about at what point I can project breakeven.

      2. Anonymous

        Unless, of course you got a nice low fixed rate loan from a abnk that didn’t forsee 70’s type inflation…

  6. Allison C.

    You must be a mind reader too IR, I had my eyes on this place when it was up for sale, and I like it very much. Too bad I don’t like the price tag. So does anyone know what’s the tax rate on this house? And what would be a realistic price for this house? Thanks to all who answer. 😉

  7. Alan

    I can’t agree that $500-600k at the bottom is realistic. I’m expecting another 20-30% drop which would put the bottom at $699 – $799k.

    Unless of course the recession gets a lot worse.

  8. ice weasel

    This is almost irrelevant but some of the comments and in many threads force me to ask.

    I read, over and over again, comments from people on how close a particular house to the freeway or a busy road and almost as often in addition to that comment is one of noxious fumes or carbon monoxide poisoning or losing bran cells or something of that order.

    So my question is this, leaving aside the generally undesirable nature of home close to a major road or freeway, specifically, can anyone link to a study that says a home in close proximity (let’s call it 100 yards since that was a figure quoted above) to a road is more dangerous than one say, 200 or even 400 yards away from the same road? Or is this just kvetching?

    I’m not advocating for living next or underneath freeways or major thoroughfares. Hardly. All I’m asking is this a real concern or just some basic prejudice, a different way to make one better than another?

    For some reason I suspect that the real research into the subject would yield results which indicate that it’s not much, if any, more healthy to live one mile from a freeway, from a breathing perspective, than it is to live 100 yards from one. The pollution might disperse a bit but I tend to doubt it’s enough to make a big difference. In other words, if you live in Socal, don’t pretend your home that’s a mile from the 405 is substantially more healthy than the poor sod who lives half a block away.

    1. AZDavidPhx

      Whenever I read those comments, I figure it is some mortgage-owner who is in denial and desperately trying to justify why the house a block away is declining in value while asserting that the value of their own home is not.

    2. Axiom

      The comments today are going so many different directions… it’s hard to know where to jump in.

      But I have seen a couple of recent studies that address proximity to major roads and health issues in both adults and children.

      Journal Report
      07/16/2007

      Living near high-traffic roads may be hazardous to your health

      American Heart Association rapid access journal report

      Compared to participants living more than 200 meters (642 feet) from major traffic, the chance of high coronary artery calcification (top quarter of calcification levels) for those living

      within 50 meters (160 feet) of heavy traffic was 63 percent higher.
      between 51 – 100 meters (164 to 328 feet) was 34 percent higher.
      between 100 and 200 meters (328 to 642 feet) was 8 percent higher.
      These percentages were calculated after adjusting for known risk factors such as age, gender, high blood pressure, smoking, cholesterol level and diabetes.

      Living Close To Road May Worsen Allergies
      Asthma, Eczema More Common The Closer To Traffic

      POSTED: 8:49 am EDT June 16, 2008

      The researchers tried to compare the children evenly based on things such as parents’ allergies, pets and siblings. But they found that the closer a child lived to a major road, the more likely they were to have asthmatic bronchitis, hay fever or eczema.
      We consistently found strong associations between the distance to the nearest main road and the allergic disease outcomes,” wrote Heinrich in a news release. “Children living closer than 50 meters to a busy street had the highest probability of getting allergic symptoms, compared to children living further away.

      Personally I don’t need piles of research to keep me from buying a house that is too close to a freeway, or backs to a major road/intersection, or has power lines running through the backyard, or has minimal setback fron the street, or is all garage frontage. I just don’t like any of the above and would assume that in anything but the nonsensical market of the past few years such homes would be more difficult to sell, or would net a lower price, or both.

      I guess I’m just insensitive that way. Once after a long day of looking at a LOT of houses; when we pulled up in front of the last house and I saw power lines in the back yard, I made my RE agent tell the seller I didn’t need to look at his house. I was tired and knew I would never buy that house. I barely glanced at the brochures, published by the utility company (no agenda there and completely unbiased I’m sure)claiming no health risks, that the seller insisted on sending out to me. Didn’t matter.

      1. picflight

        Do you know where I can get a prescription for some pot? I lost my response that I was writing on this board.

    3. Red

      I have seen studies that indicate significant health effects on children of living within a quarter mile of major freeway; theres a lot of variables in traffic, ambient breezes and background levels…
      I work at a facility that uses toxic materials, and so we have toxic monitors and alarms. We are also about a half mile from the freeway; we regularly get Ozone alarms on hot summer days during commute hours.
      A quote from one study:
      ” It is easy to see why new homebuyers are concerned with how close property is to a busy road or freeway. Unfortunately scientists cannot say exactly how close is “too close” at this point. European studies have shown increased respiratory health problems in children who live or go to school within 100 meters (~330 feet) of a busy roadway, with the greatest risks appearing in the first 50 meters (~165 feet). Studies conducted by SCPCS investigators here in LA show that carbon monoxide and ultrafine particles – the smallest portion of particulate matter emissions and potentially the most toxic – are extremely high on or near the freeway, dropping to about half that concentration 50-90 meters (~165-295 feet) from the freeway. After about 300 meters (~990 feet) the concentration of particulate matter reaches the “ambient” level “

    4. lynn

      There is a huge difference between being one/half mile or one mile away from a freeway (in both air and noise pollution). The prevailing winds also make a big difference.

      The only studies I have read relate to how far a school should be from a freeway. Being very close to a freeway is very bad for children.

    5. freedomCM

      google freeway proximity health outcomes, there are a lot. also education test scores correlate.

      Compared with children who lived at least 1500 m from a freeway, children living within 500 m of a freeway had substantial deficits in 8-year growth of forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1,
      -81 mL; P = .01; 95% confidence interval [CI], -143 to -18) and maximum midexpiratory flow rate
      (-127 mL/second; P = .03; 95% CI, -243 to -11).

  9. Iblis

    This is from yesterday’s Political Diary, a newsletter published by the Wall Street Journal.

    ——

    Payback

    Democrats and most Republicans in the Senate are furiously rushing out the housing bailout bill before more embarrassing revelations interfere with this multi-billion dollar French kiss to the real estate lobby.

    On Thursday the Senate decided it wouldn’t let the scandal of Senators Chris Dodd of Connecticut and Kent Conrad of North Dakota — who received VIP cut-rate loans from Countrywide Financial — slow down the legislation. Senator Jim DeMint demanded a floor vote on a motion to postpone the bill until it’s known how many other Senators and House members received special treatment from Countrywide. Unbelievably, only eleven Senators sided with Mr. DeMint on the amendment. Chris Dodd voted “no” (naturally) and Kent Conrad, who had been on the Senate floor shortly before this vote, was nowhere to be found. The vast majority of Republican Senators voted against the DeMint amendment and for the “ethics pardon,” prompting one Senate Republican leadership aide to ask: “Are we trying to lose the election?”

    Then it was reported on Thursday that Bank of America, which is buying Countrywide, handed out more than $70,000 in contributions to Mr. Dodd.

    On Friday we received a copy of a “confidential” Bank of America “discussion document” called the “FHA Housing Stabilization and Homeownership Retention Act of 2008.” The March 11th document lays out in some 60 pages of meticulous detail how the housing bailout plan should work. The document appears to have become the framework for the bill negotiated by Sen. Dodd and GOP Sen. Richard Shelby. It provides rich information about who should get paid, how much it will cost, how the bill should be financed, how to overcome political opposition to the bill. The document notes that the bill would subject the Federal Housing Administration, the taxpayer bailout agent here, to $39.67 billion in “potential exposure.” This is much higher than “official estimates.”

    One Senate banking committee staffer tells me: “We literally had banking lobbyists writing this bill.” This isn’t the way it’s supposed to work in Washington especially when the party in power on Capitol Hill keeps pledging to get rid of the “corporate special interests.” But apparently that new ethic of anti-corruption will have to wait until at least next week, when the Dodd-Shelby housing bill comes up for a final vote and taxpayers are put on the line for nearly $40 billion of bailout funds. No word yet on whether Senator Barack Obama will break from his crusade against “corporate lobbyists” to be on hand — or which way he would vote if he were there.

    — Stephen Moore

    1. capocorso

      I have to admit I am very close to pulling out of the political process. I see no point in even voting anymore. It really doesn’t matter if the person has a D or an R next to their name, they get to Washington and look out for #1….themselves.
      I think I have had enough. I choose to bury my head in the sand. It is too infuriating to even pay attention.

      1. GoldSlut

        ” have to admit I am very close to pulling out of the political process. I see no point in even voting anymore. It really doesn’t matter if the person has a D or an R next to their name, they get to Washington and look out for #1….themselves.
        I think I have had enough. I choose to bury my head in the sand. It is too infuriating to even pay attention. ”

        I agree!

        I put all my trust in gold ANYDAY versus a politican with a printing press.

    2. Malibu Renter

      I work in banking. I’ve helped write legislation. On many occassions, I’ve helped fix poorly written bills already pending. Fairly often, I’ve helped to make the bills clearer and have fewer unintended consequences.

      I’m one of the “good” people who you probably actually want contributing to legislation. I’m precise, careful, understand political pressures, but don’t pander to them. If you took either a typical politician or their staffers and asked them to write bills on highly technical topics, they would screw it up unless they had outside help. The key is finding knowledgable helpful people who aren’t just trying to be self-serving. When I make certain suggested changes, I might say “this is definitely in the interest of bankers, but this wording is most helpful to responsible bankers who are trying to do the right thing”.

      If someone in the Senate wanted my help, I would be glad to give it. The problem with this bill there is too much attention and political pressure. Not sure if my employer would let me do it.

  10. SteveforReal

    Buster,

    Again, all that you do in Irvine can be (and is) done daily in any college town in the U.S. I see vespas and sedgways (sp?) everyday on the way to work. What you SOCAL people don’t understand is that we expect to see something . . . something to justify these prices. Where i live – an uber green college town – granite countertops have been passe for 4 years!!! Resort living looks like real resort living. We expect REAL views. Further, our homes have beautiful roof cuts, 1/2 acre gardens, and all the accoutrements in 2 million dollar SOCAL homes etc. i see granite, travertine, cabinents, and crown molding in these SOCAL homes that can be found on the shelves of any Home Depot Expo nationwide. And these recent homes are . . . ugly.

    What you all don’t get is . . . what we are (non-SOCALers) seeing is not a step up in lifestyle, but 2 steps down.

    That is why Austin, Boulder, Madison, Chapel Hill, etc. are still growing.

    FYI, many SOCAL people living in suburbs are simply NOT, by any stretch of the imagination enjoying “suburban living.”

    1. movingaround

      If one were to simply look at trappings (e.g., size house, cars, etc) my move back to So. Ca (I am a So. Ca native) was definetely a step down financially – huge step down. Of course there are benefits here – no bugs, Irvine is so easy to live in – close grocery stores, etc.), no weather problems at all (don’t have to sweep my floor three times a day!) and family. However, we resisted moving here for years because prior to this last move it would not simply have been a step down but would have been a financial disaster to move here. There are so many beautiful places to live that do not require the financial sacrifice required here.

    2. capocorso

      I cannot see any comparison with any of the towns you listed. I actually wouldn’t mind living in Austin, but for me there is no comparison to living in Southern Cal. Last week on the same day you had the US Open golf championship, the NBA finals and US soccer world cup qualification all going on at the same time within 100 miles of each other.
      To each his own, but hearing someone compare Madison or Boulder or Arkansas to So. Cal is laughable.

    3. mike

      Steve,

      All can be done in other locals? Hey I may not like the traffic in OC but I can go to the beach in December and wear shorts. I can get to the Mountains and ski if I want to in a short time couple hours maybe. I don’t shovel snow and I don’t have to worry about the monster bugs and humid conditions in other places. I can get into LA for a show or a Lakers/Dodgers/Angels/USC/Ducks/Kings/Clippers game. Can you do all that in any other college town USA? I have been to a great many places in the US and having been born and raised here I’ll stay. Hey I have no problem if you don’t like Irvine and wouldn’t want to live here. Good for you maybe you can talk a few more people into leaving. That would be good for me. So I save up and buy a house a bit later than my cousins in Michigan or Oklahoma or Colorado. Big deal they all want to come visit me on vacation not the other way around.

  11. movingaround

    the arrogance of people in so. ca. is simply astonishing – get out there and experience the world someday will you? Now, I know that everyone on this blog will delight in insisting – “oh, I have lived here and there and I still want to move back to good old Irvine” – but don’t you get that every single town, community, city has people that want to live there more than anywhere else in the world. Southern California is NO DIFFERENT – some people love it – some people don’t. The ONLY thing that I see truly unique about so. ca. is the Hollywood industry – thats it.

    1. mike

      Why do so many people want to live here if it is no different then? It would indicate a lot more people love it than don’t.

    2. AZDavidPhx

      You are going to get this mine-is-bigger-than-yours CA related Kool-Aid talk on here because of the nature of the blog being related to CA.

      If this were a Phoenix, AZ blog, you would have the same characters popping off about how awesome AZ is and how crappy California is.

      Obviously, to people like us who do not live in CA, this belief that some of the locals put faith in about CA being superior to every place else in the world is wildly amusing.

      Ah, people like to go to the beach for a week’s vacation. It naturally follows that the implication is that they want to live here year-round. Why else would they visit? Surely, there is no other explanation.

      1. Axiom

        Actually, some of us who live in CA also find it amusing.

        It would be interesting to see how often most CA residents actually take advantage of many of the opportunities posted here as being unique to the area.

        Just one example: I was at a dinner party over the weekend and mentioned plans for a beach day. I couldn’t believe how many people said they hadn’t been in years. Yet you wouldn’t believe how much $$$ some of the same folks paid for their ocean view properties. I guess just looking from a distance is good enough.

        1. BethN

          So true. When I lived inland (as a teenager) I went to the beach almost every day during the summer. After graduating from college I moved to the beach area and subsequently went to the shore maybe 4 times in 15 years.

      2. T!m

        “If this were a Phoenix, AZ blog, you would have the same characters popping off about how awesome AZ is and how crappy California is.”

        I think that is the main point in this discussion topic. I would add that many (most?) of us who like living in SoCal don’t think it is better than elsewhere for everyone. It’s just the best place for us.

        I’ve lived in an Iowa town of 25,000 people; lived in Kansas City, MO; went to college in a town of 10,000 people; lived in St. Louis, MO; and lived in Irvine and Newport in SoCal. My mom loves living in the Midwest because she loves winter and snow. She would not be happy here. I love $7 Mexican food for lunch. She likes Claim Jumper.

        Steve, a few days ago you nicely asked why we like it here. I re-posted a list that I had posted at <https://www.irvinehousingblog.com/forums/viewthread/2278/P50/#53433>. Since then, you keep saying that you can do all that at any college town. But I know that isn’t true, so, it seems that either I didn’t stress some things enough for you to understand, or you don’t want to understand. I will assume it was the former. Let me try again.

        Just as an example, what college town has a different water park for each day of the week? Now, you might say that you will just go to the same one 7 times. My point is that being here gives you that option or the option of going to a different one each day. You may or may not care or like the things listed, but there you are.

        In SoCal, people are outside all the time. It is hard to really understand until you are here. When I was watching TV growing up in the Midwest, I would see shows where the kids’ lockers were outside. I thought that was such an unrealistic thing. When I moved out here, I saw that schools out here actually do that. It is so rarely too hot, too cold, or too wet that you can do that. Again, if you don’t like being outside all the time, you won’t care.

        It is all about values and priorities.

        1. movingaround

          exactly T!m – good post – we agree finally! I do have to add though that some people like being outside a whole lot – but they prefer being outside in the cold, snowy weather – not me – I still have too much Ca blood – but I happened to be married to one. He would prefer Alaska or Canada I think.

  12. Alan

    There’s a downside to everything.

    In my condo, across the street from the beach, all metal except brass and stainless steel rusts away in the salt air. I had to replace every recepticle in the unit after 10 years and you should see the air conditioner. My first bbq just turned to dust and you have to replace the burners every couple years because holes develop.

    1. Major Schadenfreude

      Why would you have an air conditioner if you are across the street from the beach?!

      1. Alan

        acutally it’s a heat pump, (me bad, misrepresented the unit) and I need it for heat in the winter.

      2. jhill

        Dark Secret — Every now and then, maybe once every 2 or 3 years for about 3 days, it’ll be 104 at the beach in SoCal. I’d have AC for these dreadful episodes. And the beachfront hotels I’ve stayed in always have it.

  13. Shannon

    A lot of people live here because our parents live here. I for one was born in raised in Orange County. My best friend lives in Oak Creek. I go to the beach over 100 times a year and I ride my bike to work. That being said, I find a lot of people in Orange County are overly aggresive, snobbish, wasteful, self centered, and not very good parents to their children. Maybe they are like that every where else as well. All I can say is we are a family of four surfers and that is one of the few reasons why we stay. If there were waves in Austin, we would be there tomorrow.

  14. TangerineSpeedo

    The particulate at the 405/73 interchange is likely from the airport. I have lived under the flighpath, adjacent to it and further adjacent to it – in each case far from high traffic areas. Anywhere near the takeoff flight path yields the significant black soot – even Balboa Island, which is under the reduced throttle area.

  15. SteveforReal

    Where I live we have major golf tennis tournaments, triatholons, pro sports, etc. etc etc all witin a 1 hour drive. Further, we have REAL mountains – Rockies – within a 1.5 hour plane trip – which is cheaper than driving.

    We have at least 30 professional athletes who play out of town/state, yet curiously all choose to raise their children in out little town. Some even send their kids to public schools.

    I have been to Orlando 5 times (i got kids), but I don’t want to ever live there. We don’t have 7 water parks – but when did that ADD to quality of life?

    And, I regularly fly to Boston for yankee games at fenway. I always schedule business trips around yankee games (I buy 4 tickets on craigslist and sell 2 outside the park or “on the bridge”.)

    I was raised in Chicago, and 99% of Bear fans have never set foot in soldier field. So when i catch a game on the dish, i am doing exactly what my family is in the City.

    My quality of life is that there is nowhere in my City that I am scared to have my hybrid car stop. Also, if my wife’s car ever did stop – at least 10 people we have never met would stop to ask if she needed assistance.

    I hate pro basketball – so does most of the U.S. if you have been watching the ratings – but, I regularly see 5-10 top 20 college football/basketball teams per year play. And i sit 3 rows from the floor when I do.

    maybe you have missed the memo,, but why SOCAL is tanking, Madison and Austin are exploding.

    “7 water parks is it” ??????

    1. T!m

      Okay, so it appears you aren’t understanding because you don’t want to. In your initial post, you were nice and also said you expected to get some hostility for asking. I haven’t been hostile, but your post reads that way to me.

      Did you follow the link I provided? It lists lots of things. I even clearly said I was using the water park item as an EXAMPLE. Man, I’m just trying to answer your question. As I said, it is all about priorities and values. If you prefer flying out of town to see a baseball game, then good for you — it sounds like you are in the right city for yourself. I prefer driving 20 minutes to one. I’m not saying I am better than you.

      You said all the things I listed could be found in any college town. Then you go on to say how you have to fly to other towns for many things. Which is it?

      I’m wondering if you have some hidden motivation here. You don’t seem like you are really trying to understand.

    2. CK

      Uh, did I read incorrectly or did you just say that you have a better quality of life than the “tanking” SoCal because you can FLY to stuff to do?

      I’ve seen some good ones, but that one takes the cake. Best of luck to ya.

    3. Red

      Face it, SteveForReal,
      you will never get anyone who has paid that much for their entry to hell to admit where they are…
      When I check out “Best Places To Live”, I find there are many wonderful places that are not in Southern California. I have retirement visible on the horizon, and keep thinking about where I could go after trading in my overpriced home for a big chunk of cash. The question is becoming just how much smaller that chunk may be… and what tradeoffs will I make?
      I see people around me paying a million for a peek of blue slightly different than the blue of the sky, or the privilege of walking a few blocks less to the beach. Not worth it to me; yet it seems I was willing to pay quite a bit to be here and not somewhere without an ocean handy. My brother decided he wasn’t going to pay, now he’s in Boulder and very happy with mountains. Of course, he spent 10 years cruising the world on a sailboat, so got enough ocean.

  16. SteveforReal

    an aside based on Shannon’s comment above

    The one thing sickening about where i live. The pedastal that children are placed on. Its insane.
    The children clearly know that they are in charge of their parents happiness. I see people picking up/dropping off their kids off at school and, when you watch the hello’s and goodbye’s you would guess that the parents are leaving or returning from a 3 week to the Netherlands.

    And, everyone, has to have “perfect families”, “perfect vacations”, “brilliant prodigy-level kids” and “perfect holidays.” As a “rough and tumble” chicago kid with a loud obnoxious family, I find my city overbearing.

  17. Ken

    But the music IS back playing!

    Just heard the Mortgage Bailout Bill passed Congress — after all, it’s an Election Year.

    What do you mean, “caught without a chair”?
    She’s got her Guaranteed Gummint Gravy!
    Paid in full by all us stupid suckers!

  18. SteveforReal

    Tim,

    I go to Vegas. But, I ain’t raising my kids there.

    Anything you can drive to in SOCAL . . . so can anyone else. Its not more “yours” because you arrived by car or have a state license. There are hundreds of people residing in Tennessee that have Dallas Cowboys seasons tickets. Are they more or less fans than the person living in Plano who has never seen the inside of the stadium?

    Lets get this back on track.

    I see nothing special about these homes and I have been waiting . . . and waiting. i routinely see homes and locales that make me fantasize. I have never seen one (1) in Irvine. None of these million dollar properties are the ones in “The O.C.” Further, most of these homes have substantailly less of EVERYTHING (size, accoutrements, wow-factor, etc.) than homes 1/2 the price in places I, and 99% of the U.S., would rather live.

    For example:
    http://www.redfin.com/CA/Irvine/59-Fire-Thorn-92620/home/5931294?src=blg_irvine&utm_source=irvinehousingblog&utm_medium=blog&utm_nooverride=1

    The above is not a dream house nor is it in a dream location or “dream” anything. This is an ugly, ugly home – inside an out.

    I know people who has stainless steel appliances that are MADE (doors/walls) of . . . stainless steel. They will last 30 years . . industrial quality machinery. Not a regular LG fridge/stove with a stainless steel front – This is insanity?!!

    I don’t understand how thinking people have gotten US (the country) into this mess. It is scary. Very scary. I can live anywhere and I there are so many reasons to NOT live here.

    1. T!m

      I don’t recall saying anything about something being more mine or that other people couldn’t drive to the same things. I don’t know what you are referring to here.

      I agree that you aren’t going to see houses that are your dream house in Irvine. Maybe in Newport or something you might. (Also, “The OC” was filmed in LA — it is a union thing that has to do with distance from Hollywood). When I lived in St. Louis, I still couldn’t afford my dream home.

      I don’t think people like living in SoCal because of the amazing house you get for your money, unless you are Oprah or Kobe. I’m happy living in a small place, so it is not something that bothers me. I am more bothered by the lack of real darkness at night due to light pollution.

  19. SteveforReal

    Tim

    I understand your perspective and believe you love and enjoy where you live. I humbly apoligize if i have hastily gone off on a tangent.

    SFR

  20. Reds

    The first, second and third owners, who is the winner? here is my list.

    1. Irvine Company (big $)
    2 .Bush (by re-fan American dream)
    3. Texas (now Texan can buy wall St)
    4 .Mortgage bakers (never forget to exe stock option)
    5. 1st owner (only if moved to Texas)

  21. movingaround

    Lets see – how about walking downtown while it is lightly snowing and all the trees have lights on them and then seeing a tree – larger than any tree here in Irvine – fully lit up while the local high school kids sing christmas carols and having a chance to chat to all your neighbors while your kids play with the friends. Oh, and did I forget – you didn’t have to get there early to find a parking place. That beats grilling steaks for Christmas any day in my personal opinion.

  22. gman

    Can we partition off a special thread on the forum for the “My city is better than your city!” type arguments? I used to read the blogs but am starting to skip them because it always devolves into the same discussion, which I think is OT. My guess is that existing readership will start to deteriorate if nothing is done about it.

  23. Not from OC

    I moved to OC from Kansas City 3 years ago, so I thought I would throw my 2 cents in. I live in Newport Beach, not Irvine, but that’s close enough. I work in Newport Beach, and hate traffic, which is one of the main reasons I didn’t want to live in Irvine. Jamboree is a mess during rush hour and the 405 is ridiculous. Also, Irvine is pretty boring with all of the cookie cutter houses and planned neighborhoods. Don’t get me wrong; Irvine is nice, there’s no crime, good schools, and I would rather live in Irvine than Kansas City simply because of the weather. For me, I moved to So Cal for the nice weather and to be close to the beach, but for no other reason. Most of the other things mentioned in the previous posts can be done in most any other major city in the U.S (baseball, football, and basketball games, golf, theme parks, etc).

  24. Just a Lurker

    As long as we are arguing about the best place to live. My vote is on Strasbourg, France: give me a flat in “Le Petite France”. I wonder what a cool mil buy in EU. Oh wait! a buck does not buy much any more. Lost half the buying power in 5 years.

    Irvine is ok (clean, safe and convenient) but very very expensive. It got a lousy school system, but great student body, from good educated family with lots of resources (that is why the test scores are so high). We feel very lonely, despite living in this crowded city. If human contact is optional then OC is for you.

    1. TB

      Just adding my voice to the fray – I live in San Diego, born and raised in CA (Palo Alto, Los Angeles and San Diego) and when I first came to this blog I was SO amused at how highly Irvinites think of their city. I always thought of Irvine as a boring sort of middle-class place, and I have a hard time picturing it as somewhere “everyone wants to live”.

      But now I am familiar with this blog and I see there must be some truth to it because the housing prices are OUTRAGEOUS. Worse than San Diego. At least for a million bucks in San Diego you get some charm and a house that doesn’t abut a freeway or look like every other house in the neighborhood.

      There’s a lot to be said about good schools and low crime, though. If Irvine was less expensive I think it would be quite appealing to me. But for the COL it seems like quite a rip-off.

      Regarding whether SoCal is where everyone wants to live. Yes, I take my child to Sea World, the beach and Disneyland regularly, and the world famous San Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Park, and Legoland, and on and on…this is all wonderful. Truly, it is. I also love the weather here.

      But I’m not planning on staying here. The stress of driving everywhere is a big reason. Also, the culture of materialism. And frankly, it doesn’t matter to me that there are 100 world-class activities I could be involved in on any given day. What children need (and adults too) is COMMUNITY, not constant recreational activities. I wouldn’t want to live in podunk Kansas, but I am with the poster who thinks that any decent college town is a much better place to live than SoCal.

      My husband and I are academics and are currently job hunting, and I am very excited about the prospect of moving to the Midwest, which I am familiar with because I lived there for 8 years as a young adult. There is plenty to do there, and the COL is so much less (while salaries for academics are actually pretty much the same!) that you can easily afford to take a vacation anywhere you’d want to go a couple times a year and experience all the wonderful activities SoCal or anywhere else might have to offer.

      I’m really sick of SoCal. I can’t wait to move elsewhere. I’ll miss a lot of things but it really does feel like a rat race here.

      1. Rocker

        I’ve lived in San Diego (Poway/Rancho Bernardo) in the past, and I agree with you 100%: it’s cleaner, less crowded, certainly San Diego (North County and the Coastal Area) is every bit as good as Irvine / Newport Beach.

        In terms of population density, the best days of Irvine are in the past, look to all the new housing developments like Quail Hill, Tustin Field, 3 floor condos/townhomes, I don’t expect this to change, eventually things are going to be very crowded: schools, roads, etc.

  25. Larrygg

    I live in Huntington Beach and there must be a dozen condos, townhouses and patio homes for sale within a few blocks of my condo. Most are around $1 Mill or more and most of them are empty and the only people I’ve seen moving into any of them here lately are renters. Stick a fork in this RE market, it’s done!

  26. socalmd

    I make a little over 300K as an internal medicine physician.
    My wife makes about 80K as a RN

    We definitely don’t feel rich

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