Friday, January 16, 2009

HOME BUYERS LOOKING TO FLORIDA PANHANDLE FOR SECOND HOMES

We are no longer a secret. The USA Today has let the cat out of the bag. The place to buy that second home is in our backyard. With the Baby Boomer generation coming of age and ready to move south to our beautiful beaches and hometown community values, our area will be full with folks from around the country sharing the news to their family and friends. Are we ready? By the way, the military has also determined this is a place for their missions and families to call their home.

WALTON COUNTY, Fla. – Jan. 16, 2009 – Unlike densely populated South Florida or theme-park epicenter Orlando, the western panhandle of Florida has no big cities, and trendy nightclubs are few and far between. The region is not exactly sleepy, with plenty of golf courses and resort developments, but for many years it hasn’t drawn much attention from second-home buyers beyond nearby Louisiana, Texas and Alabama.Not so any longer. Attracted by some of the best values in Florida (not to mention some of the state’s most acclaimed beaches), buyers from all over the USA and Canada are heading to south Walton County. A new international airport scheduled for 2010 may bring them from even farther.The main selling point is sand, so soft and white locals call it “sugar sand.” The 26-mile stretch of coastline that constitutes the beaches of south Walton County has 14 towns or communities – including Seaside, the locale for the fictional picture-perfect town in the film The Truman Show. All 26 miles have been certified “Blue Wave Beaches,” an environmental seal of approval from the Clean Beaches Council.The entire strip is on a narrow peninsula between the Gulf of Mexico and Choctawhatchee Bay. More than 40 percent of the region is owned by the state and protected from development. There are numerous state parks and preserves, as well as an extensive network of protected sand dunes. All of it is linked by more than 200 miles of bicycle paths and hiking trails. But the landscape is not all nature: The strip has about a dozen golf courses.The 14 communities are each distinct – some gated, some not; some planned, some evolved. The best-known are Sandestin, Seaside, WaterSound and WaterColor. Among them, they contain an array of restaurants, art galleries, shops and recreational facilities. Most have a mix of houses, townhouses and condos. Prices also are diverse, from just over $100,000 to several million dollars.“Compared to south or central Florida, we have a huge variety of product with a large number of affordable homes,” says Joe Bracciale, director of real estate sales at Sandestin.

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