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Community Information
HOME PRICES RANGE BETWEEN $1,500,000 TO OVER $50,000,000
Montecito lies just East of the City of Santa Barbara. This gracious town has it all-- breathtakingly beautiful views of the mountains and ocean, sun-dappled lanes, and a charming village lifestyle. It's no wonder that Montecito has been the retreat of choice for industrial barons and Hollywood celebrities for over a century. For beautifully illustrated stories on Montecito history and the latest in arts and dining, go to Montecito Magazine.
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I was interviewed for this recent story in the Los Angeles Times.
NEIGHBORLY ADVICE: MONTECITO
Quietly, modestly, tastefully rich By Ann Brenoff, Times Staff Writer July 8, 2007
This is a place where less is more. Forget garish Beverly Hills mansions and Bel-Air palaces that scream "look at me." Santa Barbara County's Montecito is understated elegance, English gardens and the quiet genteelness that comes from having nothing to prove. It is, however, only for the chosen few.
Beginnings
Montecito, which means "little woods," once teemed with grizzly bears and wolf packs. And then the rich and famous discovered it.
At first, wealthy people came for the waters. There's a popular story that back in 1850, a gravely ill man named Wilbur Curtiss encountered a Native American here who claimed to be 110 years old. The secret, Curtiss learned, was the magic hot springs that cured the sick and made the old young. Curtiss, at first skeptical, bathed in the springs, and his good health returned. Being a smart businessman, he immediately filed a homestead claim to the four thermal pools. He later opened the Montecito Hot Springs, a spa and hotel.
Over the years, the resort grew and prospered, but in 1964 the property burned to the ground. The springs still exist, and many locals know how to find them, but the "no-trespassing" signs at the end of the hard-to-traverse trails keep most people away.
Until the spa's demise, it continued to draw a steady stream of those seeking the curative promises of its waters.
What it's about
This is where the rich and famous come to be ignored. Many celebrities have found refuge here, including Oprah Winfrey, Ellen DeGeneres, Rob Lowe, Kirk Douglas and Jeff Bridges. They tend to live behind gates but are often seen around town. Jonathan Winters is a regular at Tom's, the local coffee shop.
These celebs - and the captains of industry who are their neighbors - could hardly have staked out a prettier spot.
But what distinguishes it from some other places populated by the super rich is its lack of glitz and ostentatiousness.
On the contrary, there is a dignified Cotswold-like feeling to many of the streets and lanes, especially those in the Hedgerow neighborhood (named for the solid row of tall hedges that fronts each property). Mature eucalyptus trees form crowning arches over the streets.
Even the commercial areas are charming. In the upper village, there's a hardware store, post office, gas station, a drugstore, coffee shop and deli and the ubiquitous real estate offices. In the lower village, there are more galleries and frame shops, restaurants and, yes, more realty offices, but this is by no stretch a Rodeo Drive.
Good news, bad news
This isn't a place for the faint of wallet.
In 2006, Forbes Magazine declared the Montecito ZIP Code the seventh-highest-priced in the U.S., and the median price of a home is $2.9 million. High prices notwithstanding, sales remain brisk compared with the slowdown elsewhere in the state - up 30% over the previous year. In March, for example, homes sold in an average of just 17 days, compared with 54.6 days in Los Angeles.
Schools are top flight, a draw for families.
Housing stock
Montecito developed "organically," said Brook Ashley, a child actress turned realty agent with Prudential California Realty. She has lived here for almost 20 years. There are no tract homes, and the densest housing development is a condo complex near the Four Seasons Biltmore Hotel off Butterfly Beach.
Many of the original homes were somewhat ordinary, but over the decades they have been tastefully spruced up with creative landscaping and stone walls. Of course, there is no shortage of mansions on estate-size lots.
But even the small - just several hundred square feet - Moody Cottages, built by four local sisters, fetch a commanding price.
The Moody sisters, without formal construction training, built about 20 of their charming homes.
There are about 160 units for sale right now, almost 150 of them single-family homes. All told, there are nearly 4,200 housing units in the community, which has a population of about 10,000.
Report card
Children attend Cold Spring Elementary School, or Montecito Union Elementary, which scored 958 and 936, respectively, out of a possible 1,000 on the state 2006 Academic Performance Index Base report. Santa Barbara Middle School scored 763 and the senior high, 737.
ann.brenoff@latimes.com
Sources: DataQuick Information Systems
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 Brook Ashley Prudential California Realty 1170 Coast Village Road Santa Barbara, CA 93108
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