Project location: 20 minutes west of Kamloops on the Trans Canada Hwy
Project size: 615 building lots; 499 apartments and townhouses, 9 buildings; sites up to 450 rooms, 3 hotels.
Prices: "Bluff" lots - $300,000 to $550,000
"Summers Landing" townhouses- $400,000 to +$700,000
"Lake Star" townhouses-$400,000 to $700,000
Tobiano is the newest, and rarest, jewel in the Thompson Okanagan. A
working cattle ranch, an under-used lake and rolling sagebrush hills
have been sculpted into a master-planned resort just 20 minutes west of
Kamloops on the Trans-Canada Highway.
Mike Grenier, with his father Bill, owner of the Pagebrook Inc.
development company, first saw the Six Mile Ranch property in the
mid-1990s, while looking around North America for property with
recreational-development potential. He purchased the property in 1995
and soon after built his family's own award wining timber-frame home,
with 18,000 glorious acres as a backyard.
Grenier admits to having tweaked his plans over the years, but his
vision has remained true--to create a premier resort destination.
Mike, Shelley and their daughters Rebecca, 11, and Allison, 9, are about to have neighbours.
Finishing touches are being added to the first of the Tobiano properties, Lake Star Town Homes, scheduled for occupancy.
Mike Vopni of the Sotheby's brokerage firm says that although no major
product launches are imminent, the real estate company tasked with
marketing Tobiano is constantly releasing new properties.
"As we sell a residential lot or town home, we release new inventory,"
he said from his office in the gull-wing roofed Discovery Centre at the
centre of the development. "We have sold well over $3.5 million this
year which I believe puts Tobiano on the top of the list for sales
success at a master planned resort community for sales in 2008."
Planning this community has included the precision timing of construction.
The Thomas McBroom-designed, 18-hole golf course opened to rave
reviews last summer and Tourism Kamloops is already touting Tobiano as
the best new course in Canada. A round of golf here is often the
dealmaker on a property purchase. McBroom has often said that Tobiano
is one of the most picturesque properties he's ever worked on. The
fairways and the tee boxes complement the landscape and its gulleys,
canyons and fissures.
The rest of the development follows suite. With nearly 1,000 acres set
aside for the developed part of Tobiano, neighborhoods are widely
spaced, with each home and amenity building situated for optimum view,
balanced by a "village centre," hotels and the golf course. All set
against the stunning backdrop of Kamloops Lake and surrounding hills.
Most purchasers are from Metro Vancouver. Their motivation is mixed:
Some are picking up recreational property and some primary residences.
Vopni estimates the sales are in favour of the recreation buyer. Either
way, it's the recreational opportunities that speak to the purchasers.
Besides the golf course, there will be a 100 slip full-service marina
and an equestrian centre complete with a network of trails that will
connect riders to 17,000 acres of forest, hills and fishing lakes on
the other side of the highway. Horse and rider will access the trails
through a culvert passing under the highway.
The short, twenty-minute commute down that Trans-Canada to the schools
and shopping in nearby Kamloops compares favourably against the Lower
Mainland's traffic gridlock. For urbanites coming for the weekend,
Vancouver is a neat 3-hour drive (once you're clear of the
before-mentioned traffic snarl).
Patrick Harlow, a product development manager with Bell Canada, is
going to trade his estimated 10 hours of weekly commute from South
Delta to downtown Vancouver. The twice a day drive over two bridges and
through a tunnel will be replaced with nine holes in the early morning,
before a shift at the home office. He expects to spend two days a week
at Bell's Vancouver office, cutting four hours a week off his commute.
He's not sure what the change of location will do for his golf handicap.
The 38-year-old says having a full-time residence at Tobiano is a
chance to give Ethan, his four-year-old son a chance to grow up in a
place where there is time to dirt bike, golf, horseback ride,
snowmobile and jet ski, all without leaving the community.
Where, according to the Transportation Ministry's distance calculator?
From Seymour and Hastings, 355 kilometres, 31/2 hours, via the
Coquihalla Highway.
Where, according to the Forest Ministry's Tree Book? In the bunchgrass
biogeoclimatic zone, grasses dominate upland sites because it's too hot
in summer for trees to take root.
Where, according to the Encylopedia of British Columbia? "Long known
for its trout fishing, Kamloops attracts a growing number of tourists
in all seasons, especially since the completion of the Coquihalla
Highway reduced driving time from the coast."
Daily average temperature, January: -4.2
Coldest January day: -37, Jan. 29, 1969
Daily average temperature, July: 21
Hottest July day: 40.6, July 31, 1969
Population, 2006 census: 80,400
% change since 2001: +4
Listed Date:
Jul 09, 2008
Property Type:
Residential Detached
Dwelling Type:
Other
Year built:
2008
(Age: 0)
Bedrooms:
-
(Above Grd: -)
Bathrooms:
-
(Full:-/Half:-)
Taxes:
$- /
-
Parking Total/Covered:
- /
-
Reno / Year:
- /
-
Listing information last updated on Jul 22, 2008 4:39 PM