I lived in Plwton in 1969 to 1980, I attended Harvest Park middle school. In fact I was in the first graduating class at Harvest Park in 1971. I also attended Amador High School. Go Dons! All can say about the growth in Pleasanton is WOW! Double WOW! When my family moved there in 1968 Pleasanton had to traffic lights. We did have stop signs. The Safeway shopping center was fairly new and everybody did their shopping there.I lived in a brand new housing track called Pleasanton Meadows.
Luis! Yes, I had to re-upload the last two videos due to copyright violations (lost the rights to the music). I have a bunch of new videos recorded and will start releasing them in Jan 2022! Thanks for checking in and I still have my eye out for you.
@@RichFlemingRealtor We will be waiting for the new videos!. (Idea) We would love to see a video of green neighborhoods/towns ( Places with a lot of mountain landscapes, hidden in the middle of the forest like some developments in Moraga, Orinda or Lafayette in East Cost or Mill Valley, Kentfield or similar.
Jennifer! Your plan seems sound is is logistically very doable. Call/text me at 925.386.2999 or email me at Rich@RichFlemingGroup.com to discuss further.
A household needs to earn probably at least $300,000 to be able to qualify for a loan here. We are all praying that the coming crash will prevent the destruction of the middle class by bringing home prices back into affordable ranges for the average family.
Who is "we"? What makes you think a crash is coming? Building more housing would be a simpler and less economically painful way to moderate housing prices than a crash.
@@RichFlemingRealtor The "we" is me, my kids, and millions of people waiting for a return to normalcy. While building more would help, we need a good crash to get rid of all the malinvestment, zombie companies, and other overvalued assets, such as the stock and bond markets. Yes, it will be painful, but it will prevent the development of a permanent underclass of millennials in the Bay Area who will never be able to buy. It's like cleaning out your attic; it'll be a good thing. Evidence? San Jose is already down 13%.
@@RichFlemingRealtor the NIMBY Nation has been strong in preventing that. We moved to Pleasanton in 1988 between my 7th and 8th grade years and I was a Pleasantonian {Amador Valley High Class of '93} until it was time to go meet Professor Drill Sergeant at the Fort Benning Home for Wayward Boys {Infantry} the following year. My dad was a San Jose cop and it took every penny of his income plus weekend "pay jobs" plus his wife's income to sustain our 1600 sq foot house there. $198k brand new build in 88. A "Starter Home" of shit construction we spent decades re-working. That pad apraised for close to $1.7 Milli Vanillis recently {Just blame it on the rain?} {Hey, I was living in said house when MV's record went "screeeeaaattch" so the 'dad joke' is relevant} I'll be 47 in November. I lived in P-Town again from 2010-2020 and put my son through Foothill High, while flying for Air Force Rescue out of Moffett Field, at $124k/yr, and there's NO way I'd even be able to buy anything there and still function financially. The 2BR we rented is 1025 sq feet in Del Prado and appraised north of $1M-icheal "HEE-hee" Ex wife's issue now. I'm in Calaveras County on 18 acres that cost about what the garage and kitchen combined are worth in that Pleasanton tiny home. I concur with Elizabeth on the household income needed. That's to be even somewhat comfortable on the 1st as you stroke those checks {yo, millenials...thats "click an auto pay debit from your app-for-that"} They aren't gonna build out. We ARE gonna have a crunch of Federal Reserve "printer go Brrrr" notes driven insane valuation. But it will never be within comfortable reach of the average Gen X, Y or Z skilled worker without sacrificing your soul. {"Go Dons...stomp them Falcons"}
I lived in Plwton in 1969 to 1980, I attended Harvest Park middle school. In fact I was in the first graduating class at Harvest Park in 1971. I also attended Amador High School. Go Dons! All can say about the growth in Pleasanton is WOW! Double WOW! When my family moved there in 1968 Pleasanton had to traffic lights. We did have stop signs. The Safeway shopping center was fairly new and everybody did their shopping there.I lived in a brand new housing track called Pleasanton Meadows.
Thank you 🙏
Thanks for stopping by and watching!
Thank you Rich ¡Great Video!. Are you reuploading some videos or I'm getting confused with other videos/cities?
Luis! Yes, I had to re-upload the last two videos due to copyright violations (lost the rights to the music). I have a bunch of new videos recorded and will start releasing them in Jan 2022! Thanks for checking in and I still have my eye out for you.
@@RichFlemingRealtor We will be waiting for the new videos!. (Idea) We would love to see a video of green neighborhoods/towns ( Places with a lot of mountain landscapes, hidden in the middle of the forest like some developments in Moraga, Orinda or Lafayette in East Cost or Mill Valley, Kentfield or similar.
@@luiscarloscastellan ... Moraga, Lafayette and Orinda are on my list of places to do videos about.
Sounds like a nice place to live.
Pleasanton is a VERY nice place to live! Thanks for watching and commenting.
I’m a nurse was thinking about working at a hospital in Pleasanton and living in Oakland (I’m a black woman ) i want to live where the culture is
Jennifer! Your plan seems sound is is logistically very doable. Call/text me at 925.386.2999 or email me at Rich@RichFlemingGroup.com to discuss further.
Hello thank you so much for this great video! How about Christian churches in Pleasanton CA? 😊
Hello! Thanks for stopping by and commenting. I am not very familiar with the churches in Pleasanton. Sorry I can't be of more help.
Would you be able to share about other ethnicities? Particularly Asian please!
To find out information like that, I would suggest checking the US Census Bureau for information on Pleasanton, CA
Why? Who cares about ethnicities.
Me and girlfriend are looking for a place to live we currently live in Fremont I’m am an Oakland native
Drop me a text, email or call if you have questions.
All I know is that Medalark is h*lla good
A household needs to earn probably at least $300,000 to be able to qualify for a loan here. We are all praying that the coming crash will prevent the destruction of the middle class by bringing home prices back into affordable ranges for the average family.
Who is "we"? What makes you think a crash is coming? Building more housing would be a simpler and less economically painful way to moderate housing prices than a crash.
@@RichFlemingRealtor The "we" is me, my kids, and millions of people waiting for a return to normalcy. While building more would help, we need a good crash to get rid of all the malinvestment, zombie companies, and other overvalued assets, such as the stock and bond markets. Yes, it will be painful, but it will prevent the development of a permanent underclass of millennials in the Bay Area who will never be able to buy. It's like cleaning out your attic; it'll be a good thing. Evidence? San Jose is already down 13%.
@@RichFlemingRealtor the NIMBY Nation has been strong in preventing that.
We moved to Pleasanton in 1988 between my 7th and 8th grade years and I was a Pleasantonian {Amador Valley High Class of '93} until it was time to go meet Professor Drill Sergeant at the Fort Benning Home for Wayward Boys {Infantry} the following year.
My dad was a San Jose cop and it took every penny of his income plus weekend "pay jobs" plus his wife's income to sustain our 1600 sq foot house there. $198k brand new build in 88. A "Starter Home" of shit construction we spent decades re-working.
That pad apraised for close to $1.7 Milli Vanillis recently {Just blame it on the rain?} {Hey, I was living in said house when MV's record went "screeeeaaattch" so the 'dad joke' is relevant}
I'll be 47 in November. I lived in P-Town again from 2010-2020 and put my son through Foothill High, while flying for Air Force Rescue out of Moffett Field, at $124k/yr, and there's NO way I'd even be able to buy anything there and still function financially. The 2BR we rented is 1025 sq feet in Del Prado and appraised north of $1M-icheal "HEE-hee"
Ex wife's issue now. I'm in Calaveras County on 18 acres that cost about what the garage and kitchen combined are worth in that Pleasanton tiny home.
I concur with Elizabeth on the household income needed. That's to be even somewhat comfortable on the 1st as you stroke those checks {yo, millenials...thats "click an auto pay debit from your app-for-that"}
They aren't gonna build out.
We ARE gonna have a crunch of Federal Reserve "printer go Brrrr" notes driven insane valuation.
But it will never be within comfortable reach of the average Gen X, Y or Z skilled worker without sacrificing your soul.
{"Go Dons...stomp them Falcons"}
@@SnoopDougieDoug Good rant, Doug. You lived it, so you know.
I hate the bay area.
Sorry to hear that. Hope you're able to avoid the area.
Why?