Featured Property: 2484 Fisher Road, Heffley Lake Waterfront Property, Kamloops, B.C. $599,900

Fisher Road Heffley Lake Sunset Real EstateA private piece of paradise on Big Heffley Lake. This turn-key home comes fully furnished. It has 120+ feet of waterfront and sits on a 0.62 acre treed lot. There is a spacious deck with an incredible 180 degree view overlooking the lake and large dock, fire pit, flat grassy beach area and yard. The spacious rancher style home has numerous updates including a metal roof, kitchen, appliances, furnace, hot water tank, all flooring, all drywall and insulation in the ceiling and walls, bathrooms, light fixtures, internal doors, plumbing and much more. Heffley Lake is 10 minutes from world class skiing at Sun Peaks Ski Resort and 30 minutes from the Kamloops Downtown core. There are few properties like this one on Heffley Lake. This home overlooks the largest part of the lake. Heffley is ideal for year round activities such as water skiing, wake boarding, fishing, paddling and hiking in the warmer months and snowshoeing, cross country skiing, snowmobiling and much more in the colder months. There is room to build a detached shop and lots of parking for all your vehicles and toys. This home is suited for year round living. Don’t miss out on this fantastic property!

To view all homes for sale in Kamloops click here.

Featured Property: 560 Carmel Court, Upper Sahali, Kamloops, B.C. $369,900

560 Carmel Crt Upper Sahali Kamloops PropertySpacious Sahali home in a cul-de-sac location. Very close to shopping, schools, transportation and the water park. This home backs on to a green belt and has access through the back gate. 3 bedrooms on the main and 2 bedrooms plus a den down. There are three bathrooms, a large spacious rec room and lots of storage. Many large windows up and down making this home very bright and inviting. 200 amp service, all appliances included (also upright freezer and built in microwave/hood fan), detached workshop w/ concrete floor, spacious 2 car garage and natural gas outlet in the back yard. Private yard with a large covered patio.

To view all homes for sale in Kamloops click here.

Aberdeen Enthused By New Park: ‘It’s a Good Thing’

This article appeared in the Kamloops Daily News on May 2nd, 2012 and was written by Mike Youds.

For a neighbourhood nervous about a proposed strip mine just over the hill, a City open house on Wednesday seemed, well, more like a walk in the park.

West Highlands will be Kamloops’ newest city park once it’s developed next year, and there was no doubt at Aberdeen elementary Wednesday night that the park will be a crowd pleaser.

“It’s a good thing,” said Vance Ardell, one of about 75 people, many of them area residents, who attended the session. “I’d like to see people using it, I like to see the dogs out using it and the kids using it, too. I like the whole thing.”

The 14-hectare, donut-shaped green space is an urban redevelopment project that practically fell into the City’s lap when Aberdeen Highlands Development Corp. decided to close Aberdeen Links last fall.

The golf course simply wasn’t sustainable, said Glenn Grant, a neighbourhood resident.

“This will be more widely used by residents around there,” he said.

Responding to a survey that showed overwhelming support for a park, the company sold a parcel of the land to the City for $2.3 million and donated other portions. With another $2.5 million earmarked for park development, the City got the planning process underway Wednesday by asking for input.

Conceptual plans include redeveloping the former clubhouse as a possible community centre flanked by a couple of playfields, expanded parking, community gardens and preservation of the existing pond. A 1.7-kilometre linear path would weave through the grassland section of the park, which encircles an existing subdivision.

Erynn Carney, a young mother, sees the potential to address a recreational shortcoming in the city — toddler parks.

“There are so many kids up here,” she said. “In fact, most of the city doesn’t have a toddler-friendly park.”

Another not-quite-so-young contingent was well represented.

Matthew Gosse was with a group of young longboard riders from throughout the city who hope to see part of the park offer paved trails. As members of the Kamloops Longboard Club, they give lessons to youngsters and argue for a safer alternative to streets.

“Opportunities like this don’t come up too often,” Gosse said, noting that the amenity could serve multiple purposes.

“It would be the best place in the city for it,” added Brendan Woods, who recalled having been hit twice by vehicles while longboarding on the street.

Winter sports — skating on the pond and cross-country skiing on the trail — are another possibility.

“Given the elevation of the park, I think winter activities could have huge appeal,” said Michael Doll, a City parks planner.

There was but one bone of contention at the open house. Several residents complained about off-leash dogs and canine droppings. Stick-it notes were strategically placed on one map to show where bag dispensers ought to go.

“This is the biggest doggy park in the world,” said Joanne Linnell, whose home overlooks the golf course. “Is it going to be a doggy park or a park for people?”

With potential for another 3,000 residents in the neighbourhood through build-out by the developer over the next 10 to 15 years, there will be even greater need for a park in the area, said Coun. Nelly Dever.

Nick DeCicco, the City’s parks planning and project supervisor, said that’s a citywide complaint not confined to Aberdeen. He said residents are happy to see the former golf course preserved as public green space.

“Everything going well, we should be able to get the park developed next year,” he said.

Another open house will be held once public input has been added to the concept plan.

Tranquille On The Lake Project Growing

This article appeared on Kamloops This Week on May 1st, 2012 and was written by Andrea Klassen.

Tranquille on the Lake KamloopsA housing project slated for the historic tuberculosis-sanatorium lands on Tranquille Road is beginning to bear fruit.

Or, rather, vegetables.

While the village-style development is still years away from construction, the organic farm that anchors the project is up and running.

Starting Saturday, May 26, the Tranquille Farm’s produce will go on sale in a new farmers’ market space that will run on weekends to the end of summer.

The neighbourhood plan for the Tranquille on the Lake development will also head to city council this month.

“This sets the vision for the next 30 or 40 years, so, it’s really a key issue,” said development manager Tim McLeod.

“Once this is behind there, then zoning will take place. Then we’ll do a phased development agreement, then start to build.”

The updated plan was on display on April 26 at a downtown open house McLeod said was meant to give council and the public an opportunity to see where the plan is at now.

Tranquille on the Lake could include up to 2,000 residential units, which would include apartment, townhome and single-family dwellings and seasonal houses.

While past plans for the site included an 18-hole golf course, McLeod said it was written out of the latest draft to save more space for the organic farm and orchard that will cover about 60 per cent of the 191-hectare property.

“There’s a huge groundswell of people looking for good-quality food,” he said.

“They’re really concerned about it and they want to live where that food is.”

A marina planned for the village has also become a “working waterfront,” which McLeod said could include boat-repair and fishing shops.

“It’s more of a West Coast feel,” he said.

“So, on a Saturday morning, you take your latte and you can go along the beachfront and enjoy it.”

If council finds favour with the development, McLeod estimated it will take about a year to get through the regulatory process and two more years to get the first phase of the project to the move-in stage.

On the farming side, owners B.C. Wilderness Tours are also drafting a farm plan for the province’s Agricultural Land Commission, which functions much as its neighbourhood plan does.

The company is still hoping to take a portion of its property out of the Agricultural Land Reserve and replace it with non-ALR lands McLeod said are better-suited to farming.

In addition to granting approval for the farmers’ market, the commission has already agreed to an on-site RV park.

The full neighbourhood plan is available at tranquille.ca.

Click here to read more information about the area.

1 634 635 636 637 638 781