The Greater Albuquerque Area of New Mexico is a perfect destination for people of discrimating tastes, who value quality of life - cultural diversity, breathtaking landscapes, sunshine, art, sacred spaces, and a stream in the desert.
April 2007 - Posts
-
It is springtime and the many trails of New Mexico beckon. In the greater Albuquerque area, o ur high desert climate and easy accessibility to walking paths and trails to and through the bosque (woods) encourage us to be outdoors. We can also pick up Read More...
|
-
I can’t think of any of my friends in Albuquerque, New Mexico who don’t have pets. Most have two or more. Several also rescue animals. They tell me the need for animal rescuers is enormous because of a high percentage of abandonment by pet Read More...
|
-
Anew movement is sweeping the United and gaining momentum throughout the world. Real estate practitioners and building industry professionals are leaders in the green building revolution. They support the construction of buildings that conform to Leadership Read More...
|
-
As real estate pratitioners we do not operate in a vacuum. We are actively engaged in the real world with each other, with our customers, our clients and their families. A friend sent me a timely letter about a timely book that is not about real estate Read More...
|
-
The real estate resale market activity report for the Greater Albuquerque area remains positive. Both median and average sales prices have moved up a notch. The median sales price is $198,500.00 compared with $189,800.00 in February. The average sales Read More...
|
-
The old town square is at the center of Old Town, Albuquerque. It is the original city center that the Spanish settlers established some three hundred years ago. Old Town is the cradle (la cuna) so to speak, of Albuquerque, New Mexico. The well-preserved Read More...
|
-
Albuquerque , New Mexico is over 300 years old. It was not always the city that it is now, of almost half a million people. Before the Spanish explorers arrived, Pueblo Indians chose the fertile spot on the bank of the Rio Grande to grow their crops. Read More...
|