Showing posts with label statistics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label statistics. Show all posts

Sperlings Demographics for Cashiers, North Carolina



Demographics news states the future job growth for Cashiers, North Carolina is 29.7% which I thought was very impressive for those lookingto relocated to our beautiful mountain community.
This will give the opportunity for buyers to move here full time, even before they retire.



Here is the study





Population Growth:

7.7%



Median Age:

47 years



100 = national average, 110 = 10% more expensive



January Avg Temp:

34°F



July Avg Temp:

81°F



Sunny Days:

212



Precipitation Days:

134



Rainfall (inches):

73



Snowfall (inches):

0



Cashiers Demographics

Cashiers Jobs and Politics

Unemployment Rate:

3.7%



Recent Job Growth:

4.8%



Future Job Growth:

29.7%



Democrat:

47.5%



Republican:

51.8%



Independent (others):

0.6%



Schools

Blue Ridge School

PK-12

Public

2

Summit Charter School

K-8

Charter

See More Schools In Cashiers, NC



Quick Glance, Weather, Demographics, Jobs & Politics,Housing, and Education statistics provided by Sperling's.

See Also:


Enter your Email











Preview Powered by FeedBlitz


For more information regarding, Relocation, Homes for Sale, Real Estate, and Land and Lots for sale in the Western North Carolina Area mailto:info@carolinapg.com or call 828-226-8837

Helpful Tips for Building a Log & Timber Home

Log and Timber Home Magazine.

Great Magazine if you are looking to build a home in the mountains of Western North Carolina and need some ideas of designs.

They have 3 different magazines
Log Home Design
Log Home Living
Timber Home Living

You can search all three magazines on their website at one time, which I especially thought was handy if you are looking for something specific.



Here's a poll they took from their readers on essentials for building a log home.


“Front porches—log home essential or a feature that’s had its day in the sun?”


A feature that neither helps or hurts the log home look
15.6%

A fad that’s past its prime
1.1%

An absolute essential
83.3%


In planning your log home’s budget, what room is the number one priority?


Outdoor living space
5.1%

Master bedroom
13.1%

Great room
50.5%


Kitchen
31.3%

What type of roofing looks best on a timber frame home?
Wood (shake) shingles
21.2%

Metal roofing
57.6%

Asphalt or fiberglass shingles
9.1%

Slate
12.1%

What wood is best for building?
Cedar
48.5%


Pine
21.6%

Oak
29.9%

What is the ideal square footage for a log home?
2,501-3,500 sq. ft.
28.9%

1,501-2,500 sq. ft.
54.1%

Under 1,500 sq. ft.
9.3%

3,501+ sq. ft.
7.7%





Like our site? Subscribe for updates via email.

Enter your Email





Preview Powered by FeedBlitz


For more information regarding Real Estate, and Lots for sale mailto:info@carolinapg.com or call toll-free 888-277-2006 x2

Cashiers' NC real estate on par with other resort markets

 Whiteside Mtn. - Cashiers, NC

Whiteside Mountain Views

Cashiers' real estate on par with other resort markets


By Jessica Connor - Editor


Posted:


Wednesday, Jul 05, 2006 - 09:46:03 am EDT



Cashiers’ real estate market is “on the map” when it comes to other resort areas’ markets, say some local Realtors.The Chronicle surveyed a handful of other resort markets in the country - Highlands; Key West, Fla.; Vail, Colo.; Newport, R.I.; Martha’s Vineyard, Mass.; Hilton Head, S.C.; and Jackson Hole, Wyo.

Though our median and million-dollar home sale figures are not the highest of these markets, they are not the lowest, either.And that spells good things for the community, said Cathy Garren, vice president of the Highlands-Cashiers Board of Realtors.“I think it certainly puts us on the map, so to speak, as being one of the top resort areas in the nation,” Garren said. “We know we are one of the top beautiful areas in the nation, but more people are finding out the same thing that we already know.”

The figures represent single-family houses sold between May 16, 2005, and May 15, 2006, most retrieved through a community’s Multiple Listing Service (MLS).The numbers are as follows:

Cashiers - $510,000 median, 38 sold at $1 million and up (representing the Jackson County area of the Board of Realtors, which comprises primarily Cashiers, Glenville, Sapphire Valley, Yellow Mountain and the Norton Community)

Highlands - $542,500 median, 48 sold at $1 million and up

Key West $775,000 median, 111 sold at $1 million and up

Vail - $698,500 median, 184 sold at $1 million and up

City of Newport - $472,000 median, 27 sold at $1 million and up

Martha’s Vineyard - $712,250 median, 117 sold at $1 million and up (representing all six towns on the island)

Hilton Head - $700,000 median, 323 sold at $1 million and up

Jackson Hole $298,000 median, 170 sold at $1 million and up

For more information regarding Real Estate, and Lots for sale and new developments in the Cashiers, Highlands and Lake Glenville areas please contact us 828-226-8837

Why people are investing in North Carolina

HAVENS Highlands and Cashiers, N.C.; On the Blue Ridge, Twin Towns Draw a Younger Crowd
By DENISE KIERNAN


HIGHWAY 64 rises on the one-hour drive from Asheville, N.C., to the Highlands-Cashiers Plateau in the Blue Ridge Mountains. As it climbs, the cool mountain air and the wide expanse of sky offer a sense of refuge for those arriving from hot, sticky cities like Atlanta and Charleston.


That sense of refuge has drawn Southerners to homes in the twin towns of Highlands and Cashiers for well over a century. But now, with more and more part-time residents staying beyond the summer and a younger, more active set of homeowners over all, it may no longer be true to say that Highlands-Cashiers is one of the best-kept second-home secrets in the nation.


Once, the towns' trademark feature was their several golf communities for retirees, said Ann McKee Austin, a local real estate agent. But now, she said, you're likelier to see ''the S.U.V. with the Labrador in the back and the kayak on top.'' Or, as Cathy Garren, another real estate agent, put it: ''It used to be retirees from Florida. Now it's working people from Atlanta.''


They come for the mild weather and for the lush forests and waterfalls set amid stunning mountain silhouettes. But despite the climate and the setting, relative distance from big cities has helped to keep real estate prices from skyrocketing; local agents say that in the last five years, prices have increased from 12 to 20 percent. ''This is not a boom or bust area, where you have windfall years and then slack years,'' Ms. Austin said. ''It's consistent and steady. We like it that way. It's not some kind of new, made-up town on the coast of Florida.''


The Scene
Highlands and Cashiers (pronounced CASH-ers) are equally affluent fraternal twins, nestled in the midst of the Nantahala National Forest. The area has been used as a summer retreat since the mid-1800's, when wealthy families from the Low Country of South Carolina began putting up summer cottages and modest Greek Revival houses there. The town of Highlands was founded in 1875 by Kansas developers who, the story goes, drew two lines on a map, one from Chicago to Savannah, the other from New York City to New Orleans, believing that the intersection would be ideal for trade.

Today, if there is a difference between the two towns, it is that Cashiers is a little bit country, Highlands a little bit country club. Highlands, fittingly, is also higher, at an elevation of 4,113 feet to Cashiers's 3,500 feet. New homes in both towns tend to be large houses located either in gated communities or on estate lots of five acres or more.

Highlands has a proper Main Street, which draws strolling day-trippers in khakis and polo shirts. But both towns offer plenty of boutique shopping and local crafts. For activities, there's a lot to do, from pampering to playing in the rugged outdoors. You can indulge in a massage at the spa of the Old Edwards Inn on Main Street in Highlands or play croquet on the lawn of the Chattooga Club in Cashiers. Or you can climb the sheer face of Whiteside Mountain, hike to the 411-foot-tall Whitewater Falls or fish on Lake Glenville.

Mike Hays, who owns an insurance agency in Sarasota, Fla., lived between the two towns for five years and is buying a new home in Cashiers. ''I like living in Cashiers and going to Highlands,'' said Mr. Hays, a 36-year-old father of two young children. ''We've got a mountain double-jog-stroller, and we take the kids hiking with us. We go out for ice cream, We play in the yard. We're at home.'' Mr. Hays's family comes back to the area in the fall for the colors and at Thanksgiving.

Sue Gail, originally from England, lives most of the year in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and found herself at Highlands Falls Country Club in 2001, after her husband, a developer, began working on projects in the area. Ms. Gail, 60, started the Highlands Film Festival, which just completed its second year. She and her husband spend several months in Highlands in the summer; she says many residents she knows are spending more and more time there. ''It's beautiful,'' she said. ''People are so wonderful up here. It's a rejuvenating getaway.''


Pros
Property taxes vary but are relatively low (an example: $1,485 a year for 6.94 acres). Views are long, summers are mild and breezy, and fall features a mind-boggling palette of colors.


There are many golf courses of distinction in the area. Bobby Jones spent several summers at the Highlands Country Club, and he still holds the course record. The Wade Hampton Club, designed by a golf course guru and area resident, Tom Fazio, was ranked 17th in the United States by Golf Digest in 2005.

Outdoor Magazine ranked Cashiers one of America's ''top dream towns'' in 2004.
If exerting yourself is not a priority, there are plenty of shops and restaurants in both towns, or you can hop into your car and go for a scenic drive.


Cons
Anything that travels to the Highlands-Cashiers Plateau takes the same twisting drive, and getting stuck behind a land-yacht can add time and nausea to your trip.
Unincorporated Cashiers is dry, though brown-bagging is permitted practically everywhere. Alcohol can be bought in Highlands, which is incorporated, but laws there are complicated (some restaurants can serve wine, but not beer). Nevertheless, many club communities have stocked bars and restaurants, and private restaurant clubs (membership fees range from a dollar a year to more than $100) have full permits.

Some of the restaurants and shops shut down during the winter, and even in summer, things close early. ''We do have some great restaurants,'' said Debi Dickson, an Atlanta resident who spends four months a year in Highlands. ''Just don't expect to eat at them at 10 p.m.''


The Real Estate Market
Expect to spend at least $700,000 to buy into one of the high-end, full-amenity gated communities. (Many of the club amenities in those communities close in the winter.) Houses at that price will probably not include a view or a fancy kitchen. At about $900,000, you can begin to have a house with everything: views, granite countertops, extensive decks, three bedrooms, an acre of land. Styles vary, but variations on Adirondack, Shingle-style and English cottage are popular.

Bargains can still be found in some of the smaller, older cottages in the woods, especially if you're willing to be 10 to 15 miles outside town. With some searching, you can perhaps find a little bungalow, a ranch or an A-frame in the $200,000-to-$400,000 range with two or three bedrooms, depending on the condition and age of the home.

It's not unusual for a house to stay on the market for six months because of the seasonal nature of home sales. Ms. Austin recently sold a three-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath, 1,962-square-foot Shingle-style house on 3.47 acres in the Chattooga Club. It had another 1,069 square feet in porches and decks, views and included many antiques. It was listed at $2,295,000 and sold 35 days later for $2,245,000.

Ms. Garren recently sold a 30-year-old three-bedroom, three-bath house on .81 acres in a subdivision for $440,000. It was on the market for 64 days.

There is a good deal of new high-end development in the area, more than 3,000 acres in and around Cashiers alone. But agents suspect that the out-of-the-way location of Highlands-Cashiers, although attractive, keeps prices and development from spiraling out of control.

''We don't want the fudge factories, the T-shirt shops and water slides,'' Ms. Austin said.


LAY OF THE LAND POPULATION -- The Highlands area has about 3,000 year-round residents and about 20,000 in season. The area around Cashiers has 1,700 year-round residents and about 10,000 in season.


LOCATION -- Western North Carolina in the Blue Ridge Mountains, roughly 80 miles southwest of Asheville.


WHO'S BUYING -- Retirees with a love of golf who park themselves there for the summer and wealthy pre-retirees from nearby Atlanta who use their homes throughout the year. Still a favorite of Southerners, but Midwesterners are starting to stop in.


GETTING THERE -- Asheville's airport is the closest at about 60 miles, roughly an hour and a half drive. The Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport is a two-hour drive away in South Carolina. Atlanta is a two-and-a-half-hour drive away.

WHILE YOU'RE LOOKING -- The Old Edwards Inn and Spa (445 Main Street, 866-526-8008) on Main Street in Highlands offers Swedish massage packages, upscale shops and fine dining in Madison's Restaurant and Wine Garden. Its 30 rooms, suites and cottages start at $235.


For questions pertaining to the Cashiers/Highlands Real Estate market contact The Carolina Plateau Group info@carolinapg.com or call toll-free 888-277-2006 x2

Cashiers, North Carolina History

Cashiers, North Carolina



Cashiers is a census-designated place and unincorporated village located in southern Jackson County, North Carolina. As of the 2000 census, the community had a total population of 196. The name is pronounced "cash-ers", rather than "cash-ears" (like cashiers at a grocery store checkstand) as non-locals often mispronounce it.
It is said that the name derives from those who weighed the gemstones found in the hills of western North Carolina and paid out the cash to the miners who brought them to the crossroads there. It is also said to be a man's surname instead.
The town is served by U.S. 64 to Highlands (west) and Rosman (east), and N.C. 107 to Sylva (north) and Walhalla (south, via S.C. 107). The village is centered around the crossroads of the two.
It 2003, the North Carolina General Assembly passed local legislation allowing Cashiers to incorporate as a village, however this was turned down by a vote of 161 to 302 in a local referendum on August 12th. [1] In North Carolina, the village status would allow it to have its own government and levy taxes, but not require it to provide any services as cities must, and not allow it any extraterritorial jurisdiction as towns have.
It was apparently the issue of potential taxes that caused the referendum to be turned down. Instead, the county created zoning for Cashiers, which does not exist for most of the county, even in other similar places like Dillsboro. The zoning council for Cashiers is run by the county, therefore there are no extra local taxes supporting it.
Cashiers has a charter as a town from 1927, but this is now inactive as it has had no actual government for some time, if ever. Since this has never been repealed, it is unclear why it could not be reactivated instead. The new village would have had a council-manager government.

Geography

Cashiers is located at 35°6′43″N, 83°5′58″W (35.111978, -83.099488)1.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the community has a total area of 2.8 km² (1.1 mi²), all land.
The land value in this area is high in value, making it difficult for middle income people to live in the area. Cashiers and the nearby towns of Highlands, North Carolina,

P1010021

Glenville and Sapphire make up a popluar mountain vacation area at the southern end of the Blue Ridge Mountains, a finger of the Appalachian Mountains. Cashiers is surrounded by scenic views, waterfalls and Nantahala National Forest lands. Visitors and vacation home owners from all over the southeast enjoy hiking, mountain biking, golf and fly fishing during the warm months of the year.
The National Forest Service and The Nature Conservancy have both worked to protect several natural areas near Cashiers, including biologicaly diverse Panthertown Valley, Whitewater Falls, and the Tuckaseegee River Gorge. The Chattooga River also rises near Cashiers.

Demographics
As of the census2 of 2000, there were 196 people, 96 households, and 48 families residing in the community. The population density was 70.1/km² (182.0/mi²). There were 182 housing units at an average density of 65.1/km² (169.0/mi²). The racial makeup of the community was 98.98% White, and 1.02% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.51% of the population.
There were 96 households out of which 15.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 46.9% were married couples living together, 3.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 49.0% were non-families. 39.6% of all households were made up of individuals and 15.6% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.04 and the average family size was 2.76.
In the community, the population was spread out with 14.3% under the age of 18, 6.6% from 18 to 24, 24.0% from 25 to 44, 36.7% from 45 to 64, and 18.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 49 years. For every 100 females there were 94.1 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 100.0 males.
The median income for a household in the community was $37,500, and the median income for a family was $51,458. Males had a median income of $26,339 versus $23,750 for females. The per capita income for the CDP was $22,845. None of the families and 4.2% of the population were living below the poverty line, including no under eighteens and 15.2% of those over 64.

External links
Maps and aerial photos Coordinates: 35.111978° -83.099488°
Street map from Google Maps, or Yahoo! Maps, or Windows Live Local
Satellite image from Google Maps, Windows Live Local, WikiMapia
Topographic map from TopoZone
Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA
National Forests in North Carolina
The Nature Conservancy: North Carolina
Cashiers Chamber of Commerce
Jackson County Travel & Tourism
Jackson County government official website
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)

If you plan on traveling to the North Carolina Mountains and would like to preview Homes for sale, pre-construction and land for sale there are many options in these areas. Most communities don't allow for sale signs so you'll need to find an agent for listing data.

An experienced Real Estate professional will be able to help you determine the type of property that best suits your needs. Contact The Carolina Plateau Group in Cashiers, NC info@carolinapg.com or for more information call us toll-free 888-277-2006 x2