Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Urban couple answers suburbs’ call.

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From their two-bedroom condo in a high-rise residentia­l tower in downtown San Francisco, Kristina and Grayson Dove enjoyed all the Golden Gate City had to offer. Great restaurant­s, nightlife, theater, music and art events lay just outside their door. Kristina’s office was an easy one BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) stop away.

Then came March 2020. The pandemic sent employees home to work remotely. The city rolled up its sidewalks and pulled down the shades.

Kristina, an event and food director for Twitter, began working out of her bedroom. “I didn’t leave the room all day.” In June, she had twins, who took over the second bedroom. Her husband, a biotech auctioneer, began taking calls in the living room. Without a yard or even a balcony, they rarely went outside. The dazzle of city life faded.

That change, the need for space, and the fact that she no longer had to commute to work led the Doves to do what many families across America — those upended by the pandemic, and re-evaluating their lives — have done: They left the city for suburbia.

In December, the Doves moved 18 miles north to a five-bedroom, 4,800-square foot two-story house on a near-acre in Kentfield, Calif., which is in Marin County.

Their real estate agent, Tracy McLaughlin, helped them find what McLaughlin says more and more clients want today: “They were looking to get out of the city. They wanted walkabilit­y, a family home that was nice but not showy. They wanted a pool, a nice neighborho­od and good schools.”

Many companies are accommodat­ing the change long term. Once the pandemic lifts, for instance, Twitter is letting workers choose whether they want to work in the office, from home, or a combinatio­n. Kristina says she’ll likely opt for the hybrid plan.

“Because we can take our laptops anywhere,” McLaughlin said, “that lets us work and live in places we never dreamed of. If people can still earn what they did in the city, and enjoy some breathing room, they are not going back.”

Before they do, she said, “cities will have to be clean and safe and beautiful for people to want to return or they will remain blighted.”

If the pandemic has a silver lining, McLaughlin added, it’s that it made people try something different; and many, like the Doves, found another way of life that worked better.

Nationwide, the housing market is hot as the pandemic has driven homebuyers to make permanent changes. Here’s what McLaughlin said buyers in this market want. m Indoor-outdoor living.

“If they are going to move out of the city, they want to touch the ground,” McLaughlin said. “They want yards, not elevated living, not decks or balconies. They want a place where they can entertain outside and enjoy outdoor recreation and feel safe. Swimming pools are huge.”

■ Room for exercise. Having a yoga studio or exercise room is a big selling feature. When gyms closed then reopened with only limited capacity, people began creating places in their homes to help them work out.

■ Walking trails. Homeowners want to walk outside with their dogs and be on a walking trail. They don’t want to have to drive to a dog park.

■ Safer neighborho­ods. “People can deal with a year of not going to restaurant­s or bars, but not with also having homes or cars broken into or homeless people living on their street,” she said.

■ Workspace. Even if it doesn’t have a dedicated home office, every home must have a place to work — preferably one with a view.

■ Outbuildin­gs. Since the pandemic, guest houses are more desirable. Accessible dwelling units (ADUs) have been on the rise. Whether for boomerang kids or in-laws, they allow families to be close without living together.

■ Simple technology. Homebuyers want easy technology. They don’t want a remote to turn on their fireplaces. They don’t want crazy lighting systems. They want great internet, solid cellphone service, and performanc­e right away.

■ No fixers. Buyers don’t want houses that need a lot of work. “Buyers want turnkey. They don’t have the bandwidth to remodel,” she said. “They want to buy a house where they can move in and feel good right away.”

Marni Jameson is the author of six home and lifestyle books, including “Downsizing the Family Home — What to Save, What to Let Go” and “Downsizing the Blended Home — When Two Households Become One”, and coming in June “What to Do With Everything You Own to Leave the Legacy You Want.”

 ?? (Photo courtesy of Kristina Dove) ?? Kristina and Grayson Dove — with their 9-month-old twins, Bodhi and Phoenix — and dog, Monte, moved away from the city to their new home in the San Francisco suburbs.
(Photo courtesy of Kristina Dove) Kristina and Grayson Dove — with their 9-month-old twins, Bodhi and Phoenix — and dog, Monte, moved away from the city to their new home in the San Francisco suburbs.

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