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Newcastle, WA

Newcastle Days - September 6th & 7th!

David Edwards King County Real Estate: Real Estate Agent in Renton, WA

Posted by David Edwards under For Buyers, For Sellers, For Realty Professionals, Regional - West, News & Media, Local Events Calendar, Regional News, Newcastle

A resident and business favorite, Newcastle Days is a celebration of the culture and spirit of our community. Entering its 14th year, the festival continues to grow into a showcase of art, service, community and business. Newcastle Days is a living experience of the treasures to be found right under your nose. Admission is FREE! Sponsorship opportunites are still available! Contact Jules Maas at julesm@ci.newcastle.wa.us, or visit the City's Website at http://www.ci.newcastle.wa.us/ch_cds_pw_petr_se_newcastledays.asp for more information.

David Edwards
REALTOR
Keller Williams Realty Southeast Sound
Phone: 425-890-8045
Fax: 425-902-1899
E-Mail: david@davidjedwards.com
Website: http://www.davidjedwards.com
Blogsite: http://www.davidjedwards.com/renton-info-blog.asp
Mobile Site: http://davidjedwards.mofuse.mobi
Community Reports: http://www.topmarketer.net/CSR/CSReport.aspx?CV4GU5KAYOEF

David J Edwards is a full time real estate agent and REALTOR with Keller Williams Realty specializing in Residential Real Estate for buyers and sellers.

Public Meeting to Discuss the Newcastle Sports Park

David Edwards King County Real Estate: Real Estate Agent in Renton, WA

Newcastle City Hall
6:00 - 8:00 PM
September 15th, 2008

Join us for Newcastle's Sports Park Facility at our third Open House. Come see the preferred site design alternative and provide input towards the development.

Ed MacLeod, Landscape Architect of MacLeod Reckord will be present to give a brief presentation pertaining to the details of the preferred alternative.

For additional information contact Michael Holly, Parks Program Manager at 425-649-4444 X 142 or e-mail michaelh@ci.newcastle.wa.us

David Edwards
REALTOR
Keller Williams Realty Southeast Sound
Phone: 425-890-8045
Fax: 425-902-1899
E-Mail: david@davidjedwards.com
Website: http://www.davidjedwards.com
Blogsite: http://www.davidjedwards.com/renton-info-blog.asp
Mobile Site: http://davidjedwards.mofuse.mobi
Community Reports: http://www.topmarketer.net/CSR/CSReport.aspx?CV4GU5KAYOEF

David J Edwards is a full time real estate agent and REALTOR with Keller Williams Realty specializing in Residential Real Estate for buyers and sellers.

Summer is Special in Newcastle Washington

Michael Creel: Real Estate Agent in Bellevue, WA

 As summer approaches I prepare for the sound of music! My home is fairly close to Lake Boren Park, and each year I get to sit in the back yard and enjoy the sound of live music. Every summer is interesting here in Newcastle's Olympus neighborhood; from the community garage sale, moonlight movie nights, to the Arts & Crafts show.

The 23-acre Lake Boren Park at the base of Olympus is a major asset to the neighborhood and a gathering place for many Newcastle residents. With a large play area, sand volleyball court, tennis courts, walking trails and a fishing dock, it's a very popular destination. The homeowners association, which meets monthly, hosts an annual neighborhood garage sale and Easter egg hunt.

"The upscale Olympus neighborhood in Newcastle lives up to the grandeur its name implies, with sweeping views of the Olympic Mountains, Lake Washington and Mount Rainier, along with well-kept yards and homes," writes Jolene Gensheimer in a special to The Seattle Times Real Estate section on Sunday, October 14th, 2007.

Olympus is served by two school districts: Issaquah and Renton. Both elementary schools have new buildings, with Issaquah's Newcastle Elementary, which opened in 2004, and Renton's Hazelwood Elementary, which opened in 2005. The neighborhood also has wide streets, making it a good place for walkers and bicyclists, as well as walking trails and a large greenbelt.

The well-maintained yards and homes are a trademark of Olympus and are enforced by neighborhood covenants. For example, residents need to submit a paint sample before painting their home, and there are codes requiring residents to keep their yards maintained (believe me, I've been warned before)!

Olympus is also a short walk from the Coal Creek Park Trails; the park trails serve the city as a refuge from the urban sprawl with a trail through a narrow creek ravine leading to two waterfalls and several excellent historical sites. The trail through Coal Creek Park is one of the most fascinating hikes anywhere around Puget Sound.

It features several waterfalls, a small canyon, and an environment typical of the Cascade foothills, the park stretches the boundary between the suburbs of Bellevue and the natural areas of the Issaquah Alps, a green belt pointing from the foot of Cougar Mountain through the rows of houses along Lake Washington's eastern shore.

What makes Coal Creek Park so unique is that in the late 1800s, when forest still reached all the way to the shores of Elliot Bay and today's Eastside was mostly untracked wilderness, the park was the site of the Newcastle coal mine. As you hike the trail, you may get glimps's of remaining vestiges of the mining days, clues to the story of Newcastle coal; hence the name Coal Creek.

So anyone in need of a special place to spend a hot summer day, pack the family into the car and head to Newcastle and visit our park, our trails, and maybe even grab a round of golf at the club. The music is great each Wednesday in June through August, and the BBQ pits are going full blast. We hope to see you there, tell them Mike sent you!

Event Calendar 2008

Concerts in the Park Wednesdays, June 25 - August 20

4th of July at Lake Boren Park Friday, July 4

Moonlight Movies Fridays, August 8, 15 & 22

Newcastle Days Saturday & Sunday, September 6 & 7

Volunteers Needed for ivy Removal in Newcastle

David Edwards King County Real Estate: Real Estate Agent in Renton, WA

Volunteers Needed for Ivy Removal in Newcastle

Posted by David Edwards under For Buyers, For Sellers, For Realty Professionals, Regional - West, Local Events Calendar, Regional News, Washington

Location: Newcastle Historical Cemetery

When:

Saturday, February 16th 10:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M.

Sunday, February 17th. 1:00 P.M. - 3:00 P.M.

"Weed Warriors" of Newcastle is a new volunteer group forming to assist the City of Newcastle in removing weeds of concern, like ivy, or other invasive species that degrade our public areas.

The cemetery is located northeast of Lake Boren Park. Parking is available at the park within a short walking distance via the access road found at the northeast corner of the park. Limited parking is available on 129th Ave. N.E. at the cemetery site.

Light work includes clipping the vines from the trees. More strenuous work, for those willing, includes root removal. The city of Newcastle will provide some of the tools, like clippers and tarps, and handle the disposal of the vines.

Please bring your own gloves and dress for the weather.

For more information, contact:
Peggy E. Price
Secretary/Treasurer
Newcastle Trails
PeggyP@NewcastleTrails.org
(425) 829-2196

Newcastle, we can’t get no respect!

Michael Creel: Real Estate Agent in Bellevue, WA

Golfing in Newcastle

Having lived in the beautiful city of Newcastle's Olympus neighborhood for several years now, I really have come to understand the pain felt in being denied our own zip code. For years the city has battled with the postal service to issue a new zip code to Newcastle, so that that sharing zip codes 98056 and 98059 are no longer necessary. It has thus far proven to be an exercise in fultility.

Newcastle was originally a coal mining town founded in the 1870s and was an unincorporated area within King County until September 30, 1994. In 2006 the Chief Demographer of the Washington State Office of Financial Management estimated the population was 9,175. Currently the city is a suburban community with a total area of 4.5 sq. miles. Most residents work in nearby Seattle, Bellevue, or Renton, and based on per capita income Newcastle ranks 23rd of 522 areas in the state of Washington to be ranked. The most notable attractions of the area are certainly The Golf Club at Newcastle, and Lake Boren Park.

On May 16th, 2006 the city council passed a Resolution authorizing the City Manager to execute a professional Services Agreement with Doubleday Government Relations for Federal and State lobbying on behalf of the City through June 2007; the battle went all the way to Washington DC, to no avail.

The funny part of it all is that if you visit the website for the US Postal Service, it clearly states:

"While the Postal Service must be guided by concerns for service and efficiency, it does appreciate the identity and addressing concerns of local communities. Therefore, municipal requests to modify authorized last lines of address and/or ZIP Code boundaries in order to provide municipal identity, especially in undeveloped areas, will be considered and every reasonable effort will be made to accommodate them."

In reality, the postal service makes every effort to prevent this from happening. Now some may wonder why we care, why is a zip code important? A zip code gives a city its own identity; it makes each area unique to the world. Just as we all have our own unique genetic code, each area in a city has a unique zip code.

Also, it affects property values; and although Renton is a perfectly nice city, the value of comparable properties is lower than those of Newcastle. We pay higher than usual property taxes in Newcastle due to the lack of any significant commercial development tax contribution. So no homeowner enjoys paying higher taxes to live in a small exclusive community, only to be thrown in the same zip code as a much larger and more urban city. We are independent, and deserve the recognition of being afforded our own zip code; we deserve a little respect!