CIELO VISTA @ YORBA LINDA

NEW -> Contingent Buyer Assistance Program


ANY THOUGHTS ABOUT THIS NEW PLAN?
It looks like many of those lots will have decent views (based on google maps street view of the project under construction) and with some decent yard space. Generous house & room sizing relative to Irvine new builds. I dig the single story floor plans. Gated community is a nice touch.

I don't know anything about Yorba Linda. Greatschools.org rates the nearby schools 7-10. There's a Whole Foods within a short drive of this community, which suggests there's some money nearby. Probably gets a bit hot back there given the distance from the ocean. Maybe a bit windy at the foothills? Is that a burn scar on the hills behind the community or am I confused by the plants/shadows on google maps?

How is Lennar as a home builder? Mid-tier?

Seems like a nice project. Curious to see how they price the houses. If I had to guess, starting around $650/sqft for the smaller ones, $600/sqft for the larger ones. Tack on a few hundred K for the best lots.
 
I lived in Placentia next door, we shared the same school district with Yorba Linda.

So, I like Yorba Linda. I even got married at the Nixon Library there. But I would not live all the way up there in the hills. There are limited number of routes to get in and out, and when my cousin lived there during a fire they had to walk all the way in just to retrieve some personal belongings because the roads were blocked to car traffic.

I looked at this:
And it said HOA fee is $620 and special assessment fee $1,039.

Have you considered north side of Placentia? For example:

$95/month HOA fee. Ralphs shopping center around the corner, Kaiser and Anaheim Canyon train station close by. If you don't like the local schools, you may be able to do inter-district transfer and send your kid to another school in the district.
 
Last edited:
Yorba Linda has a hard time getting insurance because it's burned before.
If you buy a house here, expect to pay $5,000 - $10,000/year for home owners insurance.

Looking @ the development, it looks like it's in a burn zone.
 
It looks like many of those lots will have decent views (based on google maps street view of the project under construction) and with some decent yard space. Generous house & room sizing relative to Irvine new builds. I dig the single story floor plans. Gated community is a nice touch.

I don't know anything about Yorba Linda. Greatschools.org rates the nearby schools 7-10. There's a Whole Foods within a short drive of this community, which suggests there's some money nearby. Probably gets a bit hot back there given the distance from the ocean. Maybe a bit windy at the foothills? Is that a burn scar on the hills behind the community or am I confused by the plants/shadows on google maps?

How is Lennar as a home builder? Mid-tier?

Seems like a nice project. Curious to see how they price the houses. If I had to guess, starting around $650/sqft for the smaller ones, $600/sqft for the larger ones. Tack on a few hundred K for the best lots.
For my personal experience:

Cons:
Horrible traffic,
Job opportunity
Population growth

Pros:
Good price
above average safety
good public school/ good private school
Good parks
 
Yorba Linda has a hard time getting insurance because it's burned before.
If you buy a house here, expect to pay $5,000 - $10,000/year for home owners insurance.

Looking @ the development, it looks like it's in a burn zone.
Thank you so much! I just learned this problem. I checked again, this new development should in the fire zone.
 
Someone who was building an exposed wood patio in Yorba Linda told me the fire department made him pickle the exposed wooden beams in some fire resistant chemical before they would sign off. The wooden beams had to rest inside the pickle for a few months.

It made the patio way more expensive.
 
For my personal experience:

Cons:
Horrible traffic,
Job opportunity
Population growth

Pros:
Good price
above average safety
good public school/ good private school
Good parks

The other con is that it is much warmer in Yorba Linda than it is in Irvine but there is little to no mello roos out there so the property tax rate is lower.
 
The homes are so big that they eat up the lots so yard space is small. 10 sold to date. Yes it's in wuiz zone. Burned in 1980, 2008, and 2019. The Whittier fault borders on the north..
 
Yorba Linda is a nice place to live. Lived there for several years. They are opening up a lot of new things there now too. Like the dtf at Brea mall.
 
Back
Top