A Profile of Babcock Ranch in SW Florida

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  • Опубликовано: 27 апр 2021
  • Miles O'Brien profiles Babcock Ranch, America's first solar town, with developer Syd Kitson, CEO of Kitson & Partners for the 2021 Edison Awards.
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Комментарии • 27

  • @jdgoodwin3136
    @jdgoodwin3136 Год назад +13

    I just read that you came through Hurricane Ian relatively unscathed. Congratulations. However, I'm not surprised. Delighted, yes. Surprised? Not so much.

  • @shelleyhuskey1870
    @shelleyhuskey1870 2 года назад +5

    Awesome! Thinking about retiring in a couple of years and may need to check out this community and its homes. Kudos

  • @denisepetersen2774
    @denisepetersen2774 Год назад

    Thank-you for this video. We just toured Babcock Ranch last Sunday, after surviving Hurricane Ian and living in Cape Coral. We heard the homes had received no damage and are built higher above sea level. We saw a few model homes by one of the builders in a couple different locations, and then had one of the sales reps. take us to see a recently completed home. My husband noticed how different this home was constructed compared to the model homes, as in less than quality wood working and trim. We were told the houses usually take about 60-90 days to complete, and there are many in different stages of completion. We were told they had sold many houses since Hurricane Ian, and we felt the two sales reps. we spoke with had an indifferent air about them; i.e., we were even told if we didn't buy now, someone would for sure scoop up the very lot we were interested in anyway. Some of the models were no longer available, either. Many options that used to be offered are no longer, like pools. They used to be included, but since the pool builders could not guarantee a finished product by the time you were ready to close, you now have to pay for the pool yourself after your closing. Now that I've heard the information from the video about taxes, we for sure would not even consider buying here.

  • @thomasrudder6474
    @thomasrudder6474 Год назад +2

    I agree with Zahir about being less car dependent. This community needs a trolley transport system to take residents downtown to restaurants and shopping and also to Publix. A jump on jump off trolley would be perfect to meet the residents needs. please consider!

  • @db-nj4el
    @db-nj4el 2 года назад +2

    great place to live, definitely worth visiting to see what this town has to offer.

  • @miguelrodriguez-wj1zr
    @miguelrodriguez-wj1zr Год назад

    Amazing, I Love it

  • @DocWallyWorld
    @DocWallyWorld Год назад +2

    Read the article u guys survived wanted to see it

  • @klamcpa
    @klamcpa Год назад

    They built the houses 30 feet above sea level. Is the town near the beaches?

  • @sbrecke1507
    @sbrecke1507 Год назад

    All houses should be built like that in hurricane areas. It should be the standard building code

  • @JenNagleInk
    @JenNagleInk Год назад +2

    What happens when hurricanes lifts those panels. I would not want to be in the path.

    • @elenado6590
      @elenado6590 Год назад +1

      They are very well secured those panels will not fly.... It is a aglomeration of people brought by a great concept but realized poorly from the quality of life expectation...Just another for money(first) concept...

    • @JenNagleInk
      @JenNagleInk Год назад

      @@elenado6590 awe, that's to bad.

  • @sbl17jackson37
    @sbl17jackson37 3 года назад +12

    They should have put these solar panels on the homes instead of destroying a large area to make a solar farm. Solar panels do not look bad on homes. This now destroyed a piece of land could have been used as a park or to grow food. Not a good decision.

    • @EmilGhiurau
      @EmilGhiurau 2 года назад

      I do wonder now why did they do that?

    • @robertfletcher3421
      @robertfletcher3421 Год назад +1

      @@EmilGhiurau As protection against hurricanes, Ian

    • @mrlepercon
      @mrlepercon Год назад +1

      They still can

  • @duanetye6897
    @duanetye6897 Год назад +2

    All those thousands of solar panels an still don't generate enough power, so they burn natural gas. 10 to 15 years all those panels will be in a landfill. It's a great concept it survived Ian but it didn't have water push into it like Fort Myers an other area's did.

    • @MikeySlou
      @MikeySlou Год назад

      Ok Duane 😅

    • @elenado6590
      @elenado6590 Год назад +1

      @@MikeySlou It is true...15 years span life s solar panels then all community will pay more for replacement! I bet one day residents will not be allowed to install solar on the roof so will not make competition....

  • @zahirmillard8205
    @zahirmillard8205 2 года назад +4

    Him: "Lets build a less car dependent city focused on peoples health and the environment"
    Me: "Your still building suburbs and nonflexible zoning..." sad face.

    • @analfloss453
      @analfloss453 Год назад

      How can you build a low car depend environment when it’s built in the middle of nowhere?

  • @mandamoo8746
    @mandamoo8746 Год назад

    Builds sustainable city, but fills fields of solar panels, that sadly have a lifespan, hence will end in landfill, and shows footage of people shopping at a market receiving plastic shopping bags. #ItAllCounts #NiceIdeaInTheory

    • @jersey8231
      @jersey8231 Год назад +1

      Every product produced has a lifespan and eventually ends up in a landfill. What's your point? And more importantly what's your solution?