going to intel/rosemary beach area soon! in 2 weeks soo exited can't wait to play spike ball , wiffle ball and the beach and water its self. thanks for the guide!
Great video, but it seems to imply that Rosemary Beach just sort of organically grew into the community that you see today. It did not. It was PLANNED. I don't think it's possible to discuss RB, Alys Beach, or Seaside without delving into the New Urbanist planning & design contributions of DPZ, which was primarily responsible for the South Walton regional plan and so many of the town plans within it. Even copycat firms who designed places like Watercolor and Watersound owe DPZ for their successes. It might be worthwhile to make a video about DPZ's enormous influence over the shaping of South Walton.
@@joyla6266 My OPINION isn't true? Interesting. If you listened to the end of the video, he said "...has become its own thing," thus the implication to which I referred a year ago. My point was that it's been its own thing from the start. I've been there several times over the span of more than 20 years, and - while retail tenants have changed, and several homes burned down and were replaced - the town as a coherent whole has remained largely the same. I LIKE the south Walton communities and his videos about them! I merely suggested that he produce a video about the intense planning that has shaped the county into a far more coherent form than the rest of the Emerald Coast.
I mean that hotel seems very high-end but when I called the concierge she couldn't even tell me what activities were in the area which is a big fail. That's like the core of the hotel in at the concierge's clueless it reflects on the quality
@@theknowitall4090 Then head a few miles west to Seaside if you're committed to pastel colors, metal roofs, bright white picket fences, wooden dunewalks, and blue umbrellas. DPZ had already designed "beachy" over there, so RB and their other town plans were intended to look different. If you actually visit any of these communities, you'll be pleased by their coherence, regardless of architectural vernacular.
Oh my gosh the gentlemen narrating reminds me of Dilbert. LOVE that show! And I LOVE Rosemary Beach!
That’s our CEO and Founder! Check out more of our videos with him narrating.
@@30A Awesome!
rosemary beach is beautiful........no question
I love the 30A area of Florida.
We do too! Thanks for watching ❤️
@@30A This is the power of good urban design.
I’m looking forward to visiting in two weeks
going to intel/rosemary beach area soon! in 2 weeks soo exited can't wait to play spike ball , wiffle ball and the beach and water its self. thanks for the guide!
You’ll have a blast! Check out more of beach town videos to learn more about the area.
@@30A already have! went in 2019 to water sound/seaside area also had a blast im going to check out more though thanks!
This place looks awesome, but I hate traveling to South-Alabama.
Great video, but it seems to imply that Rosemary Beach just sort of organically grew into the community that you see today. It did not. It was PLANNED. I don't think it's possible to discuss RB, Alys Beach, or Seaside without delving into the New Urbanist planning & design contributions of DPZ, which was primarily responsible for the South Walton regional plan and so many of the town plans within it. Even copycat firms who designed places like Watercolor and Watersound owe DPZ for their successes. It might be worthwhile to make a video about DPZ's enormous influence over the shaping of South Walton.
@@joyla6266 My OPINION isn't true? Interesting. If you listened to the end of the video, he said "...has become its own thing," thus the implication to which I referred a year ago. My point was that it's been its own thing from the start. I've been there several times over the span of more than 20 years, and - while retail tenants have changed, and several homes burned down and were replaced - the town as a coherent whole has remained largely the same. I LIKE the south Walton communities and his videos about them! I merely suggested that he produce a video about the intense planning that has shaped the county into a far more coherent form than the rest of the Emerald Coast.
Way to go Joe!
Question!! Is expensive for live there ????
I mean that hotel seems very high-end but when I called the concierge she couldn't even tell me what activities were in the area which is a big fail. That's like the core of the hotel in at the concierge's clueless it reflects on the quality
The architecture looks weird and out of place.
Dutch Colonial. Look up Aruba or Curacao.
Definately not "beachy'.
@@theknowitall4090 Then head a few miles west to Seaside if you're committed to pastel colors, metal roofs, bright white picket fences, wooden dunewalks, and blue umbrellas. DPZ had already designed "beachy" over there, so RB and their other town plans were intended to look different. If you actually visit any of these communities, you'll be pleased by their coherence, regardless of architectural vernacular.