Pacific Beach Homes
Whether you are looking to buy Pacific Beach Homes or just looking to browse Pacific Beach Homes for sale, BrookstoneAssociates.com offers an easy to use online search feature. BrookstoneAssociates.com allows our clients to search an up to date database of thousands of Pacific Beach Homes. Browse thousands of Pacific Beach Homes for sale all in one place. You can view pictures and descriptions as well as schedule viewings and get information on upcoming open houses. At Brookstone Associates we believe that our clients are our most important asset. This is why assisting our clients in buying or selling a property is priority number one. Many times in our industry it seems that other agents are more concerned with marketing themselves instead of their client’s property. At Brookstone Associates you will never find one of our agent’s pictures on business cards, signs, or flyers. We have made it our goal to lead by example in offering our highest level of service. Brookstone Associates seeks to only employ REALTORS®. REALTORS® subscribe to a strict code of ethics and are expected to maintain a higher level of knowledge of the process of buying and selling real estate.
Pacific Beach is a neighborhood of San Diego, bounded by La Jolla to the north, Mission Beach and Mission Bay to the south, Interstate 5 to the east and the Pacific Ocean to the west. While largely populated by young people, surfers, and college students, the population is becoming older, more professional, and more affluent due to rising property and rental costs. "P.B.," as it is known as by local residents, is home to one of San Diego's larger nightlife scenes, with dozens of bars, eateries, and clothing stores.
Pacific Beach was developed during the boom years of 1886-1888 by D. C. Reed, A. G. Gassen, Charles W. Pauley, R. A. Thomas, and O. S. Hubbell. It was Hubbell who "cleared away the grainfields, pitched a tent, mapped out the lots, hired an auctioneer and started to work". To attract people, they built a Race Track and a San Diego College of Letters, neither of which survive today. A railway also connected Pacific Beach with downtown San Diego, and was later extended to La Jolla. Pacific Beach Homes |