thewoodlandshomes

thewoodlandshomes

IVAN ARJONA - Currently ranked as the #1 RE/MAX Agent in The Woodlands, Spring, Magnolia, Conroe and surrounding areas # 6 in Texas # 3 in Greater Houston
The Woodlands, TX Real Estate & Local Information by Ivan Arjona Realtors® RE/MAX® The Woodlands & Spring

Пікірлер

  • @madelinegilmore4239
    @madelinegilmore423911 ай бұрын

    🤷 Promo-SM

  • @user-nc2kz2mn5v
    @user-nc2kz2mn5v Жыл бұрын

    Sadly it has gone from a place where everything was nestled in the trees to a concrete jungle...glad I lived there in the '80s and 90s.

  • @user-nc2kz2mn5v
    @user-nc2kz2mn5v Жыл бұрын

    The Woodlands began a lot longer than 30 years ago! You might have mentioned George Mitchel and his master plan.

  • @mikeg8138
    @mikeg8138 Жыл бұрын

    Promo`SM

  • @lorchris7696
    @lorchris7696 Жыл бұрын

    I have lived in The Woodlands for over 30 years. It’s a great community for all ages. Thank you Ivan for sharing our beautiful community

  • @realestatevstechnology2020
    @realestatevstechnology2020 Жыл бұрын

    Good thing!

  • @realestatevstechnology2020
    @realestatevstechnology2020 Жыл бұрын

    Great!

  • @gustavelomack8060
    @gustavelomack8060 Жыл бұрын

    【p】【r】【o】【m】【o】【s】【m】 😞

  • @onlyonedw
    @onlyonedw2 жыл бұрын

    I am new to the KZread platform and would like to use this visual for an intro I’m working on for my channel. Your work is impeccable. Would you grant me that opportunity? I will give you credits. The raw footage would really be incredible! Let me know and I can send my email to you or put it here.

  • @ravok23
    @ravok232 жыл бұрын

    Of course, life happens while you're making plans. But, I am looking to move to the Woodlands soon. Checking out houses now. Over 40 years in Houston and I have had enough.

  • @mjpottertx
    @mjpottertx2 жыл бұрын

    One problem I’ve noted with The Woodlands is that no matter where you live there, it takes about 20 minutes just to get out of the Woodlands, let alone get to IAH or downtown Houston.

  • @robertventura659
    @robertventura6592 жыл бұрын

    Very beautiful townhouse!! Love the open floor plan as well as the interior decor!!

  • @consuelocianci5567
    @consuelocianci55672 жыл бұрын

    BEAUTIFUL

  • @michaelmiller4716
    @michaelmiller47162 жыл бұрын

    Ivan, I certainly appreciate your tips especially coming from condo living where many things were done by the Homeowners Association. My wife and I were very gratified to have you and your associates as our Realtor during our recent home purchase. And thanks for the gift card!

  • @huajie666liu8
    @huajie666liu82 жыл бұрын

    Beautiful district/suburb

  • @xavieraduran
    @xavieraduran2 жыл бұрын

    Injust visited The Woodlands for the first time this past weekend as a getaway. I fell in love with this place. What an amazing place!

  • @wkjeom
    @wkjeom2 жыл бұрын

    All the trees, all the dear, all the mosquitos, all the ticks, all the Lyme disease. The Woodlands are great. I'm a Lyme victim, so I know that story. Sort of like getting run over by a truck every day.

  • @tatyiguez1246
    @tatyiguez12463 жыл бұрын

    Hermosa

  • @btd8311
    @btd83113 жыл бұрын

    Is this in the gated community? Is it still on the market? Thx

  • @ROCKETS2965
    @ROCKETS29653 жыл бұрын

    Why does this sound like an advertisement for Eagleton, IN.

  • @mjpottertx
    @mjpottertx3 жыл бұрын

    High on my list of retirement locations

  • @ZachGinnOfficial
    @ZachGinnOfficial4 жыл бұрын

    I always love watching these well researched market updates from you! Do you think we are heading for a V or a L shaped real estate market in the future?

  • @ZachGinnOfficial
    @ZachGinnOfficial4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this market update!!

  • @houstonlocksmith-tx
    @houstonlocksmith-tx4 жыл бұрын

    That is some positive news!

  • @johndgarcia200
    @johndgarcia2004 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video!!, you guys are the full package, professional, effective, a great family, and offer sincere and lasting friendship, and fun!

  • @Melody615199999
    @Melody6151999994 жыл бұрын

    Is that the Gwadaloopa River?

  • @foxp3769
    @foxp37695 жыл бұрын

    Why this terrible music?

  • @androide386v8
    @androide386v85 жыл бұрын

    Hay está mi dulce hogar y el de mi familia pronto Con la ayuda de Dios Amén. DIOS ES TODO PODEROSO

  • @roeese1
    @roeese15 жыл бұрын

    The woodlands, a piggy bank for the police. Very high rate of pullovers and tickets.

  • @2DelGuys
    @2DelGuys5 жыл бұрын

    ….and we like it that way!

  • @stephskipcain4599
    @stephskipcain45994 жыл бұрын

    I've never been pulled over. I drive like a banshee. Lol the police here are pretty amazing. They are chill even with our kids and their goofy friends. AND we are the poor of the woodlands. Its kinda crazy here. We are moving. Got laid off and cant afford to stay but it was fun while it lasted. It was also a very diverse area. Every race, creed, and sexual orientation found here. All different religious groups as well. If you can afford it, you are guaranteed a very kind place to live. Sad to be leaving.

  • @JoseDominguez-pj7nn
    @JoseDominguez-pj7nn3 жыл бұрын

    James is black

  • @flawlessscentsco.4240
    @flawlessscentsco.42403 жыл бұрын

    @@JoseDominguez-pj7nn What’s wrong with being black?

  • @roeese1
    @roeese15 жыл бұрын

    The woodlands, a piggy bank for the police. Very high rate of pullovers and tickets.

  • @berenicereyesg.7895
    @berenicereyesg.78955 жыл бұрын

    I love The Woodlands! I wish I could visit it again soon and enjoy everything it has to offer. A very special person for me lives in there. Thanks for sharing this beautiful video.

  • @eulissbenoit5968
    @eulissbenoit59685 жыл бұрын

    its Gods country

  • @macklemoore3153
    @macklemoore31535 жыл бұрын

    Condo tower doesn’t exist right now

  • @macklemoore3153
    @macklemoore31535 жыл бұрын

    They’ve added a ton since 2012

  • @mjt2231
    @mjt22315 жыл бұрын

    Any cultural diversity? I'm not seeing it.

  • @doomtomb3
    @doomtomb35 жыл бұрын

    MJT overrated

  • @catluva74
    @catluva745 жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed my time in the Woodlands. But I'm making more money up north.

  • @doomtomb3
    @doomtomb35 жыл бұрын

    cat luva how far north?

  • @tankbuilder0673
    @tankbuilder06736 жыл бұрын

    Perfect combination of modern day citys and lots of nature not as much as japan though i love the woodlands!

  • @radiotowers818
    @radiotowers8186 жыл бұрын

    If your wealthy. Nice Aerial View lol.

  • @CaesarInVa
    @CaesarInVa6 жыл бұрын

    The Woodlands is a suburb of Houston and Houston is the Karachi of the United States. Yes, there are a few pockets of civilization like the Galleria, the underground mall, The Woodlands (which is about 35 miles NORTH of the city, so that should tell you something), etc., but for all practical purposes Houston is a fourth-rate city in a third-world country (and to all those readers living in or originating from third-world countries, please accept my apologies for comparing your native homelands to the likes of Houston. No insult was intended). I've traveled extensively during the course of my life and as a consequence I've lived in and visited some pretty cool places (London, Washington DC, Paris, Rome, Florence, Sydney, Adelaide and Manila, to name but a few). I've also lived in some pretty unglamorous and immemorial places like Millington Tennessee, Bristol Virginia and Casper Wyoming. Consequently, I think I've a pretty accurate idea of what makes a city a home and Houston, I’m saddened to say, meets NONE of the criteria. In fact, Houston ranks so low on the livability scale that it registers a negative value. True, Houston offers good value for your housing dollar (I don’t know of too many places in the US or abroad where an ordinary auto mechanic can afford the mortgage on a 3,000 sq. foot home). It’s equally true that it very rarely snows or ices-over in Houston, so older people never have to worry about slipping on ice and breaking a hip; unfortunately, there’s more to a meaningful existence than affordable housing, dry pavement and a functional coxa. Firstly, Houstonians in general and Texans in particular don't like to think. As far as I can tell, there's no coherent infrastructure development or forward-thinking municipal planning. Houston and its surrounding communities are an un-zoned, patch-work quilt collection of conflicting architectural styles, forms and functions that would make subscribers to the Frank Lloyd Wright school of architecture physically nauseous. I’ve seen a glittering glass and chrome skyscraper overlooking a seedy single-story adult bookstore abutting a gothic church adjoining a Victorian-style elementary school sitting opposite a grimy industrial park. Seriously. In short, Houston is one continuous architectural eye-sore. Its what happens when the likes of Jed and Granny Clampit come in to too much money too soon, move to town and take over city hall. Secondly, and perhaps of greater impact on the individual than the absence of zoning laws and a coherent urban development plan is Houston’s complete lack of social and cultural activities. For those who appreciate even a modicum of cultural refinement, Houston’s dearth of suitable upscale venues makes the city a social and cultural wasteland of the type described in TS Eliot’s eponymous classic. Yes, “Ice Houses” abound. For the benefit of the unininformed, Ice Houses are cavernous, unfinished bars where lewdly-dressed girls with low self-esteem and annoying nasal twangs meet knuckle-dragging, monster-truck driving, slack-jawed illiterates in Houston’s version of the species’ reproductive ritual. These venues aren’t without a certain appeal to those (myself included, on occasion) who enjoy an ice cold beer on a hot day (which is ALWAYS) while watching a ball game on a wall-sized, HDTV as your hearing is assaulted by blaring country music; however. if you’re looking for an upscale venue where you can enjoy a reflective post-prandial brandy while listening to piano music and engaging in semi-intelligent conversation, well, you’ve pretty much got to hop a flight to New Orleans or some other mecca of civilization, like Kalamazoo, Michigan or Fargo, North Dakota. Although Houston boasts a thriving performing arts scene, including world-class ballet, opera and symphony orchestra, I wouldn’t know. All those activities are concentrated in a ten-block centralized area downtown, which is only 30 miles away; unfortunately, Houston traffic is so horrendous that one has to leave around noon to make an 8pm curtain call. In short, Houston is a blue collar town where blue-collar values predominate. Consequently, it’s as coarse, vulgar and crude as its people. Houston is all about guns and beer and monster trucks (all of which are clinically recognized psychological coping mechanisms used by the sexually insecure and mentally infirm to compensate for their sexual inadequacies and gross ignorance). Thirdly, Houston has no history. Yeah, it was “founded” nearly 200 years ago, but by outlaws and criminals. The douchebag for whom the city is named (Sam Houston) was chased out of Virginia by the bailiffs of Rockingham County. In fact, he was chased out of Virginia into Kentucky only to be chased out of the later by that state’s criminal justice system. I’m from Virginia which is home to the first seat of democracy in the Western Hemisphere (The House of Burgess). My state sired 7 presidents, 11 Supreme Court justices and countless congressman. Chief Justice John Marshall, who put the Supreme Court on the map, was from Virginia. We have buildings in my home town of Alexandria that go back to the early 1700s. My church, Sainte Mary’s, was established in 1726. Houston can’t even begin to compete with that kind of history. Fourthly, Houstonians are Xenophobes. If you want to find work in Houston, you’d better know a lot of people down here because Houston hiring managers would rather hire their drooling, mentally-retarded, illiterate, knuckle-dragging Neanderthal of an inbred third cousin before they will hire a competent applicant who originates from elsewhere. Fifthly, there’s the weather. Houston weather is so unbearable that you can't be outside for more than a few minutes at a time most of the year (and I'm an outdoors man from the mid-Atlantic, so I love being outside amongst the flora and fauna). In Houston, you'll die suffocating in your own sweat if you're outside for more than 10 minutes. And don't get me started on the local "vegetation"...it's the ugliest, gnarliest and most inhospitable plant life I've ever seen outside a science fiction movie. I half expect the twisted, stunted shrubbery down here to reach out and eat me as I walk past. Coming from the eastern seaboard, I'm equally comfortable on the water, but you couldn't pay me enough to swim in that that fetid, tepid, parasitic-filled Petrie dish-like bacteria incubator called the Gulf of Mexico. One guy just died a couple days ago down in Galveston and another is in serious condition as a result of exposure to some flesh-eating micro-organism. In short, Houston is a wasteland so barren and devoid of intelligence, culture, opportunity and sophistication that it makes the Sahara Desert look like the Amazon River Basin by comparison. Some locals actually think Houston is a great place to live. These are usually the same insecure morons who denigrate places like Paris, London or New York while never having traveled more than 100 miles from their precious Houston. To them I would advise seeing more of the world before making statements that confirm what I've long suspected: that most Houstonians are insular, provincial idiots. Bottom line, Houston sucks and I can't wait to relocate back up to DC next week. The sooner I get out of this dump, the sooner I return to civilization and life.

  • @tommytruth7595
    @tommytruth75956 жыл бұрын

    Houston isn't even Texas any more. It is just mutating out.

  • @iayyam
    @iayyam5 жыл бұрын

    Lmao

  • @1102KIA
    @1102KIA5 жыл бұрын

    CaesarInVa, Dude, did someone sexually abuse of you in Houston? 🤔😂😂 Cheers

  • @o.v.9110
    @o.v.91104 жыл бұрын

    Gooooooooooood damn you had a lot to say! WTF..LOL

  • @tonybrown4143
    @tonybrown41434 жыл бұрын

    CaesarInVa maybe it’s me....but I don’t think you care too much for Houston.

  • @mayheredia9895
    @mayheredia98957 жыл бұрын

    Hay esta mi casa! Hecho esta! Amen pronto.

  • @mariselaarcos1645
    @mariselaarcos16457 жыл бұрын

    pronto comprare unas cazas en ese lugar primero Dios

  • @jonathancarranza700
    @jonathancarranza7008 жыл бұрын

    I'm building a home here and it's a pleassure to be here

  • @caitlinruth1231
    @caitlinruth12319 жыл бұрын

    My home in the summer!!

  • @unifikaton
    @unifikaton9 жыл бұрын

    My home in about a month!! cant wait

  • @tylerpye3737
    @tylerpye373710 жыл бұрын

    I'm not talking to the person that posted this btw

  • @tylerpye3737
    @tylerpye373710 жыл бұрын

    I love in the woodlands so excuse me none of us are rude, u haven't even been here before so back off

  • @tommytruth7595
    @tommytruth75956 жыл бұрын

    I have, so clam up.

  • @michaelgabriel2998
    @michaelgabriel299810 жыл бұрын

    Looks a little different now :) Doesn't take long for stuff to change in H-town.

  • @tommytruth7595
    @tommytruth75956 жыл бұрын

    It is not H-town. Let's hope it never is like that place.

  • @UrMom-jb7vl
    @UrMom-jb7vl6 жыл бұрын

    Tommy Truth its a suburb tho

  • @DanielnunnQ
    @DanielnunnQ10 жыл бұрын

    Common sense doesn't exists with certain people ..you know who you are lol

  • @johancar2969
    @johancar296910 жыл бұрын

    i like it this houston´s área

  • @BIGJBIGEBIGC
    @BIGJBIGEBIGC11 жыл бұрын

    Sorry you're unsuccessful and jealous of people who actually have brains.

  • @tommytruth7595
    @tommytruth75956 жыл бұрын

    Not at all, but do they have to act like assholes?