Saddle Mountain – San Antonio 78258
Welcome to Saddle Mountain.
With gorgeous views of the rolling hills in the Stone Oak area, Saddle Mountain, located directly across the street (map) from Barbara Bush Middle School (part of the North East Independent School District), is a KB Homes community in San Antonio 78258 with home prices starting in the $160Ks from KB’s four-sides masonry Classic Collection.
Saddle Mountain is still under development, so there are plenty of opportunities to select your lot and build a brand new home. From 1582 square feet to 3728 square feet and three to six bedrooms, you’ll find homes in all shapes, sizes, and price ranges (up to the $220Ks); all offering nine-foot first floor ceilings and two car garages. Although traffic woes have affected the Stone Oak area for some time now, the new 281 Superstreet Project should hopefully lessen the problems and bring with it renewed development in and around 281 (especially the 78258 and 78260 zip codes).
If you’d like to take a tour through Saddle Mountain and see the homes currently available or to look at lots to build your new home, contact me.
If you’re thinking of buying a home in Saddle Mountain, you can view the inventory homes currently available by clicking the link below:
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Comments
Better Google “KB Home Sucks” before you buy a KB Home!
Hector – You should meet the people at http://www.kblies.com if you haven’t already (I couldn’t find a mention of them on your site).
I’ve spoken several times on this and other blogs about KB’s reputation. My job with these posts is to highlight neighborhoods. There are plenty of people happy with their KB Homes, including clients of mine, so I refuse to go with blanket statements about their quality – especially since they hire local contractors to do the actual building. If their guys (from KB) do their job right (checking on sub-contractors more), things might be different. I think this is a problem overall in the new home production builders.
rerockstar´s last blog ..Paying More Than Asking Price For Your Home
PS I also fixed your comment so that “KB Home Sucks” is now a direct link to your site, in case anyone would like to read it.
rerockstar´s last blog ..Building A New Home In San Antonio? Consider this…
You failed to mention that you live in an apartment or a home? Not to mention a KB Home. Thanks for your consideration by fixing my link. It’s good to see a website owner who can show both sides of the homebuying experience. Do you think I wouldn’t like to be one of the happy campers? I’m stuck with their mistake. KB Lies is on my links page for over 2 years. They also link back to me, I support their efforts in San Antonio. Just like the sign on McDonald’s… 20 Billion served, doesn’t mean how many were actually eaten, or how much food poisoning was involved. KB Built 37,000+ homes in the year mine was built – Do you think all 37K plus are perfect? We have audio recordings of KB Management telling us everyone who worked on this home were fired! This issue affects many lives. Matt Stigliano, rockstar turned Realtor your selling homes?, I’d like to sell mine but it’s uninhabitable. KB Home will go through a moral change at some point. Your car has a lemon law, but your new home in Texas does not? You as a Realtor and your Realtor groups should be fighting for these laws… Why isn’t Realtor® trying to change this? Isn’t it in their best interest?
LemonMeister – I’m not sure how it applies to the discussion of KB Home, but for what it’s worth, I currently live in an apartment although I have owned two homes at different times (one in Los Angeles, one here in San Antonio).
As for allowing both sides, I try to remain unbiased when it comes to the KB controversy. I’ve listened to both sides – spoken with residents from Sundance Trails and Quarry at Iron Mountain (where a big part of the KB stuff has happened in San Antonio) as well as other communities and of course, being in the real estate industry I know a lot of people from KB Home, from salesmen to managers to office workers. I think both sides deserve a chance to air their concerns. What I don’t like (and won’t tolerate on my site) is some of the mudslinging that has been a part of it. I have rejected comments before because of the tone and even removed a post because I felt I didn’t have all the facts when I posted it (it was based on comments by a “resident” of Quarry at Iron Mountain.
I do think lemon laws should be a part of builder construction – for all builders, not just KB. When you’re dealing in quantity like production builders are, there are bound to be mistakes made. I wish there wasn’t, but it happens in any large scale production of any item. This is why I encourage phased inspections on all new builds (by someone other than the builder). Inspectors may not be able to fix 100% of the cause of the problem, but they can certainly catch a lot more of the mistakes that have been made (I’ve seen builders forget to install insulation on outside walls, incorrectly install electrical and plumbing, grade land improperly, etc.). Of course, they’re not the cure all either – builders need to take responsibility for their actions as well. Some homeowners, Realtors®, title companies, lenders, etc. do too.
rerockstar´s last blog ..Appraisals, Appraised Value, and the Fair Market Value of Your Home
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