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    This Weeks Family Business

    This WeekSerra Mesa Bear Buns Bakerys Family Business

    Thursday,  KUSI’s Allie Wagner was in Serra Mesa checking out the Bear Buns Bakery!

    As Serra Mesa’s coffeehouse, we open our doors and invite our neighbors to come in and enjoy our yummy, home-baked goodies.

    Our goal is to provide a warm and inviting gathering place to cultivate community. We offer the best locally roasted organic coffee, homemade baked goods, and other local products all served by our friendly staff.

    Try our famous cinnamon rolls and customer-favorite bread pudding. We offer delicious smoothies in addition to our specialty teas and drinks including espresso, frappes and chai tea.

    We are family-owned, operated, and supported. That’s right – we strive to make all our customers feel like family; that is what makes us this weeks family business.

    Look for Bear Buns Bakery coupon in your local Serra Mesa magazine. Located in various areas throughout the community and delivered to select homes throughout Serra Mesa. Request yours today by contacting your local Serra Mesa real estate expert, Gloria Roma

    619.993.3734 or Gloria@SanDiegohomesforsaleca.com

    Posted in: Serra Mesa news Tagged: bakery serra mesa, bear buns bakery, cafe serra mesa, gloria roma serra mesa, Gloria Roma Serra Mesa real estate agent, moving kids serra mesa, Serra Mesa, serra mesa cafe, serra mesa expert, serra mesa magazine, serra mesa real estate

    We’re NOT Moving!

    We’re NOT Moving! Baby Boomers, the Silent Generation and seniors born after 1931 are deciding to stay home. 

    There has been a great amount written on millennials and their impact on the housing market. However, the headlines often contradict each other. Some claim this generation is becoming the largest share of first-time home buyers, while others claim millennials don’t want to own a home, blaming them for the dip in homeownership rate.

    baby boomers silent generation aging in place causes housing shortage
    Seniors are Not Moving; Serra Mesa is San Diego’s perfect example

    While it is true that millennials have achieved milestones like getting married, having kids, and

    buying homes later in life than their parents and grandparents did, they are not solely to blame for today’s housing market trends.

    According to Freddie Mac

    Insight Report explored the impact of the Silent and Baby Boomer Generations on the housing market.  If millennials are unable to find a home to buy at a young age like their predecessors, then who is living in those homes?

    The answer: Seniors born after 1931 are staying in their homes longer than previous generations. Instead choosing to “age in place.” Essentially saying ‘we’re not moving’. 

    Freddie Mac found that,

    “this trend accounts for about 1.6 million houses held back from the market through 2018, representing about one year’s typical supply of new construction, or more than half of the current shortfall of 2.5 million housing units estimated in December’s Insight.

    Older Americans prefer to age in place because they are satisfied with their communities, their homes, and their quality of life.”

    According to the National Association of Realtors, inventory of homes for sale is currently at a 3.5-month supply. Which means that nationally we are in a seller’s market. A ‘normal’ housing market requires 6-7 months inventory, a level we have not achieved since August 2012.

    “The most important fundamental in today’s housing market is the lack of houses for sale. This shortage has been identified as an important barrier to young adults buying their first homes.”

    Bottom Line

    If you are one of the many seniors who desires to retire in the same area you’ve always lived, you’re not alone. Will your current house fit your needs throughout retirement? If you have any questions about demand for your house, let’s get together to discuss the opportunities available today!

    Gloria Roma 619.993.3734 or Gloria@SanDiegoHomesForSaleCa.com

    Posted in: Serra Mesa news, Seniors Aging In Place Tagged: aging in place, baby boomers, gloria roma, gloria roma real estate agent, Gloria Roma Serra Mesa real estate agent, moving kids san diego, moving to serra mesa, san diego, selling serra mesa house, seniors, Serra Mesa, silent generation, SRES

    Omakase OMG at Kokoro Restaurant

    Omakase OMG at Kokoro Restaurant

    Subtly seductive sushi and other delicacies at Serra Mesa spot

    The dish started with the familiar: a comforting crunch and a flavor not entirely unlike that of French fries. But that didn’t last long. As my teeth sank into the interior, I became lost. Was it meaty or crunchy? It wasn’t either, but rather somewhere in between.

    I couldn’t quite pinpoint either the flavor or the texture. Then I recognized the bits of green powder on the plate: that was the rich, aromatic, earthy and ethereal flavor of matcha. Then, with one hit of salt it suddenly all made sense. The world was back in balance.

    Omakas Kokoro Serra Mesa
    Serra Mesa Kokoro Restaurant

    That lotus root tempura with matcha and salt at Kokoro Restaurant (3298 Greyling Drive Ste. B) in Serra Mesa was just a single dish in the middle of Chef “Taisho” Akio Ishito’s omakase menu. It was neither the meal’s first delicious bite nor its fantastic sushi finale. It was, rather, just one dish somewhere in the middle. And yet it captured the omakase’s essence: simple, surprising and subtly seductive precision and perfection. That’s why our title says Omakase Kokoro Restaurant.

    Omakase, at least in the eyes of most Americans who have any understanding of the term, is often a sushi thing. But the Japanese word is much broader, translating literally as “respectfully leaving another to decide what is best.” Omakase dining, then, is much more expansive than simply sushi. It’s somewhat similar to kaiseke—both are elaborate, multi-course, tasting menu-style meals built around seasonality, quality ingredients and simple preparations—but without the ritualized structure and ceremony.

    At Kokoro, the omakase includes raw and cured fish dishes, but it doesn’t exclusively feature those items. It’s not even mostly that. In fact, our omakase opened with a supremely simple dish of marinated spinach and enoki mushroom that was both understated and elegant. A miso-cured amaebi took that up a notch, with the miso marinade underlining the inherent sweetness of the shrimp.

    Understated

    Another surprising offering was a clear soup that seemed to feature a fish cake. But it wasn’t the fish cake that made the dish: it was the strip of yuzu, a Japanese citrus, sitting at the bottom of the bowl that really starred. That yuzu’s ever-so-slightly sweet acidity balanced and actually highlighted the deep umami of the soup and the fish cake.

    Fried monkfish in lobster broth with snow pea and daikon was a bit more forward. The dish played on the parallels between the monkfish and the actual lobster broth. After all, monkfish is often called “poor man’s lobster.” Two big chunks of daikon balanced the richness of the seafood and the two little slices of snow pea offered a welcome hit of freshness.

    The sashimi and sushi courses were, predictably, excellent. Taisho’s knife skills are second to none and his sourcing is impeccable. My favorite fish dish at Kokoro came at a lunch visit: mackerel battera sushi. Battera is Osaka-style sushi made by stacking translucent, paper-thin konbu over vinegar-pickled mackerel (Kokoro also offers it with salmon) and served on sushi rice. The entire package is compressed in an impressive wooden contraption resulting in a dish that is as dramatic and attractive as it is delicious.

    Even with all that, I keep coming back to that fried lotus root tempura. Unexpected, subtle and surprising, that dish summed up what makes Kokoro stand out. There’s really nothing in San Diego quite like it.

    by Michael A. Gardiner

    Posted in: Serra Mesa news Tagged: Gloria Roma Serra Mesa real estate agent, moving kids serra mesa, san diego events, Serra Mesa

    Serra Mesa Mid-Century Bomb Shelter

    Serra Mesa mid-century bomb shelters aren’t something we see or hear about every day. You’ve got to read this!

    If Serra Mesa resident Amy Holles ever gets married again, she has the perfect room for her future mother-in-law.

    Holles’s home came equipped with a 1950s-era bomb shelter dug underneath the driveway.  The shelter is accessed through a wooden hatch door in the garage. A steep wooden staircase leads shelter seekers into a pocket of stale air walled by concrete. Beyond a power outlet, a retractable dining table, and flat turquoise paint, the shelter doesn’t provide much luxury. What it can provide, presumably – its efficacy has never been tested – is protection from nuclear holocaust.

    Serra Mesa Bomb Shelter
    Surprise in garage after she inherited house from family member.

     

    While the issues of safety from air raids and boarding for her future in-laws are solved, Holles is worried about a more immediate issue: the cracking in her driveway.

    Now It’s Time For An Engineer

    There are several apparently severe cracks in the concrete. Holles says it seems like there are more cracks now than there were a year ago when she inherited the lot from her aunt. She thinks her driveway is about to give out, but doesn’t know for sure.

    “Who do you call?” she asked. “You can’t look up bomb shelter inspectors.”

    For now, Holles says she’ll embrace the shelter. The city of San Diego recommended she call a structural engineer to assess its stability. The city also said it can’t force her to do anything because the shelter is legal and it’s on private property.

    When you need a structural engineer, give me a call. I always have 2-3 names of engineers I refer to my clients. In San Diego we have moist clay and Mission Valley sand both of which shift. Shifting causes sink holes, like the one in Serra Mesa earlier in 2019 off the 805 Murray Ridge off ramp as well as cracks in foundations and pieces of backyards falling into canyons. Though, these kinds of things aren’t known to happen on the mesa in Serra Mesa they do randomly occur in and around the city of San Diego.

    By Rafael Avitabile and Joe Little

    Posted in: Serra Mesa news Tagged: Gloria Roma Serra Mesa real estate agent, moving kids serra mesa, san diego community, Serra Mesa, Serra mesa Military housing

    New VA Outpatient Clinic Serra Mesa

    The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs announced Monday that it plans to develop a new outpatient clinic in Serra Mesa to replace and expand its existing facility in Mission Valley.

    “Over the years, the demand for outpatient services has continued to grow in the central San Diego area, so we are very happy to be moving forward on this project to expand our ability to meet those needs,” Dr. Robert M. Smith, of the VA San Diego Healthcare System, said in a statement.

    The new clinic, which will open in a renovated office complex along Aero Drive, will include almost 100,000 square feet of examination rooms and other space for area military veterans who seek medical and other services on an outpatient basis. The project is expected to cost $22.2 million. The VA said the remodeling work is scheduled to begin in October and will be completed in December 2021.

    The new clinic will allow VA staff to expand the services now available to the local veteran community, which surpassed 240,000 last year. “More veterans are coming to VA for care, so having better access for veterans is definitely one of our priorities,” Butler said. The Serra Mesa clinic will be able to expand its core primary care, mental health and specialty care and laboratory services, Butler said. The new complex also will have more than 500 parking spaces.

    VA Serra Mesa artist’s rendering VA San Diego Healthcare System
    VA Serra Mesa artist’s rendering VA San Diego Healthcare System

     

    More important;

    The new facility will allow the VA to expand into additional services such as an eye clinic, blindness rehabilitation, audiology, podiatry, physical therapy, occupational therapy, prosthetic’s, radiology and pharmacy. It also will feature a gynecology center and women’s clinic. “There will be a lot more services,” Butler said. “It’s double the size of what we currently have so this is going to be a really nice new clinic for the veterans in that area.”
    The facility will have about 200 employees, including physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, pharmacists, social workers, dietitians and mental health providers, among others. The VA San Diego Healthcare System has been working to expand the Mission Valley clinic for more than eight years, Butler said. The VA previously secured funding for an expanded center in Chula Vista, which is expected to open late this year.

    In February 2016, The San Diego Union-Tribune published a special report

    detailing at least 27 local veterans under the age of 45 who took their own lives between 2014 and the end of June 2015. Family members of several suicide victims blamed the VA system, saying it failed to properly diagnose and treat cases of depression or post-traumatic stress disorder.
    The investments in veteran healthcare come after years of complaints that services were too often delayed or withheld at VA facilities across the country. Others complained for years that the VA system wrongly delayed medical services, falsified records to reduce backlogs, denied disability benefits or otherwise failed to deliver services earned by American veterans.

    Butler said the VA facilities in the San Diego region do not have lengthy wait lists; she estimated that the most a veteran would have to wait for primary care services would be one day. When finished, the new center will be double the size of the current facility on Rio San Diego Drive, and it will handle far more than the 160,000 patient visits Mission Valley’s clinic handles each year and has limited staff and parking, said Cynthia Butler, a spokeswoman for the VA San Diego Healthcare System.

    Jeff McDonald

    Posted in: Blog, Relocating or Moving to and from California Tagged: Lincoln Military Housing, Military Housing, Serra Mesa, Serra Mesa Military, Serra mesa Military housing, VA building, Veteran Affairs

    About Gloria

    Gloria Roma helping seniors move
    Gloria Roma works with adult children of seniors when navigating inherited real estate holdings.

     

    Gloria is an accomplished Realtor with over 28 years of cumulative experience in real estate and finance. If you’re buying, Gloria knows how to help you, having been awarded as the TOP 3 Buyers Agent in America. If you’re selling, her showcased estates SELL for up to 18% higher with Gloria’s Proven Home Selling System.

    DRE #01243709

     

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