Sunday, 9 November 2014

Guildcrest & Viceroy homes promoted at Woodstock sales office

Comfort Homes delivers by building homes off-site
By Mark Schadenberg

It's seems simply too logical not to be a great idea.
Find a piece of property, pour a foundation, prepare all other services you may need including electrical and sewer hookup, and then bring in the already-built house.
You can buy a modest brand new house for under $120,000 and have it transported to your destination. The cost of the house itself can be under $90.00 per square foot.
There is a company (dealership) in Woodstock doing just that and very successfully actually as they have a geographical area and franchise agreement with three builders of large modular homes, including the well-known Viceroy brand based in Port Hope, along with Guildcrest (Moorewood, Ontario). The Viceroy houses would essentially be built on site, while Comfort Homes models (interior picture and specs page here) are built in a factory and then transported.


Contact Comfort Homes at 1-888-600-9336 or (519) 533-0855, or better yet visit their site at 560 Athlone Avenue in Woodstock where they currently have both a permanent Viceroy and 'sample model' Comfort Home on display. The brand new – it arrived less than three weeks ago – Pondstone model is 1524 square feet and quite a functional and impressive ranch-style house. While it is vinyl-sided, the home features a large eat-in kitchen, 3 bedrooms, a luxury ensuite to the master bedroom (walk-in closet too), vaulted ceilings, plywood roof sheathing, high efficiency gas furnace, high-end carpet, and could include more specific upgrades such as a gas fireplace.
When discussing the 20 or more building plans available with Woodstock office owner/manager Ted Rumsey, it quickly became apparent that Woodstock's location is ideal for this 'showroom' as it is visible from the 401 and is just a short drive to the 401 / 403 crossroads. Woodstock is also about mid-way between southern Ontario cottage destinations such as Grand Bend on Lake Huron or southward to Lake Erie. Oxford County is also the bullseye on the target as many in the agricultural business are either replacing old farm houses with a modern residence or adding a secondary home on an existing farm for a second generation family member living nearby.  
Their traffic area or geographical area in which automobiles arrive in Woodstock includes northward to Collingwood, so the local office is also attracting visitors to Oxford.
You too should plan on stopping by two visit the unique homes, as hours are: Monday to Saturday, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.; and Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
 
 
 
Weather alone can be a reason to select Comfort Homes as your home builder as Rumsey noted in an earlier London Free Press article, but there are additional reasons to consider.
The advantage of factory-built is obviously speed. You can have things done on site simultaneously to in the factory. There are no weather delays. We don’t have to worry about snow in the factory.
We work with the customer on finishing the inside. It’s one-stop shopping. They don’t have to go around to different kitchen and flooring places.”
 
Viceroy home photo here:





Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland
Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

Checkpoint Charlie is now only a historical destination

The Berlin Wall fell 25 years ago today
By Mark Schadenberg

The Berlin Wall did not suddenly appear immediately following the end of the Second World War. The Berlin Wall was built in the early 1960's and separated the then-dissected cities of East and West Berlin for 28 years.
The Wall came down 25 years ago today – certainly an important moment in European history, and actually world history. The Wall – you will remember – symbolized the differences between Communism and the so-called free world. The Berlin Wall was the rock and stone and mortar – a physical reminder representing The Cold War or The Iron Curtain. The terms 'Checkpoint Charlie' and 'Brandenburg Gate' are references to The Berlin Wall.
Many dictatorship-like countries had an evolution in the 1980's, such as the union movement and more freedoms in Poland.
The saddest part about the existence of the Berlin Wall is the idea that a sibling or perhaps your best friend lived less than a kilometre away, but you were not permitted to visit. It truly was a time of security and lack of trust that many today would find difficult to believe. One report I read said the estimated number of people killed trying to climb the wall or escape to East Berlin in a different fashion was 138.
 
 
The story of the wall getting knocked down is also about confusion as East Germany (Oddly called the German Democratic Republic) in 1989 had announced it was relaxing some rules about repression and edicts pertaining to movement (visiting or even emigrating) over borders, and in fact East Germany still intended to have complete control over issuing visas.
The fall of The Berlin Wall occurred with a hole, but within months the soon cracked and crumbled wall (More than 150 km) was almost completely dismantled. You could say it was souvenir seekers that chipped away at The Wall. The complete border shutdown, which had began with barbed-wire fences, is no more.
I watched a BBC news story that said to mark the 25th anniversary of The Berlin Wall's demise, a long connected row of about 7,000 white balloons (Lichtgrenze 2014 or light border) has been raised as an art form to depict and illuminate where the wall once stood. If you were under the age of 10 in 1989, much of that 'history' has not been remembered about a different time in Berlin.
The TV show Busting The Berlin Wall is the name of an episode of the CBC's The Passionate Eye which is to debut on the 25th anniversary of the Wall's demise on Nov. 9. According to the overview on the CBC website, the show uses CGI (computer-drawn images) to illustrate many attempts of escaping East Berlin through tunnels or hiding inside a vehicle, and even a hot air balloon crossing.


A story in Time magazine notes that even the current German Chancellor grew up on the other side of The Wall.
“I think you never forget how you felt that day — at least I will never forget it,” said German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who grew up in the East Germany, in one of her podcasts. “I had to wait 35 years for that feeling of liberty. It changed my life.”
The world is a small place – we know that. It was former Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev, whose “glasnost” and “perestroika” reforms which actually helped usher in the end of the Cold War and the fall of the Wall.
All events evolved quite quickly as by early October of 1990, the nation of Germany reunification was complete.

LINKS & SOURCES:

Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland
Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

Tuesday, 4 November 2014

Canada Post dropping door-to-door delivery

Woodstock added to long list of communities losing its letter carriers

By Mark Schadenberg
It is not good news, but it was only a matter of time.
I live in a newer neighbourhood and must pick up my mail from a so-called super box about half a block away.
Where I resided previously in a 30+ old home, I received mail at the front door.
Canada Post has now added Woodstock to its formal list of discontinued home delivery to ALL city households – effective the autumn of 2015. That's more than 8,000 fewer Canadian homes in Woodstock alone not receiving door-to-door mail delivery.
A sad day indeed on the horizon.
Announcements have been previously made about other local communities such as Tillsonburg.
Today, we congratulate more friends and relatives than ever on their birthday, but it is done via Facebook or perhaps LinkedIn or another social media vehicle. We send emails with songs attached to the greeting. I do it as well as often an anniversary recognition for friends includes a link to a famous Flintstones bit (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nf8ZAMRO1DU).
While I don't buy a lot on the internet, I do like receiving flyers from major local retailers via email. My current winter boots were bought by visiting a physical store, but the coupon for an extra $40 off the sale price was sent to me by email – not in a newspaper or a hand-delivered post card.

Canada Post will complain about huge losses as Canadians pay their bills on the internet and have gradually moved away from buying stamps and mailing. It's an institution that quite frankly dates back to the stagecoach era, and should have been continued as mail carriers are technically employees of the federal government. Important services are always subsidized, including a local list such as transit, libraries and swimming pools.
As for the mail, when I lived in Huntsville 25 years ago (yes, I am indeed getting old), I was required to pick up mail at the post office. It was in a convenient location though at one of the town's main intersections, across from my bank and a few doors away from the CFBK radio studio.
Our society has seen many conveniences – products and services – unfortunately fade away. In Woodstock, home delivery of milk is still possible though thanks to Lies VanBergen (Call her today at 519 539-7706) and her Blue Cow company.
Other reports about the mail demise indicate that more than 1 billion fewer pieces of mail are to be distributed in 2014 versus 2007 stats. There is a chart included here.


Canada Post has been losing money for several years, but is gaining dollars in other revenue streams. You could say their service is becoming extinct like cassette tapes.
One announcement made in recent years is that some neighbourhoods would receive mail delivery just three or four days per week instead of five – Monday to Friday. The diminishing service had unfortunately already began.
Apparently, according to the postal service anyway, no jobs will be lost. If that's true, the flip side continues by saying no more new jobs will be created as current letter carriers retire or have their jobs shifted to another capacity.
Adding neighbourhood post offices in a convenience store occurred several years ago. In Tillsonburg, for example, there's a post office inside a Canadian Tire store.

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Woodstock Sentinel-Review story:

In a press release from Canada Post, the corporation notes that no regular full-time or part-time employees will lose their job as a result of the change, as it will reduce its workforce largely through attrition as people leave the company.

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A Global TV News story from earlier this year:

Thankfully, with an average age of 48 among its workforce, the service said it expects 15,000 workers to retire over the next five years meaning no layoffs are immediately required.  
In a dramatic but necessary move, Canada Post is completely withdrawing from home mail delivery by 2019. That will affect about one third of Canadian households which continue to receive mail delivery to their doorsteps.
Canada Post’s parcel delivery business is its fastest growing division and has helped offset losses taken from the decline of its traditional mail business in recent years. As e-commerce shopping continues to grow, door delivery of packages will too and Canada Post aims to compete indefinitely in that business.

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In some capacities, Canada Post is competing with commercial parcel delivery services as E-commerce increases – buying consumer items over the internet (Amazon, etc) and not from a store.
With the cost of gas, I could see rural delivery fade into the sunset, but for urban dwellers it's a disappointing day to see the letter carrier disappear.
LINKS:

Friday, 31 October 2014

Riddell, Rembrandt, Broos, Hargreaves, Zaluski & more !

Woodstock residential construction activity keeps rolling along
By Mark Schadenberg

The movers and shakers in Woodstock residential building are moving a lot of soil to prepare for their next projects.
This writing is a quick, but extensive, update on many projects. I admit, I am shaking the trees a bit here to inform possible real estate clients that I make all efforts personally to keep in touch with all residential future plans locally. I even watch city council meetings as the debates on the flavour or overall appeal of a future subdivision are discussed.
Is it hopefully safe to say that the main local developers – who are also local – currently are Albert Hargreaves, Cliff Zaluski (Sierra Construction), Walter Broos, Len Reeves, and the Builders Group.
Hargreaves is always expanding Alder Grange (Lakeview Road area north of Pittock Lake and east of Hwy 59), which has now crossed the walking trail into Parkview Drive. Hargreaves is also moving forward with a smaller subdivision off County Rd 11 (Hartley Farm) which will eventually have a connecting road to the Sally Creek subdivision and thereby Hwy 59.
As for Sally Creek, I noticed just yesterday that the Sierra-driven subdivision has laid out a cul-de-sac road which reaches County Road 17 (Tollgate) for homes to back on to Tollgate and to also back on to Sally Creek and the Outdoor Canada Farm Show lands controlled by the University of Guelph.
Walter Broos (www.broos.ca) has been everywhere in Woodstock as the main designer and playmaker for the Finkle / Juliana area, including the new Cedarview retirement residence and the relatively new church on Juliana. As a developer, Broos is also concentrating efforts in the northeast and in particular streets like Munnoch (named after former Woodstock mayor Margaret Munnoch), Spitfire and Normandy. Keep in mind, Broos is not the builder, he is the developer of a registered plan of subdivision along with all its intricate approvals at the county and city level, and then servicing the lands too.
On Munnoch, the ground has been serviced by Broos for a future 24-unit condo complex. There is no timetable publicly announced or price tags or an official announcement on who the builder will be, but I have included a picture I took of the property this week and artist renderings from his website.


 
 
 
 
On the east side of the Cedarview home – in the Finkle / Juliana / Alberta triangle is acreage earmarked for a 12-storey apartment.
If I'm not mistaken, Broos also owns land behind the East Side Mario's and beside the John Knox School on Norwich Avenue with great 401 exposure and access for a future commercial interest.


The Builders Group has been a huge force in Woodstock for more than 15 years ever since the creation of the full extension of Heron Avenue. Builders Group are now Deroo Brothers Ventures, Marc Deroo Fine Homes, Karl Reyneveld, Oxford Builders (George Geerlinks) and John Goodman Homes. They have on-going efforts to complete the Juno Crescent / Ottawa Avenue neighbourhood (Lansdowne Meadows) in the city's far northeast which will be residential adjoining the proposed Woodall Farm recreational park. Builders Group also has a large chunk of greenspace in their inventory to connect Alberni to Dieppe.
On the south side of Devonshire in the city's east, the Lunor Group has expanded its streets into the next phase of The Neighbourhoods Of Devonshire. Finoro Homes and Claysam Homes are the builders here and both have established a strong reputation locally. The Claysam new construction is represented by William Cattle in my same Royal LePage Triland office (www.williamcattle.com). The Claysam plans and inventory homes are certainly MLS listed, so therefore you can also contact myself for more details and a tour of their model home and its subdivision.
RIDDELL STREET
If you want to live in a brand new house in old Woodstock, now is your time to call me for some details as two construction sites are going to be prime and each has a different focus.
On the west side of Riddell Street where the hospital staff parking lot previously existed, Rembrandt Homes based in London (1560 North Routledge Park, N6H 5L6; (519) 657-1200) is now quietly promoting the sale of 11 detached homes in a 'hidden' cul-de-sac (See included map). Certainly a unique neighbourhood to design your dream home, and Rembrandt is a well-established southern Ontario builder, but you better act quickly as, according to an email I received from Rembrandt, five of the 11 lots are already reserved.


 
 
Just down the street where a farm market / grocery store once existed, soil has been serviced for townhouses that are advertised on their signage as future rental properties. Nellwood Construction (long-time Woodstock builder Ray Losee) is the contact. This block was originally proposed about five years ago to have an 8-storey or higher structure, but neighbours lobbied that their homes would always be in a 'shadow', so even though a tall apartment building has existed on nearby Admiral Street for about 20 years, the current home owners rightfully were successful in proving their point and winning their claim, and in essence reducing the zoning to medium density from high density. The new focus will be to create 56 units there.


 
 
As is quickly noted, Woodstock continues to grow . . . exciting times. Future industrial and residential developments are most certainly always on the horizon.
LINKS:


Your Woodstock & Oxford County Realtor
Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland
Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

Thursday, 30 October 2014

Lions Club's Ladies Night Out fundraiser is Nov 3

Lots of community reasons for you to join the Lions Club
By Mark Schadenberg
It's Christmas fundraising season now for the Lions Club of Woodstock.
The Lions Club is always busy . . . and our club is also currently busy seeking to add to our membership.
Christmas is just around the corner and the Lions Club is like a group of elves raising money and donating time to the Salvation Army, Inn Out Of The Cold, Operation Sharing and Ingamo Homes.
The annual Ladies Night Out event is Monday, Nov 3. See the poster and buy a ticket. If you're a guy, buy tickets for your spouse and their friends.
 
The Lions monitor Salvation Army kettles closer to the festive day, volunteer with Operation Sharing's program called That Christmas Place, and collect donations through a food drive organized along with various grocery stores.
Before the Santa Claus parade rolls down Dundas Street on Nov. 15, the Lions Club is at the Woodstock fairgrounds track oval lining up the floats, bellowing out instructions, and getting the wheels rolling and bands marching. Newly elected Woodstock city council member Jerry Acchione is in the Lions Club and coordinates the logistics of annually introducing Santa to the local kids.
Our club annually hosts a Christmas dinner for members and participants of the Big Brothers / Big Sisters locally, and also assist in the BB / BS car show in September.
There are countless reasons to join the Lions Club.
Before? No, B4 ! The club operates a weekly bingo at the Legion – on Thursday nights. Dollars from those events pay for bursaries for high school grads along with funding minor sports activities, plus the many individual charitable requests we receive for assistive living devices, glasses, hearing aids, and similar items.
In Southside Park, the Lions are an important part of both Canada Day fireworks and Cowapolooza through our money-making beverage gardens.
This weekend we are assisting the local regional Diabetes association in a big fundraiser on Saturday, Nov 1.
 
 
The Lions Club was able to participate in the recent Greg Morton comedy night raising money for the Woodstock Co-Operative Dance School.
Lions member Bill Gillespie is convener of the annual Terry Fox Run. 
As a local Realtor, I know the importance of giving back and doing may part in creating a strong community. By the way, I also volunteer in other capacities, including hosting the municipal election coverage on Rogers TV for important volunteer community access programming.
For more details about joining the Lions and following along with our mission of 'We Serve', contact me anytime. Men and women over the age of 18 are invited to be part of our energetic 'Roar' club. Our past Lion chief is a woman, our current secretary is a woman, and past treasurer is a woman, and out latest newest member is a woman, so don't think for a minute that this is a men's club because it's not. You too should plan on joining our community effort.    
            POP CANS
By the way, if you ever have a large amount of empty pop cans in your garage or basement and you're not sure where to donate them, call me to pick them up as the Lions Club has an on-going fundraising effort for both the aluminum cans and the pop tabs. If you don't separate your pop cans from the rest of your recycling currently, consider doing so and I will pick them up ever four of five weeks. 


LINKS:



Proud member of the: Lion Club of Woodstock
Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland
Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

Friday, 24 October 2014

Sports Wall of Fame is Woodstock recognizing accomplishment

Seven athletes and one team to be honoured Oct 25

By Mark Schadenberg
I've been a member of the induction committee for the Woodstock Sports Wall Of Fame since the recognition began in 1996 as part of the grand opening of Southwood Arenas at the Woodstock District Community Complex.
With the idea promoted heavily by both Dave Nadalin and Phil Poole from city council at the time, the first plaque paid tribute to Gord 'Stub' Harper.
As Sentinel-Review sports editor at the time, I recall interviewing two of Stub's children about who he was and what he meant to the Woodstock sports community as a volunteer and someone who also donated greatly as owner of the Harper's Sports downtown store.
On Saturday, Oct. 25 at 2 p.m. (Doors open at 1 p.m. for this free municipal event) we recognize seven more individuals and one team.
 
 
The team is the 1974-75 CASS Knights senior boys' basketball team. Forty years ago they were the second best high school 'AA' basketball team in Ontario. Then they were 17 or 18 years old, so Saturday marks their 40th reunion with as many as 60 people associated with that group expected to be in attendance - players, their spouses, their children and grandchildren, other family members, and former classmates. It should be quite a moment to remember.
The wall of fame is all about remembering and congratulating and saying thanks. Individual athletes compete for themselves, but quietly also represent their community. For example, Olympian Catherine Bond-Mills was always introduced as being from Woodstock. Athletes on a team, compete for themselves but also obviously for a combined purpose.
Other individuals to be commemorated Saturday are:
Karleigh Parker (female athlete): OFSAA gold medalist in pole vault
Steve Kocsis (male athlete): 3-time OFSAA gold medalist in long-distance running
Doug Shelton (historic): Woodstock's first NHL player as he was with the Chicago Blackhawks in the Original Six 1960's.
Ross Moyer (lifetime achievement): Also a lifetime honourary member of Woodstock Skating Club.
Patrick Sloan (builder of sport): Minor hockey and high school hockey convener and coach.
Brad Kovachik: NHL linesman who worked at both the Stanley Cup finals and Winter Olympics this year
Jake Muzzin: STANLEY CUP champion with the Los Angeles Kings.
 


In this group, Ross Moyer is the only person to be recognized posthumously. He was still competing and climbing on a podium when his daughter was competing, but that was an era of figure skating when clubs had as many adult members as youth. For example, Moyer won a silver medal in the Western Ontario Sectionals in St Catharines in the Veteran's Dance division with a woman listed on the online 'pdf' (http://www.skating-wos.on.ca/history/1960.pdf) as Mrs Evans. Daughter Lynne Moyer was third in Novice Pairs at that same 1960 competition. Moyer would be a club president and qualified skating judge also.
Check out some of the links below, but this is again a strong class of inductees. The Woodstock Sports Wall Of Fame is an annual event and the committee welcomes nominations around the calendar, but the cut off for a particular year is the end of April.
The 2014 year on the calendar also marks 100 years since the opening of the Perry Street Arena, which closed its doors in 1996 when the complex opened. Earlier this year, the Woodstock Museum created a display to honour both the Perry Street rink and the Winter Olympics, so the Woodstock Sports Wall of Fame will also recall a previous era in winter indoors sports – hockey, figure skating and other happenings at the Perrydome from wrestling to Warpig (Legendary Woodstock rock band).
 
 
 

LINKS:
http://www.wkusports.com/sports/c-track/mtt/karleigh_parker_845858.html



Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland
Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

Cutting the ribbon at Trans-Mit Steel

Another industry officially opens its doors in Woodstock

By Mark Schadenberg

Another industry has officially opened its doors in Woodstock after building in the Commerce Way Park along Parkinson Road.
The scissors were on display earlier this week as Trans-Mit Steel hosted its ribbon cutting ceremony with many dignitaries on-hand included Oxford MP Dave MacKenzie (see photo) at its 1400 Parkinson Road facility.

 
 
Trans-Mit photos from City Of Woodstock Facebook page
 
Trans-Mit's newest location is approximately 60,000 square feet and is easily visible from the 401 – one of the reasons the company selected Woodstock and its growing industrial base with Toyota already in the Friendly City (building the Rav4 and an even busier Toyota plant in nearby Cambridge). On five acres, Trans-Mit also has first option to purchase an adjoining three acres if its required, according to a City of Woodstock newsletter. The Woodstock workforce will increase by as many as 40 with this employment, producing steel specifically for the transformer / electrical industry.
Many companies obviously see the advantage of locating at the 401 / 403 intersection at Woodstock – automotive and otherwise. Check out: www.cometothecrossroads.com; Woodstock development office of Len Magyar and Brad Hammond, 519 539-2382.
The parent company of Tran-Mit is Mitsui (www.mitsui.com) and they already have two operations in Woodstock – Steel Technologies (which added an addition last year to almost double its size) and Transfrieght. By looking at their website, I see Mitsui opened in 1947 and now has operations in 66 countries, and is a diversified company with interest in steel, minerals, and energy.
Since Toyota's arrival in 2008, Woodstock has also welcomed new construction and new facilities from Steel Technologies, Sysco (Just opened in April of 2014), Waltco (relocated from Delhi), Scholastic Books (relocated from a different Woodstock locale), Execulink, Miller Zell, AGCO Corporation (agricultural machinery), Ancra, Final Coatings (www.finalcoatingsinc.com), (along with others) and a large addition at North American Stamping Group.
Woodstock has additional vacant-and-available industrial land at the east end of Devonshire near Toyota, along with acreage in Commerce Way and smaller lots in both the Patullo Ridge and Bysham Park commercial developments.

In fact, Woodstock's third largest year ever in building permits issued was 2013. I would bet the only years to compare were the main construction time period at Toyota, along with the new Woodstock hospital.

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In a CTV2 London story earlier this year, Len Magyar (pictured below), Woodstock's development commissioner, explains the city has invested millions of dollars in the acquisition of land and all of the servicing.
"The lands you see behind me they're all service-ready. So basically it means somebody can come to us tomorrow, we can do a land sale and get them operating very quickly. And the bottom line is if you don't have service to shovel-ready land, you're probably going to have a very hard time attracting industry."

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Sites as large as 100 acres are available within the current Woodstock boundaries, and the city is hoping to expand its boundaries soon after the start of the next term of city council by moving along in negotiating a parcel of land currently part of Norwich township, and adjacent to the Patullo Ridge commercial park.


NEW LINKS:


OLD LINKS:


Woodstock is My home;
Consider making it your home too !
 
Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland
Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination