ocrenter, if you don’t mind my asking, could you elaborate further as to your assertions here?
HOW LONG has the “56 corridor” been the “premier destination” for “upper income new comers to SD?”
WHO are these “upper-income new comers” (i.e. age bracket, most prevalent race(s), mose prevalent family makeup, etc)?
WHAT this their typical or average household income bracket (i.e. $100K – $150K annually)?
Do you consider 4S Ranch (aka 4closure Ranch) part of this “upper class enclave?”
Lastly, do you think the population preferring to live in the “56 corridor” is representative of “upper-income” groups throughout the entire county?
Just trying to get a concrete idea in my mind of WHO the “56 corridor” mostly appeals to from someone “in the know” such as yourself :=]
Thanks in advance of any help![/quote]
overbearinggurl, seriously, this is a fact, not some weird personal preference or desire to get everyone to come live in my hood.
think about it, most of the IT companies are either along the I-15/route-56 junction or at the costal end with Qualcomm. Then you have tons of law firms at the costal end of the 56. The biotech industry are clustered around UCSD. And a bunch of engineering and defense related firms are in Poway and around Miramar.
The 56 corridor is the natural suburb to all of these professional high paying jobs. So it is natural that it becomes the draw. You get professionals with kids into these areas, the schools get the bump up and then it starts drawing in other folks as well. it helps that developers decided to build a bunch of high end homes in the area as well.
it is what it is. just drive past the 52 and into these “far flung” deserts and you’ll see for yourself.