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August 12, 2016
by Shayla Concannon

What’s Up in Oakley

Look at these the last 30 days housing stats for Oakley: 

Average List Price: $263,355

Average Sales Price: $255,610

Average Days on the Market: 12

Curious what your Oakley house is worth?  Call the Kopf Group Realtors today, 871-4040.

 

Next Hot Neighborhoods: The Two Faces of Oakley

WHATS RIGHT ABOUT OAKLEY?
FOR STARTERS, IT HAS ALL THE STUFF.

Remember as a kid how your gang would always gather at one particular house? You know, the one with the pool and the plush rec room and the stocked fridge? Now that youre an adult, Oakley is that house.

Oakley 1

Source:  Cincinnatimagazine

Its central location and easy highway access make heading north or south a snap, and independent retail anchors like King Arthurs Court Toys, Blue Manatee Books, Aglamesis Brothers, and Habits Café have helped attract home buyers over the past decade. The neighborhood has further juiced its destination rep with summertime events like Oakley After Hours and the Oakley Fancy Flea, which take place on the renovated central esplanade. But the last few years have seen an upsurge of hipster-bait businesses that include artisanal popsicles (Streetpops), indie coffee (Deeper Roots Coffee), and upscale eats (Sleepy Bee Café, Red Feather Kitchen, and Rooted Juicery + Kitchen). Now its an urban-style suburb where listed homes sell within hours. Oakleys CRC pool is getting an upgrade, too: The new aquatic park, scheduled to debut in June 2016, will feature a slide, diving board, and splash pad. Oakley has embraced my family and this business like you wouldnt believe, says Zach Eidson, who bought Oakley Wines on Allston Street in 2012. This fall, Eidson will uncork The Cellar at Oakley Wines, a 2,000-square-foot bar beneath his shop featuring beer, cocktails, and wine. The only thing lacking? Parking. Parking is a downside, says Eidson. But when I get 100 people every Friday night for wine tastings, theyre finding a place somewhere.

Whenever he drives by the 74-acre development that encompasses Oakley Station and two adjacent developments, former planning commissioner Caleb Faux sees one thing: I still see a development that to me belongs on Fields Ertel Road in Mason, not in the city of Cincinnati. He means it is suburban, meant for driving into from far away, not for living around. For years, the former Cincinnati Milacron site seemed rich with promise; there was talk of a dense, in-filled community. Talk of a Jungle Jims, a village-like shopping area threaded with sidewalks where people walked. That was in the early 00s. What we ended up with is a vista of forgettable architecture in the middle of one of the otherwise most liveable communities in Cincinnati. Critics talk of back-room shenanigans; they describe a lack of public debate about making the area fit in with the community. In the end, we got the box you can drive your tanker to.

I see it as a lost opportunity, says Faux. We dont have very many developable parcels inside of Cincinnati of that magnitude. We could have done a lot more with it.


STATS
POPULATION: 10,429 | MEDIAN HOME PRICE: $230,900 | CHANGE SINCE 2010: 20%


DOWN THE ROAD

Photographs by Aaron M. Conway


WHATS WRONG WITH OAKLEY?
TWO WORDS: SQUARE FOOTAGE.

The largest Kroger in the cityand the second largest in the worldjust opened in the Oakley Station development. Coolness. Sohow come it doesnt seem so large in Oakley? Its because with the big boxy buildings for Target, Meijer, Sams Club, Cinemark, and more around itnot to mention a parking lot that could accommodate a mid-sized community, boulevards the Red Army could parade down, and the supersized Crossroads Community Church campus nearbyone more enormo-edifice easily gets lost in the parade.

Oakley 2

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