Sandpoint, Sagle and Hope real estate and homes for sale in Idaho - Lauren Bisbee, REALTOR® REALTOR® Logo - NUMBER1EXPERT NUMBER1EXPERT™ Logo
Sandpoint, Sagle and Hope real estate listings, home buying, selling and homes for sale in Idaho - NUMBER1EXPERT(tm)
Search All Local Listings
Search All Local Listings
Free Relocation Package
Stay Connected
Stay Connected Facebook Twiter Linkedin Active Rain Real Town Truila Stay Connected
Stay Connected
Sandpoint Information
Welcome > Local Info > Sandpoint Information ...

About the Sandpoint Idaho Area 

Sandpoint Profile
LAKES, MOUNTAINS AND RIVERS, music, art and culture. Those are the images many people have of Sandpoint, Idaho, a town of 7,500 located in the tip of the Idaho Panhandle only 60 miles south of the Canadian border.  

That image has been amplified around the country as the town has attracted national media attention. In 2004, Sunset magazine named Sandpoint the West’s best small town, National Geographic Adventure labeled it a great adventure town, and Outside magazine listed it among 20 dream towns. 

The Long Bridge leads you to Sandpoint and the northwest shore of 43-mile-long Lake Pend Oreille, at an elevation of only 2,070 feet. Surrounded by the Selkirk and Cabinet mountains, Sandpoint offers outstanding recreation in all four seasons.  

The Selkirk and Cabinet mountains are frontal ranges of the Rocky Mountains. The Selkirks extend 300 miles north into Canada, with a spectacular glaciated landscape and peaks up to the 8,000-foot range.  

No less stunning to the east, across Lake Pend Oreille from town, are the Cabinet Mountains, also offering superb hiking, mountain biking, camping and wilderness experiences. 

Snow-filled winters appease downhill and Nordic skiers, snowmobilers, winter campers and ice skaters alike.  

Schweitzer, elevation 6,400, has some of the best skiing and boarding conditions in the Northwest, and is only an 11-mile drive from downtown. Schweitzer Mountain Resort boasts 2,500 acres of terrain, with 62 named trails traversing two open bowls and 2,400 vertical feet. 

Summers are warm and sunny. With City Beach downtown, anyone can access the lake to swim, go for a boat ride, parasail, water ski, play tennis or hoops, or simply sunbathe and picnic.  

Lake Pend Oreille's 111.3 miles of shoreline make it the fifth largest lake in the western United States. Fishermen can get their hookfull of the giant Kamloops and mackinaw trout that sometimes exceed 30 pounds.  

Several golf courses are within easy reach. The closest is just two miles from downtown, the well-kept 9-hole Elks Golf Course featuring its new clubhouse on Highway 200. The next closest, just 8 miles east of Sandpoint, is the world-class, Idaho Club Golf Resort on the shores of the Pack River and Lake Pend Oreille. Rated the most challenging course in the Inland Northwest. Two more 18-hole courses are found within the county at Priest Lake Golf Course in Coolin and StoneRidge Golf in Blanchard. Another 9-hole course is located about 30 miles north of Sandpoint, Mirror Lake Golf in Bonners Ferry. 

Sandpoint has spawned a complementary artistic and cultural community. A number of nationally recognized artists make their home here, and there is also a very active performing arts community with frequent offerings of music, dance and drama. The Pend Oreille Arts Counci (POAC) brings national acts that include ballet, opera, classical music and popular performance art works.  

The historic Panida Theater, built in 1927 as a vaudeville theater, has been acquired by a nonprofit community group and is operated as a performing arts center that attracts a wide range of musical and dramatic acts. The Panida also hosts a cinematic series of foreign and independent films, the Global Cinema Cafe. You can admire its Spanish revivalist architecture at 300 N. First Ave. Several art galleries are located throughout town, and often you’ll spot artwork at various businesses that house their own collections or revolving exhibits through ArtWalk, sponsored by POAC. 

And in summer, The Festival at Sandpoint stages one of the Northwest's premier musical festivals, featuring classical music from the Spokane Symphony Orchestra and popular acts ranging from country to jazz, pop, the blues and more. Over the years the Festival has hosted America, Dwight Yoakam, Peter Frampton, The Pretenders, Willie Nelson, Emmylou Harris, Lyle Lovett, BB King, Robert Cray, Nanci Griffith and many others.

More music offerings are sponsored by POAC in the summertime, the Summer Sounds at Park Place every Saturday from May to September and Sunday Concerts-on-the-Lawn in July, both free series.

Sandpoint’s calendar is busy year-round with annual special events: Winter Carnival in January; Madcap Mardi Gras in February; Harbor Stomp Games in March and Caribbean Carnival in April, both at Schweitzer; K & K Fishing Derby and Lost in the ‘50s in May; North Idaho Timberfest in June; 4th of July Celebration and Sandpoint Wooden Boat Festival in July; Festival at Sandpoint, Arts and Crafts Fair, Long Bridge Swim, Bonner County Fair & Rodeo in August; Schweitzer Fall Fest and Idaho Draft Horse and Mule International in September; Oktoberfest, Oompa Fest and Harvestfest in October; Thanksgiving Fishing Derby, Holly Eve, Holidays in Sandpoint in November; and continuing Holidays in Sandpoint and New Year’s Eve celebrations in December.

Sandpoint reached its official 100th birthday on Feb. 7, 2001. To celebrate, a Centennial Commission directed the production of a film, “Sandpoint, at the north end of the Long Bridge,” and dedicated a new city park. The centennial’s theme, “Bridging the Century,” was fitting since bridges have been a part of the town’s history for more than 120 years.  

The first railroad bridge was built by the Northern Pacific Railroad in 1882, officially connecting the area to the east to pioneers and prospectors and establishing Sandpoint as a bustling railroad, mining and timber town.

Today, there’s no mining and timber makes up a smaller piece of the economic pie, but there are still plenty of bridges – a symbol of Sandpoint.  

No matter which direction you come from into Sandpoint, you’ll cross over water on a bridge. Arguably the most recognizable one is the Long Bridge. Our southern portal has drawn people in over a dazzling mile-plus-long stretch of water since the first bridge – then the longest wooden bridge in the world – was finished in 1909.
Railroads and lumber were the major industries when Sandpoint was founded over one hundred years ago.  

Today Sandpoint has become one of the most diverse small towns in the Pacific Northwest. Recognized as one of the nation’s best small arts towns, Sandpoint has a vibrant visual and performance arts scene. Our year round recreational opportunities provide something for everyone—skiing, boating, hiking, fishing or strolling around town where you can experience our historic business district and unique neighborhoods.  

Our businesses, both large and small, are varied and growing. They include food processing, non-polluting manufacturing, high tech industries, recreation, and a vigorous retail and service sector as well as outstanding restaurants and pubs. 

But our greatest asset is our people whether they have lived here all of their lives or are just newly arrived. They realize they are fortunate to live in Sandpoint and are willing to contribute their time and effort to make their community the best it can be.  

With a spirit of commitment and a belief that working together is the key to a quality community our volunteers have saved an historic theater, developed North Idaho’s only native plant arboretum, started the Pend Oreille Arts Council, and helped The Festival at Sandpoint to become one of the premier summer music festivals in the Pacific Northwest.  

These are only a few of the community assets developed by, maintained by, and enjoyed by the citizens of Sandpoint.  

Come and experience our town, our commitment and our community spirit.
 

Request my Free Sandpoint Idaho Relocation Package. It's packed full of useful and important information about the Sandpoint Idaho area. Don't move here without it! Remember: I'll send it to you for free and without obligation. Just fill out the form and I will send it right out... 

Request a FREE information package. There's no obligation, and I promise to get back to you quickly. 

About You
* Your Name:
* Your Email Address:
Your Street Address:
City:
State/Province:
Country:
Zip/Postal Code:
Phone:
About Your Move
When Are You Moving?
Where Are You Moving?
About Your Home Search
Your Price Range?
Number Of Bedrooms?
Number Of Bathrooms?
Home Size In Square Feet?
About Your Home
Your Preferred Selling Price?
Number Of Bedrooms?
Number Of Bathrooms?
Home Size In Square Feet?
Additional Info
Please Enter More Details,
Along With Any Comments,
Concerns, Or Questions:
Send Latest Listings: What is this?
Send Latest News: What is this?

*Please note that fields marked with an asterisk are required.


Email With Confidence
Quick Response Guarantee >
Your Privacy Is Guaranteed >
Free & Without Obligation >


Real Estate Tips
Accepting An Offer >Negotiating Factors

Negotiations for the sale of a home can be affected by emotional factors. For example, it is easy to be offended by someone who is making an offer on your property. Even if the buyers love your house, they are trying to negotiate the best possible price and terms. They probably will not let you know how much they want your home until they have negotiated a purchase agreement.

Buyers almost never write offers that please the sellers entirely. Offers and counter offers may be traded back and forth over days or weeks. Terms of the sale will be discussed and deadlines will be set. When there is finally a meeting of the minds, both sides may feel relieved but exhausted by the process. One of a real estate agent's most important jobs is to act as the intermediary during such negotiations. With your agents knowledge of financing, negotiation procedures, and the tax laws affecting real estate sales, agents come up with creative solutions to the challenges that may arise.

See All Tips In The "Accepting An Offer" Category >
See Complete Library Of Hundreds Of Tips In 30+ Categories >

Real Estate Trivia
Q 
What is the earliest residential building that remains in Manhattan?

A 
Fraunces Tavern, built in 1719, is where George Washington delivered his Farewell Address to his officers in 1783.
See More Real Estate Trivia >


Print This Page Send To A Friend


Lauren Bisbee, REALTOR®, real estate agent and broker for Sandpoint, Sagle and Hope, Idaho home listings, property and land for sale - NUMBER1EXPERT

Lauren Bisbee
Keller Williams Sandpoint

212 N. 1st Ave, Suite 101
Sandpoint, ID 83864
Cell: 208-627-8819
Fax: 208-265-5151
laurenbisbee@NUMBER1EXPERT.com

    follow me on Twitter


    Lauren Bisbee Logo

    Keller Williams Sandpoint Logo
      follow me on Twitter

      REALTOR


      www.LaurenBisbee.com is brought to you by Lauren Bisbee
      NUMBER1EXPERT in real estate for Sandpoint, Sagle and Hope, Idaho

      Read Lauren Bisbee's Privacy Guarantee, Terms of Service, and Free & Without Obligation Pledge



      USA and Canada Real Estate - NUMBER1EXPERT
      NUMBER1EXPERT®
      © Best Image Marketing and/or its clients.
      All rights reserved. All information deemed reliable but not guaranteed.

      www.LaurenBisbee.com is brought to you by Lauren Bisbee