The Bellingham Real Estate Podcast

Paul Balzotti

Bellingham Real Estate Podcast features Realtors and Real Estate industry professionals covering a range of Real Estate topics as well as local housing information for Bellingham Washington, Whatcom County Washington, and the Pacific Northwest.

  1. 4d ago

    From Longhouses To ADUs: A Clear History Of Bellingham Housing with Jen Sandoval

    Bellingham’s neighborhoods can feel like totally different worlds, but the pattern isn’t random. When you follow the city’s housing history, the map starts to click: why Fairhaven and South Hill skew older, why streetcar-era blocks cluster near the core, why Silver Beach developed as a distinct pocket, and why the north side and east side took off later. We sit down with Jen Sandoval, our go-to local historian for old homes and neighborhood context, and trace Bellingham housing from its deepest roots to the decisions shaping today’s market. We talk about Coast Salish history and how people used the land and water long before modern development. Then we move through the early settler period, timber mills, railroad speculation, and the boom years that left us with many of the historic downtown Bellingham and Fairhaven buildings buyers still admire. From there, the story becomes a practical guide for anyone house hunting in Whatcom County. We connect the 1903 city consolidation to infrastructure growth and the rise of Craftsman bungalows and worker cottages, then explain how the Great Depression, postwar years, cars, and I-5 reshaped what got built and where. We also dig into Western Washington University’s long-term pull on housing supply, student rentals, and why infill keeps happening around campus. We end with the current chapter: affordability pressure, mixed housing, ADUs, and the debate over neighborhood character in places like Columbia and Fairhaven, alongside the rise of new “urban village” energy in Barkley and Cordata. If you want a clearer lens for understanding Bellingham real estate, listen, subscribe, share this with a friend who’s moving here, and leave a review with the neighborhood you want us to cover next. You can reach Jen at jensandoval@johnlscott.com

    26 min
  2. Mar 17

    New Comprehensive Plan. How Bellingham Plans To Add Housing with Nicole Tingvall

    Bellingham is officially planning for a much bigger future, and the numbers are hard to ignore: today’s population of around 100,000 is projected to climb to roughly 135,000 by 2045. So where do all those people live, and what does that mean for homeowners, buyers, and anyone watching Bellingham real estate? We walk through the newly adopted Bellingham Plan (the city’s comprehensive plan) and translate the parts that actually change what can be built, where, and how quickly.  We dig into missing middle housing and infill development, including ADUs and DADUs, and why recent Washington State housing bills are reshaping what a “single-family lot” can support. We also share a real example from the city showing how a larger lot could qualify for multiple infill units, plus why pre-approved ADU floor plans and streamlined permitting could reduce upfront design costs and shorten timelines. If you’ve ever wondered whether adding a rental unit could pencil out, we talk through the practical side, including how some lenders may count a portion of rental income toward loan qualification.  From major growth zones in the north to urban villages like Barkley Village and Cordata, we connect zoning and infrastructure to the amenities people actually care about, like transit access and walkability. We also cover key limits that still apply, including Lake Whatcom watershed protections, climate priorities, tree canopy goals, and landmark tree rules that shape what development looks like on the ground.  Subscribe for more clear, local housing intel, share this with a neighbor who’s curious about ADUs, and leave a review if it helped. What part of Bellingham’s growth plan excites you or worries you most?

    19 min
  3. 12/10/2025

    2025 Market Recap and 2026 Forecast for Bellingham & Whatcom County with Justin Nelson

    Spring came in hot, fall cooled it down, and somehow Whatcom County finished the year right where it started. We unpack how a classic seasonal surge ran into a wall of rising inventory and sticky mortgage rates, leaving both prices and sales flat year over year. Justin Nelson joins Paul Balzati to break down the quarter-by-quarter story: multiple offers in core neighborhoods, longer days on market across the board, and a four-month supply that changed the pace without crashing values. We get specific about buyer and seller behavior. Buyers finally had time to compare homes, revisit favorites, and negotiate on terms. Sellers had to recalibrate: a sharp first weekend is still possible for well-priced listings, but patience and realistic pricing became the norm. We also split the market by price point. The high end is carrying a heavy load of inventory and longer absorption times, while low-to-mid price bands continue to see steady demand, especially in in-town neighborhoods where convenience and condition drive action. Then we look ahead. If mortgage rates drift toward six percent, expect more transactions in 2026 as buying power recovers and fence-sitters reenter the hunt. We explore how Bellingham’s comprehensive plan—ADU expansion, potential lot splits, and broader infill—could unlock supply and attract local investment. We also discuss the potential impact of a 50-year mortgage on affordability, sales volume, and pricing dynamics, especially for entry-level and move-up buyers. Our take: modest spring appreciation followed by a plateau, more sales overall, and a high-end segment that may lag until inventory thins. Want the playbook for your next move—price strategy, timing, financing, and neighborhood selection? Tune in, subscribe for more local market insight, and leave a review with your 2026 prediction so we can revisit it next year.

    21 min
5
out of 5
11 Ratings

About

Bellingham Real Estate Podcast features Realtors and Real Estate industry professionals covering a range of Real Estate topics as well as local housing information for Bellingham Washington, Whatcom County Washington, and the Pacific Northwest.