Real Estate Professional - Montecito, CA
Average rating
4.91
4.9
Average rating
Emily is ranked in the top 1% of real estate agents nationwide, and is honored to be one of the Top 5 agents at Village Properties. Village Properties continues to be the #1 company in the area for annual sales volume. Emily has over fourteen years of real estate experience, including finance, development, consulting, residential and commercial sales, and vacant land. Some of Emily's more recent projects include the sale of 200 Lambert Road, a 52-acre property with polo fields and facilities, and Alma Del Pueblo, a new development in the heart of downtown Santa Barbara, with 37 residences and 29,000 square feet of commercial space. Emily is currently selling the 37 brand new construction residences. She also helps her clients with listing their properties for sale, and assisting clients in purchasing their primary residences, second homes, or investment properties. Emily works on a variety of high-end luxury estates, distressed sales, and beach properties, making her a truly versatile agent. In 2008, Emily spent some time across Santa Barbara and New York City, working on a large project (a brand new 58-story building with 223 residences) with a partner right next to Ground Zero. As Emily put it, "It was an amazing experience to be living in New York City, right in SoHo in the heart of things, and to expand my real estate portfolio of experience to be involved with the largest new development in Downtown New York. Even still, Santa Barbara is where my heart is. You see those mountains, and you know you're home." Emily's success has been built through her strong relationships with her clients, local real estate agents as collaborators, local vendors, and her community network. Successful relationships don't just happen. They are the product of hard work, positive thinking, commitment, persistence and integrity. Emily brings these attributes to work with her each day, and the number of successful relationships she's established and maintained exemplifies this. Her youthful spirit, high energy, and charming personality make her one of the easiest and most sought after agents to work with. In addition to being an agent, Emily has consulting experience in her background, she has mentored other new agents, and she is also a member of the Santa Barbara, California and National Associations of Realtors. This means she holds herself to the highest ethical and moral standards in the industry. Beginning her real estate career in her junior year of college, while earning a degree in Business Economics & Accounting at the University of California, Santa Barbara, Emily gained firsthand experience in real estate through Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, then working under Coldwell Banker before joining Village Properties in 2004. Emily has emerged as an extremely well rounded agent with a knowledge of finance and a work ethic exceeded only by her passion to serve her clients. Emily's dedication to people extends well beyond the borders of Village Properties as she has dedicated her free time serving as the Chair of the Member Services Committee for the Santa Barbara Association of Realtors and also on the Housing Opportunity Committee for Santa Barbara. The Housing Opportunity Committee keeps Emily intimately involved with many of the housing land use issues facing the area. At work and at play (usually painting, traveling, or at the beach), Emily's ability to problem solve serves her clients and the community well. The combination of her creative vision with her devotion to others makes Emily McBride Kellenberger the ideal agent to work with. Emily will offer you her complete and undivided attention on a moment's notice. One read of her testimonials and you'll know you are working with someone special who loves what she does. If you are looking for a terrific agent who will treat you like family, Emily is the agent of choice. Emily has spent almost all of her life right here in beautiful Southern California and she'll do everything she can to ensure you can too. In Emily's free time (which isn't a whole lot of time!), she enjoys hiking, surfing, traveling, and painting. You can view some of her oil paintings here: emilykmcbride.com.
Average rating
Address
1250 Coast Village Rd
Montecito, CA 93108
Photo | Project | Date | Description | Cost | Home |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Actively Listed - 200 Lambert/201 Toro Canyon | Sep 2014 | Encompassing over 60 useable acres on two parcels in an unparalleled location, this world-class estate site, equestrian, or polo facility presents a once in a lifetime opportunity for the most discerning luxury buyer. Perched between the mountains and the ocean on the American Riviera, offering finished with lush landscaping, elegant stonework, a seasonal creek, walking trails, polo fields, a training track, and additional equestrian facilities. | $21m | Carpinteria, CA | |
Actively Listed - El Fureidis Estate | May 2014 | El Fureidis translated as tropical paradise is one of Montecitos most celebrated estates and steeped in rich and colorful history. The estate was founded in 1906 by James Waldron Gillespie, a visionary hailing from New York who came to the West Coast looking for a location with a landscape and a climate that rivaled that of the Mediterranean. Originally known as a botanic garden, the estate boasts 10 acres of exceptional grounds offering the utmost in privacy and a variety of trees, many of which are over 100 years old. The estate was inspired by Gillespies world travels, and designed by renowned architect Bertram Goodhue, known mainly for his churches, museums, and monumental buildings. Goodhues works include the Los Angeles Central Library, Saint Thomas Church in New York City, the Nebraska State Capitol, and the Chapel and Original Campus of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. El Fureidis is known as Bertram Goodhues outstanding Mediterranean Revival masterpiece. Together, Gillespie and Goodhue embarked on a yearlong trip to Europe and the Mediterranean region to gather inspiration for the estate; a significant portion of their journey included over 500 miles on horseback from the Caspian Sea to the Gulf of Persia. This journey birthed the concept of a grand Roman villa with Persian gardens, a very progressive architectural style for the time. Constructed of steel-reinforced concrete and retaining the original layout footprint, Goodhue built El Fureidis to last. The main house recently underwent a multimillion-dollar renovation with a careful eye for detail, preserving the historic elements of the estate, while equipping the estate for modern living in a new era. Many of the original fixtures and appointments remain, and are coupled with fully modernized and deluxe appointments in the bathrooms, kitchen, and laundry facilities, such as radiant floor heating, a steam shower, and top-end appliances. The renovation includes a second floor configured with three guest suites. The estate itself forms a rectangle with a bright atrium terrace at its center, and is accessed through an entry hall and a conversation room, a Byzantine-style alcove crowned with an 18-foot-high central dome that is decorated with a floral hand painted, gold and blue design in 24k gold-leaf modeled after the church of St. John Lateran in Rome. The conversation room has remained the piece de resistance of the house. Offering numerous areas for entertaining, the public rooms of the estate are grand in style. Each public room is bathed in natural light from the numerous sets of double doors, which open to the central courtyard and other patio areas. The formal dining room is unique with a barreled ceiling painted in 24k gold leaf and depicting a scene of Alexander the Great conquering Persepolis by Henry Wadsworth Moore. The original signature by the artist remains intact. A musicians balcony overlooks the formal dining room and is accessed via a glass door. From the entry, one may enter the formal living room with lovely blue paneled ceilings, representing the heavens, and the neoclassical era of the estate. From the living room, the floor plan continues to a library, a sitting room and a lounge. Upstairs, an exquisite rooftop with three access points provides 360-degree views of the lavish ten-acre property, Pacific Ocean, and the Channel Islands. The desirable Montecito climate allows the rooftop to be enjoyed year round, while expansive space for rooftop lounging and sunset views provide the perfect setting for events. The property is bordered by a seasonal creek and offers significant gardens and landscaping, originally Persian in design, and reflective of Gillespies fondness for palm trees. At one time, the gardens boasted more than 100 different varieties of palm and other trees, and today the expansive 10-acre grounds still harbor several century-old tree specimens, including a massive Chilean wine palm, Montecitos largest Moreton Bay fig tree, magnificent king palms, a grove of coast redwoods, citrus and walnut orchards, and many others. The many terraces, reflecting pools, and gardens are enhanced by Lee Lawries nine bas-reliefs located at the rear of the estate. Lee Lawrie and Bertram Goodhue collaborated on many projects, bringing Lawrie to the forefront of the architectural industry. Lee Lawrie known as one of the United States most influential architectural sculptors and likely best known for the sculpture of Atlas at Rockefeller Center. The nine bas-reliefs depict scenes from Arthurian legends, which form a band between the tops of columns on the south side of the estate and feature Lawries signature etched in stone. The south elevation of the estate is dominated by a dazzling terrace of herringbone brick and turquoise reflecting pools, which descends via a walkway graced with additional water featuresending at a stately Roman temple or casino. The prevalent rectangular shape of the pools, terraces and walking paths in the gardens provide a tranquil atmosphere while water transports from one place to the next via narrow, shallow channels that are terraced to create cooling water. The estate includes numerous original brick pathways offering opportunities to take in the lovely trees, and to reflect on the peaceful atmosphere across the grounds. El Fureidis is a place of legendary provenance and has at times received credit for playing host to many memorable tenants and visitors, including Thomas Mann, Albert Einstein, Winston Churchill, Charles Chaplin, and John F. Kennedy. It is perhaps best known in recent years as a location for the 1983 film Scarface, and the wedding scene of Michele Pfeiffer and Al Pacino. The estate is one of only three residences in Montecito designed by Goodhue, and is a true piece of art history. | $35m | Montecito, CA |