Places to make you happy
Salt Spring Island, B.C.: Grow your own everything
Salt Lake City: Start a business
Taos: Own a vacation home
Population: 5,763. Median single-family home price: $422,756.
Annual visitors: 700,000
Take a trial run: It’s an Alpine fairy tale at the Bavarian Lodge. From $180; thebavarian.net
Regardless of what brings a person to Taos—art, snow play, its ethereal spirit—those who fall for the town tend to fall hard. It’s this enduring appeal coupled with a limited housing supply that make for about as safe a second-home bet as you’ll find.
Not that Taos has entirely escaped the bust. Prices have slipped 20 to 25 percent since a peak in 2006, but “we never had the overbuilding, so we never had the kind of bubble that other places had,” says realtor Peter Lora. Plus, the vacation-rental market has held—powder-deprived Southern Californians and Texans and heat-weary Southwesterners turn up every winter and summer like clockwork—which gives second-home buyers the opportunity to offset a chunk of their costs.
Two-bedroom condos near Taos Plaza can be had for around $200,000. Thirty minutes from town and 10,200 feet above sea level, at the Kachina Lift base, ski-in-ski-out condos can be had starting at $300,000.
Runners-up: Laguna Beach, CA; Truckee, CA; Telluride, CO
Portland: Ditch your car
Bellingham, WA: Play year-round
Eureka, CA: Be a not-so-struggling artist
Population: 27,226. Median single-family home price: $283,500.
Artist population: More than 1,000
Take a trial run: The Carter House Inns are hung with local art. From $199; carterhouse.com
“Some places, you say you’re an artist, and people smile and say, ‘Right—now what do you really do?’ ” says Matt Beard. “But in Eureka, it’s a respectable living.” Beard has shown his luminescent surf-inspired paintings up and down the California coast.
But his home is the often fog-bound Victorian seaport of Eureka, where there are said to be more artists per capita than anywhere else in the state. Many mingle with their patrons on the first Saturday of every month, when about 80 galleries, museums, theaters, and cafes in Eureka’s Old Town stay open late for Arts Alive, a popular en-masse art browse.
While walking around town, you’ll see murals, many of them the work of local Duane Flatmo, who also competes in spring’s Kinetic Grand Championship, a 3-day, 42-mile sculpture-on-wheels race. Or you might bump into Linda Wise, a garbage-company manager by day who turns others’ refuse into critically acclaimed junk-metal sculptures by night. Recently she won a juried exhibition at the Morris Graves Museum of Art. “I don’t think you can walk a block,” says Graves curator Jemima Harr, “without encountering something related to the arts.”
Runners-up: Santa Fe; Victoria, B.C.; Pa‘ia, Maui, HI
San Diego: Hatch big ideas
Sonoma County: Dine 5-star
Scottsdale: Raise your kids
Crestone, CO: Live off the grid
Population: 143. Median single-family home price: $322,000.
New solar companies: 5
Take a trial run: Willow Spring B&B. Open Apr–Oct; from $65; willow-spring.com
Perched at the edge of the San Luis Valley, the onetime mining town of Crestone might seem like an unlikely cutting-edge capital of solar. But true believers in solar power, off-the-grid living, and alternative building methods have gravitated here for decades. “There is total open-ended support for solar here,” says Paul Shippee, a solar-architectural designer and proprietor of the Crestone Solar School.
Why Crestone? Start with 330 sunny days a year. Then factor in a lack of strict building codes and an acceptance of alternative viewpoints. Federal tax credits and state-level rebates for solar installations also help in a place that, even with all that Colorado sunshine, rivals Minneapolis in the number of days when heat is needed in homes. “We incorporate active or passive solar power in almost every home we build,” says Paul Koppana, a local contractor who specializes in straw-bale houses. “We’ve built houses that, in the dead of winter, run about 50 bucks a month in utilities.”
Runners-up: Mendocino, CA; Tucson