Purchase Urban Exiles - Bloomberg Businessweek by Molly Peters
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Urban Exiles - Bloomberg Businessweek
Project
Includes 19 images
Credit: Molly Peters via Visura
Asset ID: VA48677
Caption: Available
Copyright: © Molly Peters, 2024
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Location: Ontario, CA
Topics: Business Capitalism Community Documentary Editorial Epidemics Family Housing Media Pandemics Photography Photojournalism

Molly Peters

Based in New England

Molly Peters is a photographer and visual storyteller based between New England and Arizona. She was born and raised on Martha’s Vineyard and has lived in Rome, Boston, New York, and Los Angeles. Molly completed a BA in Photography...
Also by Molly Peters —
The majority of the ShadeTree development is still under construction, though some homes are finished and already occupied.
All potential buyers had to be approved in advance, and roughly 40 homes were released for purchase all at once. The first people began lining up around noon the day before the release, which meant waiting 22 hours overnight, during a record-breaking heatwave, to hopefully purchase their preferred model of home in the morning when they began accepting buyers at 10am. It was the first time that people lined up overnight for the homes, pointing to their popularity and demand for new houses, even during a pandemic.
Lilyan watches over her husband, Jesus, as he sleeps.
Nam and Stephanie wait in line to hopefully purchase a home.
Many prospective buyers commented that they hadn’t planned to spend the night, and instead had driven by the afternoon or evening before to take one last look at the neighborhood and model homes. When they arrived and saw people already lining up, they stopped and stayed the night to guarantee their own spot in line. Buyers at the end of the line arrived 4-5 hours before the release. A strange camaraderie developed among those waiting in line; though they were competitors for the same homes, they are all also future neighbors. When those who purchased homes move into their new houses in early 2021, they will live in the same section of the development.
Pratibha dozes off while killing time in line. Exhaustion and boredom set in for many after hours spent waiting.
The majority of the ShadeTree development is still under construction.
Despite record-breaking 108 degree temperatures, construction workers continued to build.
Jingjing, a realtor waiting in line on behalf of her clients, stands near tape marking proper social distance due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Rebecca waits inside the Landsea office. She and her husband, Jason, were trying for the second time to procure a home in the ShadeTree development. Just before 10am, four families at a time were allowed into the offices to choose and finalize their purchases, starting a frenetic few hours of sales. Lots were shouted out as they sold, and the anxiety was palpable.
COVID-19 precautions were visible everywhere, as workers went to great lengths to provide a safe and sanitized environment for their clients. More people than usual were invited into the general office area to wait in the air conditioning as the heat outside got more oppressive, while Landsea employees tried to keep people distanced from one another and disinfect thoroughly any time people changed places.
Donna helps Jason and Rebecca with their paperwork to purchase their home. In addition to the required masks and sanitizing procedures, plexiglass shields stood between sales counselors and their clients.
John and his wife Jean were one of the couples near the front of the line. John works as a counselor for veterans and had struck up a friendship with the couple in line behind them, as the husband was an ex-Marine.
A completed home in the ShadeTree development.
A single dress hangs in the closet of a model home at ShadeTree. Model homes are available for viewing during open hours, preferably by appointment but walk-ins are occasionally allowed. Masks are required, and only one family is allowed inside a home at a time, in an effort to keep distance during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The view from a bedroom window in a model home shows the proximity of the neighboring house.
Jeffrey is a real estate agent waiting in line on behalf of one of his clients. He was near the end of the line, even though he arrived hours early, not realizing that people would start lining up the day before.
The ShadeTree development is primarily a construction zone at this point in development.
Homes in varying stages of construction are visible in the development.