When Joe Sobczak was searching for a brand new residence in Groveland, California, his precedence was distinctive: he wanted a property that would home his airplanes.
That is when the 69-year-old check pilot discovered a residential airpark on the Pine Mountain Lake Airport. In 2017, Sobczak purchased a 3-bedroom, 7-bathroom, 5,000-square-foot residence with a 3,600-square-foot hangar for $698,000. He has a mortgage of $4,000 a month.
“It is a phenomenal social atmosphere as a result of you’ve a direct group of people that have frequent pursuits,” Sobczak tells CNBC Make It. “The providers are considerably restricted, however the trade-off is well offset by the serenity and peacefulness of [the community].”
There are about 90 properties with hangars which have deeded entry to make use of the taxiways and runway on the Tuolumne County airport within the residential airpark. In his hangar, Sobczak retains a Beechcraft T-34 Mentor aircraft he purchased with one other pilot for $175,000.
The 2 of them break up the price of sustaining the plane. They lower your expenses on repairs as a result of Sobczak is an FAA-certified A&P mechanic, so he usually does the work himself.
As a check pilot, Sobczak works primarily out of the San Francisco Worldwide Airport (SFO). As an alternative of doing the three-hour drive, he jumps in certainly one of his airplanes and takes a 45-minute flight to close by San Carlos Airport and drives quarter-hour to SFO.
“The explanation I really feel safer within the airplane is as a result of I’ve complete management of my atmosphere, versus driving a automobile the place it is me and the 5,000 different vehicles that cross me by on the way in which to the Bay Space,” he says. “Within the airplane, it is all underneath my management.”
Fueling the aircraft prices about $1 extra per gallon than a automobile, he says. He pays round $120 roundtrip for jet gas, so the fee is akin to what he would spend driving his automobile to and from work.
As a result of the Tuolumne County airport has no management tower, residents of the airpark use a standard visitors advisory frequency so pilots can broadcast their place and supposed flight path.
“I do not actually have to inform anyone if I am going flying. All I’ve to do is taxi out and take off,” Sobczak says. “It is by no means loud …. It is so quiet that it is noisy.”