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Bradford
Coldwell Banker Richardson Associates Phone: 802-222-5432 E-mail: cbrichre@sover.net We serve the Connecticut River Valley from Ryegate, VT and Haverhill, NH to the north to Fairlee, VT and Orford, NH to the south. We provide personal, professional service to both buyers and sellers. | ||
Burlington
Coldwell Banker, Hickok & Boardman Realty Phone: 802-846-9571 E-mail: kirstendonnelly@hotmail.com Local Charlotte VT area real estate agent serving Charlotte, Vermont, Chittenden county area with real estate listings. | ||
Charlotte
Charlotte VT Real Estate Phone: 802-865-0111 Charlotte VT Real Estate Residential sale of homes and condominiums, Chittenden County, Greater Burlington area. | ||
Colchester
Marble Island Community and Resort LLC. Phone: 802.864.6800 E-mail: micrvt@aol.com Sales manager for Marble Island Resort. A luxury 58 unit waterfront resort community on lake Champlain featuring townhomes and homesites. | ||
Dorset
Re/Max Star Properties Phone: 888-778-7629 E-mail: vethomas@yahoo.com Serving Manchester, Dorset, Stratton, Bromley and surrounding areas. | ||
Dover
SnowResorts Realtors Phone: 800.896.SNOW Ext 17 E-mail: snowdon@sover.net We serve the Southern Vermont and the Mount Snow Resort area. Condominiums, vacation homes for sale and for rent. | ||
Georgia
Morin & Company Properties Inc. Phone: 802-524-1110 E-mail: deanne@morinproperties.com We service Franklin & Chittenden Counties and concentrate our specialties in Fairfax, Georgia, Fletcher, St Albans, Swanton, Highgate, Fairfield, and Cambridge. | ||
Killington
Tiki and Associates Real Estate and Property Management Phone: 802-228-3500 E-mail: tiki@vermontel.com From Ludlow, Okemo Mountain, Lakes to Killington Mountain including Plymouth, Reading, Mt. Holly and Bridgewater Vermont. 1785 Route 100 North Ludlow, VT 05149. | ||
Mad River Valley
Sugarbush Real Estate Phone: 802-496-3508 E-mail: belliott@madriver.com Mad River/Sugarbush Valley and environs. Residential, land or commercial. Specializing in the towns of Warren, Waitsfield, and Fayston. | ||
Manchester
Re/Max Star Properties Phone: 888-778-7629 E-mail: vethomas@yahoo.com Serving Manchester, Dorset, Stratton, Bromley and surrounding areas. | ||
Morrisville
Tara BeemanBeeman Real Estate Phone: 802-888-7510 Web Site Experienced Lamoille County Native that knows the area and its market! Search the mls from our website! | ||
Mount Snow
Mark Linton Real Estate Phone: 802-464-5686 E-mail: linton@together.net Specializing in Vermont Vacation Property Homes-Condominiums-Acreage. | ||
Rutland
Re/Max Real Estate Services Phone: 802-775-2552 E-mail: mhenkel@vermontel.net Serving Rutland County, Rutland and Killington in the sale and purchase of single family homes, vacation homes and lake homes. Relocation specialist. Certified Buyer Broker. | ||
Stowe
Carlson Real Estate, Inc. Phone: 802-253-7358 E-mail: lgauff@sover.net Experienced Realtor specializing in properties in the Stowe, Morrisville, Waterbury and surrounding area. | ||
Stratton
Tamarack Realty Phone: 802-297-9010 E-mail: tamarack@vermontel.com Stratton Mt area | ||
Sugarbush Valley
Mill Brook Real Estate Phone: 802-496-6000 E-mail: brooke@mbre.com Homes, condos, and land in a variety of price ranges in the Mad River/Sugarbush Valley. | ||
Waterbury
Pall Spera Company Realtors Phone: 802-253-9771 E-mail: jonig@together.net Serving areas in both Washington and Lamoille County. | ||
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More than three-fourths of Vermont land is forested. Much of it is farm woodlots, however, and is not operated as a regular source of income. The principal hardwoods are the sugar maple, beech, and yellow birch; the principal softwoods are spruce, fir, and white pine. Lumber-processing and wood-processing plants employ about 3,200 workers. Stone, including granite, marble, limestone, and slate, accounts for much of the total value of mineral production in Vermont. The state is noted for its fine granite and marble. Granite production is centered chiefly around Barre, but excellent gray monumental granite is abundant in many areas east of the Green Mountains. Pink granite occurs in quantity east of Newport. The so-called marble belt is in western Vermont, chiefly in Rutland County. This region also produces slate. The Champlain Valley is a source of limestone. Vermont has been a major producer of asbestos, and much of the U.S. supply came from Belvidere Mountain, in the northern part of the state. Talc is produced principally in the Green Mountains. The chief industry in Vermont is the manufacture of electrical equipment, especially electronic components, which accounted for nearly one-third of the income generated by industrial activity in the mid-1990s. The leading employers in the electronics sector are the manufactures of semiconductors and related devices. Other leading industries include printing and publishing; food processing, particularly the making of cheese and other dairy products; machinery manufactures, primarily firms making metalworking machinery; manufactures of fabricated metals, led by the makers of small weapons; and paper and paperboard manufactures. Other large employers include firms making aircraft engines and parts and wood household furniture. Some types of manufacturing are widely dispersed, such as furniture making and food processing. The state’s distinctive cheddar cheese is made locally in rural areas. The machine-tool industry, however, is concentrated in the Springfield-Windsor area of the Connecticut Valley. Another complex is in the Burlington area of northwestern Vermont, where the production of electrical goods and business machines predominates. The decline of Burlington’s textile and clothing industry has been compensated for by growth in the plastic and electronic industries. Vermont’s sole nuclear power plant opened in Vernon in 1972, and in 1999 it produced 72 percent of the state’s electricity. Another 19 percent came from hydroelectric facilities. Wood fueled plants operate in Burlington and Ryegate. Tourism has become an important source of income for Vermont. Initially most tourists visited in summer. However, with the expansion of winter sports activities, tourism has become a year-round industry. Because of tourism, roads have been improved and more permanent residents have settled. Many of the visitors are Canadians. In terms of dollars spent, skiing is now Vermont’s single most important tourist industry. The dominant city by far is Burlington, which had a 2000 population of 38,889. This 200-year-old port on Lake Champlain is a trade and transportation center, the seat of the state’s oldest university, and a summer resort. It also has a diversity of industries. Rutland (17,292), in eastern Vermont, is the center of the state’s marble-quarrying belt. Barre (9,291), in north central Vermont, is the center of what are believed to be the world’s largest granite quarries. Montpelier, with 8,035 inhabitants, is the smallest state capital in the nation. | ||
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Realtors, click here to register on this site. Real Estate: New Hampshire - Vermont Relocation Vacation Rentals: Maine - New Hampshire - Vermont Official Website for the State of Vermont Although we try to be as vigilant as possible, we are not responsible for any incorrect information or any misrepresentation that may occur on our site. ©1996 - 2008 AdNet. All rights reserved. |