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Brian
11th February 2007, 04:22 PM
I'll be in Valencia the first week of March to apply for my residencia, as well as make contacts and conduct interviews.

At present, the plan is to move in late May. It's going to be an interesting ride.

Brian
13th February 2007, 01:51 AM
Well, I purchased my tickets tonight. It's official. I'm off to Valencia for job-hunting March 2-11. Wish me luck!

It's exciting and frightening at the same time, but part of the process.

I have about a 4-hour layover in Madrid on the morning of March 11. I would think that security will be quite tight that day.

que
13th February 2007, 02:07 AM
Excellent news!

Good luck with the job hunting. Please run by us again in short your plans?

Moving with family to spain? and to work in which sector?

Sounds an adventure!

Brian
13th February 2007, 02:29 AM
Excellent news!

Good luck with the job hunting. Please run by us again in short your plans?

Moving with family to spain? and to work in which sector?

Sounds an adventure!

Thanks for the well-wishes, Que.

In short, our plan is to re-locate from the US to Spain this Spring (at the end of May). Yes, my wife and 2 kids are going with me! :) She is a Spanish citizen, which will help in the visas and permits for myself.

My goals for the trip in a few weeks are to look at pisos, talk to potential employers, and scout the IT market. I have found it very difficult to get hired if you are not currently over there with all the proper permits.

If I am unable to immediately find work, then I will start a private IT firm, as well as continue some of the IT consulting work that I currently do. (Terminal Services is a wonderful thing!)

Diana
13th February 2007, 08:55 AM
I'll be in Valencia the first week of March to apply for my residencia, as well as make contacts and conduct interviews.

At present, the plan is to move in late May. It's going to be an interesting ride.

Best wishes for the move and lots of good luck job hunting!

parubin
13th February 2007, 12:40 PM
Well, I purchased my tickets tonight. It's official. I'm off to Valencia for job-hunting March 2-11. Wish me luck!

It's exciting and frightening at the same time, but part of the process.

In short, our plan is to re-locate from the US to Spain this Spring (at the end of May). Yes, my wife and 2 kids are going with me! :) She is a Spanish citizen, which will help in the visas and permits for myself.



Good luck on this move !!. I imagine your wife is excited about returning to her home land, and so should be your kids. Starting a whole new life at a young age, has to be really exiting.

I hope everything's for good. I have only one question (if I may) what made you choose Valencia as your new home???

Mike_2
13th February 2007, 12:50 PM
Wow, good luck! I'm in the same boat as you, figuratively speaking. My wife and I are moving to Salamanca in April. During the second week of March (less than 3 weeks away, yikes!) we'll be in Salamanca looking for an apartment. Then its back to the states to finish up some work and then back to spain on April 1st. I thought that was an appropriate day to move, its called April Fool's Day here in the US! :)

Brian
13th February 2007, 01:08 PM
I hope everything's for good. I have only one question (if I may) what made you choose Valencia as your new home???

Valencia is where my wife grew up, and her family is all there.

ValenciaSon
13th February 2007, 01:11 PM
Good luck Brian. I hope you find a good job, a good apartment and good schools for the kids. I guess you won't be missing out on the Americas Cup or las fallas of '08!

Brian
13th February 2007, 04:52 PM
Good luck Brian. I hope you find a good job, a good apartment and good schools for the kids. I guess you won't be missing out on the Americas Cup or las fallas of '08!

Thanks, VS. We already have a pretty good lead on a piso- 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, large salon, on the 1st floor, in the suburbs, good school, good neighborhood, 600 Euros a month. Seems pretty cheap to me. (It's in the same building as the suegra).

Yeah, I'll be visiting and leaving right before Fallas this year.

Ben
13th February 2007, 05:10 PM
You should still be able to catch a couple of mascletas, they usually have a few before Fallas week.

Brian
13th February 2007, 06:00 PM
You should still be able to catch a couple of mascletas, they usually have a few before Fallas week.

Does the housing sound pretty reasonible to you, Ben?

ValenciaSon
13th February 2007, 07:04 PM
Whereabouts in Valencia are you?

Acosta
13th February 2007, 07:17 PM
Let us know how it goes Brian. As I work both in IT/Engineering/Cable-Satellite fields.

Brian
13th February 2007, 07:47 PM
Whereabouts in Valencia are you?

In the 'burbs, actually. Riba-Roja.

que
14th February 2007, 01:00 AM
So how long has the idea of moving to Spain been on the table? And how hard a choice was it to make?

We look forward to tracking your move like others that have done so in the forum

Brian
14th February 2007, 02:15 AM
So how long has the idea of moving to Spain been on the table? And how hard a choice was it to make?

We look forward to tracking your move like others that have done so in the forum

We've talked about it as long as we've been married. It didn't make a lot of sense before now. We started the process about a year ago, and are finally ready to make the jump.

parubin
14th February 2007, 12:34 PM
Thanks, VS. We already have a pretty good lead on a piso- 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, large salon, on the 1st floor, in the suburbs, good school, good neighborhood, 600 Euros a month. Seems pretty cheap to me. (It's in the same building as the suegra).

Yeah, I'll be visiting and leaving right before Fallas this year.

You don't mention if the apartment is with or without furniture. In any case it seems pretty cheap to me too (specially for four bedrooms).

Valencia has grown very rapidly towards the suburbs in the past years, and there should be plenty of available offer of newly built appartments to let.

Most of new construction in Spain constists in two-bedroom appartments (I'd say that almost two every three new appartments consist of only two rooms). There should be no problem in finding three-room appartments either. If you need four, the offer will not be as wide.

There are four-room apartments, but they are mostly bought by people who actually needs them to live, whereas if you want to rent, it is much more attractive economic-wise for the land-lord to invest on two-room appartments (they are cheaper and they have more demmand). So if you really need a four room appartment to rent, you will probably have to look harder, and most likely it wonīt be a new construction. More likely it will be a building from the sixties, seventies or eighties (four room appartmets were more popular back in those times when housing was cheaper and families bigger).

If you are able to find a new appartment (new construction) in a new development in the outskirts you will probably enjoy a nice atmosphere (impersonal but confortable) with young couples with kids as neighbourgs (good for your kids) and more likely, some attractions attached to the building (swimming-pool, gym, padel court) which could be very enjoyable in the nice mediterraneum valencian weather, specially for the kids.

As for the prices, I donīt now Valencia that well, but I would say around 800-900 euros a month, for a new appartment in a nice new neighbourhood (as described above : swimmingpool, etc...) consisting of three rooms without furniture.

I imagine your wife and family, being from Valencia themselves, will be of greater help.

Good luck.

Marina
19th February 2007, 08:24 PM
I don't know much abou prices in Valencia area, but 4 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms for 600 Euros sounds pretty cheap to me (for that price in Madrid you would only get a one bedroom flat). Good luck with the paper work and let us know how everything goes.

Marina.

Alan
19th February 2007, 08:29 PM
I missed this thread - just wanted to wish you luck Brian. And keep us up to date!

Brian
2nd March 2007, 10:36 AM
Well, I'm off today. 18 hours of airline food and queueing up for interminable waits!

But then....paella, chorizo, rioja, all the culinary delights of Spain await. :cool:

Diana
2nd March 2007, 10:48 AM
Well, I'm off today. 18 hours of airline food and queueing up for interminable waits!

But then....paella, chorizo, rioja, all the culinary delights of Spain await. :cool:

Buen viaje! Just think. It could be worse - I am off to Chile tomorrow - 28 hours to reach Puerto Montt. The only thing that helps is sleeping on the plane and positive thinking.;)

Brian
2nd March 2007, 11:45 AM
Buen viaje! Just think. It could be worse - I am off to Chile tomorrow - 28 hours to reach Puerto Montt. The only thing that helps is sleeping on the plane and positive thinking.;)

28 hours! wow! How many stops to you have? What's the longest leg of the trip?

Ben
2nd March 2007, 12:04 PM
I would happily endure 28 hours on a plane if it got me somewhere so far removed and exotic. When we did 24 hours to Oz a couple of years ago, I loved the feeling of suspended animation - no phones, no email, just films, books, sleep, looking at the map of all the exciting places passing beneath us... wonderful!

Diana
2nd March 2007, 12:25 PM
28 hours! wow! How many stops to you have? What's the longest leg of the trip?


The longest leg is just over 14 hours (Paris-Santiago). The other two are actually quite short (1-2 hours) (Stuttgart-Paris and Santiago-Puerto Montt) but all the waiting inbetween adds up.

Diana
2nd March 2007, 12:40 PM
I would happily endure 28 hours on a plane if it got me somewhere so far removed and exotic. When we did 24 hours to Oz a couple of years ago, I loved the feeling of suspended animation - no phones, no email, just films, books, sleep, looking at the map of all the exciting places passing beneath us... wonderful!

This is truly the best way to look at it. Once we spent 5 hours in Barcelona on the way to Chile, which was quite a treat (in the city, not hanging out at the airport). And this time, on the way home, we will probably take a short tour of something near or in Santiago instead of waiting at the airport for 6 hours.

eldeano
2nd March 2007, 01:39 PM
This is truly the best way to look at it. Once we spent 5 hours in Barcelona on the way to Chile, which was quite a treat (in the city, not hanging out at the airport). And this time, on the way home, we will probably take a short tour of something near or in Santiago instead of waiting at the airport for 6 hours.

If it's Chile, don't forget your jacket.;)

Diana
2nd March 2007, 01:54 PM
If it's Chile, don't forget your jacket.;)


I sure won't. In the south of Chile it gets mighty chilly.

guapo
2nd March 2007, 01:57 PM
Good luck and happy hunting!

Brian
2nd March 2007, 07:09 PM
Itīs been a long strange trip so far. My flight to Atlanta was cancelled, and they decided to put me on the 5 PM flight to Cincinnati, which gave me little hope to get there in time for the ONLY flight to Paris. By luck, I went on standby, and I was the last person on the 10.35 AM flight. Then I found out that Iīd been bumped up to business class, so I have 7 hours to rest in the Business Class room with wireless internet and free food, woohoo!

Updates to come....

eldeano
2nd March 2007, 07:25 PM
Itīs been a long strange trip so far. My flight to Atlanta was cancelled, and they decided to put me on the 5 PM flight to Cincinnati, which gave me little hope to get there in time for the ONLY flight to Paris. By luck, I went on standby, and I was the last person on the 10.35 AM flight. Then I found out that Iīd been bumped up to business class, so I have 7 hours to rest in the Business Class room with wireless internet and free food, woohoo!

Updates to come....

Let's have a photo of your 'personal' attendant. :rolleyes: