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Christine Sitton

Residential Specialist

There's No Place Like Home!

509-991-5105

 

As a John L. Scott broker, my mission is transactional excellence and client satisfaction. That means I work tirelessly to make your home buying or selling process as efficient, stress-free and lucrative for you as possible.

Christine Sitton - Spokane Valley - Liberty Lake

Christine Sitton:

Based out of John L. Scott’s Spokane Valley - Liberty Lake office, Christine Sitton brings more than 12 years in the industry to her work. Before working in real estate, Christine spent 20 years in the medical field, eventually working as the executive director of a large cancer treatment center in Spokane. She predominantly works in the Liberty Lake and Spokane Valley areas, and has done a lot of business on the north side of Spokane.

Besides internet marketing techniques, Christine says some of the most powerful marketing comes from the personal touch she brings to her client relationships. Gaining her clients’ trust and confidence is of the utmost importance to Christine, and she says constant communication and feedback throughout the process is also key.

Christine is passionate about giving back to her local community and donates to the John L. Scott Foundation in addition to volunteering with her church and with Spokane Valley nonprofit Blessings Under the Bridge. She enjoys attending church, spending time with her family, working out and playing golf.


 

Spokane

Spokane is capital of the Inland Northwest, home to the Gonzaga Bulldogs, the second largest city in Washington State and a great place to call home. What once was a fur trading and mining post and then a railroad hub has grown into a city with a flourishing arts and cultural scene and an economy built around services more than natural resources. We truly are a modern city with deep ties to our history. In fact, 18 of Spokane’s neighborhoods are on the National Register of Historical Districts. Most of the downtown commercial district’s buildings were destroyed in the Great Fire of 1889. This led to a rebuilding boom in the years that followed. The architecture for many of the new buildings was Romanesque Revival, and much of downtown reflects that style today.

City of Spokane Website: View

Spokane Public Schools: View