Posts Tagged ‘Spanish Fort home appraisals’
The Stillwater Estates residential development began in 2004. Stillwater Estates is located along the east side of Highway 225, north of Spanish Fort’s main city center. Stillwater Estates has yearly dues which cover all common areas, including neighborhood lakes, as well as the clubhouse, swimming pool and tennis courts.
The majority of homes were built between 2004 and 2008. There are approximately 171 lots within this residential development and the built-up is over 85% according to online records.
Most homes have four or five bedrooms with three to 4 ½ full bathrooms. Most reported gross living area ranges from 3,045 square feet to 5,000 square feet.
Stillwater Estates has 9 closed arms-length home sale transactions in the past 12 months according to the Baldwin County Navica multiple listing service (MLS). The average price within Stillwater Estates is $504,085 and the average price per square foot is $129.91.
The lowest home sale was $369,000 and the highest home sale was $710,000 in the past 12 months. The median home price for Stillwater Estates is $500,000 with average days on market (DOM) of 135 based on these reported nine home sales.
If a Stillwater Estates home is reasonably priced based on the known recent market data, the online information indicates a 95% to 97% selling price of the list price.
Stillwater Estates currently has 12 active listings with asking prices ranging from $404,900 to $539,950 with gross living areas ranging from 3,124 square feet to 5,292 square feet according to Baldwin County Navica multiple listing service (MLS).
Street names within Stillwater Estates are Alder Circle, Ashberry Court, Applewater Court, Boardwalk Drive, Carson Lane, Dellwood Creek Circle, Farrington Lane, Flintwood Circle, Northbrook Circle, Rushing Water Court and Stillwater Boulevard.
This information provided by Albert Marshall Cheney, Certified Residential Real Property Appraiser, with over 35 years’ experience in the Mobile Bay Metro Area of Alabama, Baldwin County and Mobile County which encompass Mobile Bay. You can know and read more information about me by going to the website: http://www.CheneyAppraisalServices.com, http://AlabamaRealEstateAppraisals.com/ or contact me at (251) 533-2424 about my services as well as within the City of Mobile non-financial (personal use, i.e. property tax issues, thinking about selling) “full report with visual inspection” home appraisals only $250.
The general information provided about Stillwater Estates was compiled by using the Baldwin County Navica multiple listing service (MLS). No portion of this information should be construed as an appraisal report for any particular residential property located within Stillwater Estates.
“Silverhill, Alabama, Rich In History!”
“Steeped in a rich Swedish and Czech heritage, Silverhill has maintained its small-town charm throughout decades of growth and development both within its town limits and in the surrounding areas. We remain connected to our rich legacy of hospitality and community, even though the face of our town has changed over the years. The People’s Supply Store built in 1902 is now our bank. Silverhill’s first schoolhouse built in 1898, is now our Town Library. …” Please READ more on the Town of Silverhill’s official website by clicking their logo below.
This information has been provided by Al Cheney, a Certified Residential Real Property Appraiser within the Mobile Bay Metro Area, covering Baldwin County and Mobile County of Alabama. You may also contact Al Cheney at (251) 533-2424 and ask about my services and non-financial (personal use, i.e. property tax issues, for sale by owner purchases, thinking about selling) condo or home appraisal fees for only $275. More complex or difficult properties are quoted on a case-by-case basis. Web-links to Al Cheney: http://www.cheneyappraisalservices.com/ or http://buildingabrandonline.com/FinanciallyFreeYourself/.
Daphne, Alabama is sometimes called The Jubilee City (it’s like an abundance of seafood) because it has an abundance of quality life things to enjoy! It is a great place to live, play and work! Daphne is proud to have been selected as a “Tree City USA” by the National Arbor Day Foundation. Daphne is a city on the move and full of growth and prosperity. It maintains a beauty and ambience for this small town and, it begins and ends with its strong leadership moving the city forward. Please read more on the City of Daphne’s official website by clicking their logo below.
This information has been provided by Al Cheney, a Certified Residential Real Property Appraiser within the Mobile Bay Metro Area, covering Baldwin County and Mobile County of Alabama. You may also contact Al Cheney at (251) 533-2424 and ask about my services and non-financial (personal use, i.e. property tax issues, for sale by owner purchases, thinking about selling) condo or home appraisal fees for only $250. More complex or difficult properties are quoted on a case-by-case basis. Web-links to Al Cheney: http://www.cheneyappraisalservices.com/ or http://buildingabrandonline.com/FinanciallyFreeYourself/.
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Loxley is a town in Baldwin County, Alabama, United States, and about 22 miles east of downtown Historic Mobile, Alabama. As of the 2010 census, the population of the town was 1,817 with a median age of around 35 years.
“John Loxley came to this area at the turn of the century (1900) to establish a lumber camp that included a commissary and sawmill. A large number of men came with him, and then stayed to settle and marry here. John Loxley is considered the founder of Loxley. There was a small village named Bennet here when Mr. Loxley arrived.
In 1920 the businesses in Loxley were an egg store, grocery store, two general merchandise stores, a train depot, drug store, telegraph office, land office, repair garage, post office, bank, hotel, butcher shop, orange packing shed, cement block plant, a blacksmith, a feed and lumber store. The main road was Highway 90; it was not paved then.”
“During World War II, Loxley was a satellite prison camp for the influx of German, Nazi, and Italian soldiers captured by American Troops. There were so many Germans captured and brought here that camps were put all over the country to house these POWs. The fall of Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge saw many younger soldiers in the camps. The Loxley camp was primarily one used to work the POWs in the woodlands and sawmills.”
READ more by clicking on the image.
This information provided by Albert Marshall Cheney, Certified Residential Real Property Appraiser, with over 35 years’ experience in the Mobile Bay Metro Area of Alabama, Baldwin County and Mobile County which encompass Mobile Bay. You can know and read more information about me by going to a few of my blogging websites: http://www.cheneyappraisalservices.com/ or http://buildingabrandonline.com/FinanciallyFreeYourself/. You may also contact me, Al Cheney, at (251) 533-2424 about my services and my non-financial (personal use, i.e. property tax issues, thinking about selling) condo or home appraisals for only $275. More complex or difficult properties are quoted on a case-by-case basis.
“The origins of Mardi Gras can be traced to medieval Europe, passing through Rome and Venice in the 17th and 18th centuries to the French House of the Bourbons. From here, the traditional revelry of “Boeuf Gras,” or fatted calf, followed France to her colonies. On March 2, 1699, French-Canadian explorer Jean Baptiste Le Moyne Sieur de Bienville arrived at a plot of ground 60 miles directly south of New Orleans, and named it “Pointe du Mardi Gras” when his men realized it was the eve of the festive holiday. Bienville also established “Fort Louis de la Louisiane” (which is now Mobile) in 1702. In 1703, the tiny settlement of Fort Louis de la Mobile celebrated America’s very first Mardi Gras. …” READ the entire history on this website, http://www.mardigrasneworleans.com/history.html, and may also like to go to this website for more information about Mobile, Alabama’s history of Mardi Gras timeline, http://www.mobilecarnivalmuseum.com/historical-timeline. Mobile, Alabama was the capital city of the French Louisiana territory but the people were concerned about hurricane destruction so it was moved to New Orleans in 1718. This informational history provided by Al Cheney, Certified Residential Real Property Appraiser in Mobile, Alabama. Call Al Cheney at (251) 533-2424 for all your real estate property appraisal requirements. Please visit http://www.CheneyAppraisalServices.com for more additional information. Thank you for visiting my company’s website.
Mardi Gras, Fat Tuesday, is 17th February for the 2015 year.
Call (251) 533-2424, Cheney Appraisal Services, Certified Residential Real Property Appraiser, when considering non-mortgage lending appraisal reports for sale by owner purchases or selling, property tax disputes, settling simple estates, etc. Al Cheney has appealing or special fees for property owners with condo units and straightforward home appraisals. The majority of the appraisal fees will be either $250 or $275 per report. More complex real properties will be quoted on a case-by-case basis.
Also, if you are someone who would like more information about the City of Orange Beach, Alabama, go to this web link: http://www.cityoforangebeach.com/pages_2011/index.php.
Remember the 41st annual Festival of Art in Orange Beach, Alabama on the 14th and 15th of March 2015. Click the photograph to go to their website for more information.
Al Cheney is a Certified Residential Real Property Appraiser with over 35 years’ experience in the Mobile Bay Metro Area of Alabama, Baldwin County and Mobile County which encompass Mobile Bay. Al Cheney is very familiar with Spanish Fort real estate. Spanish Fort is the gateway to the delta as well as having five rivers and two state parks. Spanish Fort is minutes away to Mobile’s downtown business sector by accessing “the Bay Way” or “the Causeway”.
You can know and read more information about me by going to a few of my blogging websites: http://www.cheneyappraisalservices.com/ or http://buildingabrandonline.com/FinanciallyFreeYourself/.
You may also contact Al Cheney at (251) 533-2424 and ask about my services and non-financial (personal use, i.e. property tax issues, thinking about selling) condo or home appraisal fees for only $250. More complex or difficult properties are quoted on a case-by-case basis.