Allendale Terrace is a historic neighborhood in St. Petersburg, Pinellas County, originally developed in the 1920s after Cade B. Allen purchased about 160 acres, with the first homes built along Euclid Boulevard (St. Petersburg neighborhood and Allendale Neighborhood Association sources, 2026).
The biggest subdivision in the area, Allendale Terrace is home to about 351 single-family homes in a variety of architectural styles, including Mediterranean Revival, Colonial Revival, and Craftsman, with many charming cobblestone roads and larger lots than the nearby Old Northeast. About 74 homes were built before World War II, roughly 186 from the war to 1960, and about 50 since. It is noted for being on high ground, outside the flood zone, and is considered one of the finest non-waterfront neighborhoods in St. Petersburg, bounded roughly by 34th to 42nd Avenues North from 7th to M.L. King (9th) Streets North.
This is a historic, high-ground, condition-driven market, so the money is made or lost on the home, the lot, the condition, and any renovation, not the headline price.
The pitch is historic, estate-style living on larger lots on high, dry ground outside the flood zone, central to St. Pete. The work is reading condition, judging any renovation, and verifying the parcel before you offer.