Community Details at a Glance
The Homes
Product
New single-family from two builders, Century Complete (Hopewell, Berkshire plans) and a Breeze Homes section
Builder
Century Complete and Breeze Homes, new construction launched around late 2025
Sizes
Roughly 1,455 to 2,066 square feet, up to 4 bedrooms, with 2-bay garages
Ownership
Fee-simple single-family, not condo
Costs & Fees
Pricing
Century Complete from the upper 200s per the November 2025 announcement; Breeze section listed in the 299,990 to 319,990 dollar range per Jome in June 2026
HOA
Association structure and dues not confirmed by third-party sources; get them in writing from the builder
CDD
Not confirmed at publish time; small infill communities often skip the CDD, verify in writing
Amenities
Campus
No amenity campus advertised; the value is the house, the spec, and the location
Finishes
Quartz counters, stainless appliances, and 2-bay garages in the standard package
Parks
Westside park system, including Ringhaver Park on the Ortega River, a short drive south
Location
Setting
Westside Jacksonville, Mildred Way off the Lane Avenue and Commonwealth corridor, ZIP 32254
Access
Minutes to I-10 and I-295 via Lane Avenue and Commonwealth
Downtown
Downtown Jacksonville about 12 minutes, unusually close for new construction at this price
Work
NAS Jacksonville about 18 minutes south
The Homes & Style
Century Complete priced its section from 262,888 dollars in the upper 200s per the November 2025 Century announcement, and the Breeze Homes section ran 299,990 to 319,990 dollars per Jome in June 2026, with a sample MLS-fed listing at 279,888 dollars; confirm current pricing because young communities move fast.
The buyer pool is first-time buyers priced out of everything east of I-295, Westside and rail-corridor workers, NAS Jacksonville commuters, and investors playing the new-build rental math.
There is no resale comp base yet, so the builders set the market; that cuts both ways, and early buyers should negotiate knowing they are also creating the comps.
Kings Landing splits into builder sections, and the builders run different price points and sales models, so shop both before you sign either.
Launched around November 2025 per the Century announcement, priced from 262,888 dollars in the upper 200s; Century Complete runs a streamlined online-purchase model with studio support rather than a staffed model-home operation.
Listed at 299,990 to 319,990 dollars per Jome in June 2026; a smaller regional operation, so vet the warranty terms and build quality references the way you would any non-national builder.
Quartz counters, stainless appliances, and 2-bay garages run through the standard specs here, which is a stronger finish level than the price suggests.
A sample MLS-fed listing at 279,888 dollars sat between the two builder bands; comp every house against both sections, because they compete with each other on the same streets.
Living Here
There is no amenity campus advertised at Kings Landing; the value proposition is the house and the price, and the recreation case lives outside the community.
Quartz counters, stainless appliances, and 2-bay garages in the standard package.
The Westside park system, including Ringhaver Park on the Ortega River, is a short drive south.
Lane Avenue and Commonwealth put I-10 and the rest of the grid minutes away.
Whatever the dues turn out to be, they are not funding a clubhouse, which keeps the carry cost case simple.
The Lane Avenue and Normandy corridors carry the daily errands, big-box and grocery run along Normandy and Cassat, and downtown and the Riverside retail and dining districts are inside fifteen minutes.
Kings Landing is a common community name; a search will surface communities of the same name elsewhere in Florida and beyond. This page covers the Westside 32254 community on Mildred Way, so check the ZIP before you trust any record.
Almost all sub-300 new construction in Jacksonville sits on the far edges of the metro; Kings Landing puts it twelve minutes from downtown, and that location math is the real story here.
Century Complete and Breeze Homes are competing for the same buyer on the same streets; quoting one against the other is legitimate negotiating leverage that most buyers never use.
Before You Offer
Jacksonville sees coastal, river, and creek flooding, and pockets near the St. Johns River tributaries can sit in higher-risk zones. Jacksonville participates in the FEMA Community Rating System at a class 6, which earns flood-insurance discounts of about 10 percent for homes outside a special flood hazard area and about 20 percent for homes inside one.
The reliable move is to pull the FEMA flood designation for the exact Kings Landing address before you write an offer, since two homes in the same area can fall in different zones. A home in Zone X can cost far less to insure than one near water in Zone AE. Get a bindable flood and homeowners quote during your inspection period, so the cost is in your monthly math before you commit, not after.
The Jacksonville metro is served by Xfinity (Comcast) cable across nearly all addresses and by AT&T with DSL almost everywhere plus fiber to a growing share of homes. If working from home matters, confirm the options, and fiber in particular, at the specific Kings Landing address rather than assuming.
Duval County total millage runs roughly 17.9 to 18.5 mills depending on the taxing district. The Florida homestead exemption for 2026 is 51,411 dollars for those who qualify, and the deadline to file a new homestead exemption is March 1.
The trap to plan for is the post-sale reset: when you buy, the Save Our Homes cap from the previous owner ends and the assessed value resets to the new just value, so your second-year tax bill is often higher than the seller current one. Budget the true number, and confirm whether the specific home carries a CDD or other assessment that is billed separately from the millage and is not reduced by the homestead exemption.
Comparisons
Kings Landing's real cross-shop is the rest of Jacksonville's sub-300 new construction, and almost all of it sits much farther out. Against the big Westside and Oakleaf-area master plans like Argyle Forest and the Panther Creek corridor, Kings Landing gives up the amenity campus, the pools and trails, and the established retail, but it gains roughly twenty minutes back on the downtown and Riverside commute, because those communities sit well west of I-295 while Kings Landing is inside the loop near I-10. Against Kings Preserve, the larger conservation master plan to the north, Kings Landing trades scale and a future amenity center for a tighter infill footprint and an even shorter run to downtown. The honest read: Kings Landing wins on raw location and entry price and loses on amenities and the maturity of its surroundings, so it rewards the buyer who values minutes to downtown over a clubhouse.
Who It Fits
Kings Landing fits the first-time buyer priced out of everything east of I-295 who still wants new construction with quartz counters and a 2-bay garage, the Westside or rail-corridor worker who values a twelve-minute downtown commute, the NAS Jacksonville commuter, and the investor running new-build rental math on an inside-the-loop address. It also fits the buyer comfortable creating the comps in a community with no resale base yet. It does not fit the buyer who wants an amenity campus, pools, and trails inside the gate, the buyer who needs an established, fully built-out setting today, or the buyer unwilling to drive the surrounding corridor at different hours and judge it firsthand. For those buyers, a built-out amenity community farther west is the better target, even at the cost of the commute.




























