Community Details at a Glance
The Homes
Product
Established resale single-family homes, mostly midsize; portal data shows roughly 834 to over 2,800 square feet, three to four bedrooms typical, built primarily 1945 to 1953 per aggregator records, with occasional newer infill and at least one vacant buildable lot listed in 2026
Builder
No single builder; this is a pre-war-to-postwar platted pocket built out lot by lot over decades, so construction type, condition, and updates vary house to house
Scale
A very small platted pocket, the Ling-A-Mor, Ling-A-Mor 2nd, and Ling-A-Mor 3rd Additions, centered on Ling A Mor Terrace S off Edwards Avenue S east of 4th Street S, near the north shore of Big Bayou
Distinct from
Portals file these addresses under the broader Old Southeast neighborhood; Ling-a-Mor is a subdivision plat name, not a formal neighborhood association, so confirm boundaries and any listing's neighborhood label against the plat and the city neighborhood map
Costs & Fees
HOA
No HOA is reported for these plats; portal association-fee fields show blank and the 2026 vacant-lot listing shows fee-simple ownership. Verify on title and the Pinellas County record for the specific parcel before you rely on it
CDD
No CDD applies to this established city plat as far as public listing data shows; verify the full tax bill for the specific parcel on the Pinellas County tax roll before you budget
Reality
The recurring cost to underwrite here is flood insurance, not association dues: at least one listed lot on Ling A Mor Terrace S carries FEMA Flood Zone AE per its 2026 MLS listing, so price coverage per parcel before you offer
Amenities
Big Bayou and the water
The plat sits near the north shore of Big Bayou, an arm of Tampa Bay; select lots have had bayou frontage and private docks per past listings, and the free public Grandview Park boat ramp at 3800 6th Street S is about 1.5 miles away
Lassing Park
The city's open bayfront green space fronting Tampa Bay between 16th and 22nd Avenues SE, roughly a mile north, anchors the Old Southeast district this pocket adjoins
The Chattaway
The decades-old St. Petersburg restaurant at 358 22nd Avenue S sits a few blocks north on the way downtown
No community amenities
There is no clubhouse, pool, gate, or association amenity of any kind; the amenity is the location, the bayou, the parks, and the short run to downtown St. Petersburg
Location
Setting
Southeast St. Petersburg, ZIP 33705, Pinellas County; Ling A Mor Terrace S runs south off Edwards Avenue S, east of 4th Street S, toward Big Bayou; coordinates on this page are an APPROX estimate, confirm against a specific listing address
Downtown
Downtown St. Petersburg, the USF St. Petersburg campus, and Bayboro Harbor are roughly 2 to 3 miles north via the 4th Street S corridor, commonly quoted as about a 5 to 10 minute drive
Errands
The 4th Street S corridor handles everyday errands; I-275 access is west of the neighborhood, and the Salt Creek working-marine corridor sits between this pocket and downtown
The Homes & Style
Ling-a-Mor is not a master-planned community. It is a small set of platted subdivisions, the Ling-A-Mor, Ling-A-Mor 2nd, and Ling-A-Mor 3rd Additions, centered on Ling A Mor Terrace S in southeast St. Petersburg, ZIP 33705, near the north shore of Big Bayou. Portals generally file these addresses under the broader Old Southeast neighborhood.
The housing stock is established resale product built out lot by lot: aggregator data shows homes mostly built between about 1945 and 1953, from roughly 834 square feet up past 2,800, with three to four bedrooms typical. Confirm the year built and true square footage on the specific listing, because in a pocket this small the aggregates lean on a handful of records.
Because construction spans decades and owners, condition varies house to house. Some homes trade heavily updated, others original, and portal records also show occasional infill activity, including a vacant buildable lot on Ling A Mor Terrace S listed in February 2026 at $389,900 with a partial bay view (Stellar MLS TB8479260).
The premium positions are the lots with Big Bayou frontage. A bayou-front home at 318 Ling A Mor Terrace S with a dock sold for $1,205,000 in July 2024 per Redfin, while interior homes have closed in the $300,000s to $700,000 range per public records; that spread is the whole story of this street.
There is no HOA reported for these plats and no architectural control beyond city code, so verify permits and any unpermitted additions through the City of St. Petersburg before you offer on an older home here.
Living Here
The draw is the location math: a quiet platted pocket a few hundred feet from Big Bayou, roughly a mile south of Lassing Park's open bayfront, and about 2 to 3 miles from downtown St. Petersburg via the 4th Street S corridor, commonly quoted as a 5 to 10 minute drive.
Lassing Park, fronting Tampa Bay between 16th and 22nd Avenues SE, anchors the Old Southeast district this pocket adjoins. The Chattaway, the decades-old restaurant at 358 22nd Avenue S, sits a few blocks up the same corridor.
For boaters, the free public Grandview Park boat ramp at 3800 6th Street S, about 1.5 miles away, launches directly onto Big Bayou with trailer parking, per City of St. Petersburg parks information. The Salt Creek working-marine corridor, with boatyards and marine services, sits between this pocket and downtown.
The USF St. Petersburg campus and the Bayboro Harbor marine-science district are on the south edge of downtown, a short drive or ride north.
There are no community amenities here at all: no pool, no clubhouse, no gate, no association. If you want amenities, this is not that product; if you want an established street near the water without a monthly fee, that absence is the point.
Before You Offer
Underwrite flood first. At least one listed lot on Ling A Mor Terrace S carries FEMA Flood Zone AE per its 2026 MLS listing, and the pocket sits near the Big Bayou shoreline in coastal Pinellas County, where neighborhoods saw storm-surge flooding in the 2024 hurricane season. Pull the FEMA flood map for the exact parcel, get an elevation certificate if available, ask for the property's flood-claim and surge history, and price flood insurance before you write the offer.
Verify the plat and the label. The legal descriptions here read Ling-A-Mor, Ling-A-Mor 2nd Add, or Ling-A-Mor 3rd Add, while portals may label the same house Old Southeast, and boundary treatments differ by site. Confirm the legal description on the Pinellas County record and do not let a neighborhood label substitute for the survey.
Check the age-related items on a 1940s-1950s house: roof age, electrical panel and wiring, plumbing supply lines, and insurability under current Florida underwriting, since insurers scrutinize older roofs and systems. Ask for the four-point inspection and wind-mitigation report early.
Confirm there is genuinely no HOA on title for the specific parcel, verify the full tax bill on the Pinellas County tax roll, and if the lot is marketed as buildable, confirm zoning, setbacks, and any coastal or flood construction requirements with the City of St. Petersburg before you value it as a homesite.
Comparisons
Ling-a-Mor competes with the rest of St. Petersburg's southeast bayfront pockets. Against Old Southeast proper, the blocks nearer Lassing Park, Ling-a-Mor is the southern, quieter edge of the same market; the Lassing Park blocks carry the district's identity and its brick-street, early-plat character, while Ling-a-Mor trades that for proximity to Big Bayou and, per portal data, generally lower interior price points. Against Driftwood, the small bayou-front enclave on the south side of Big Bayou known for its canopy and unpaved lanes, Ling-a-Mor is less distinctive but also less scarce and typically less expensive; Driftwood trades rarely. Against Tropical Shores and Coquina Key farther south, Ling-a-Mor offers an older housing stock and a closer run to downtown, while those neighborhoods offer more mid-century waterfront and, on Coquina Key, more open-water and canal frontage. The honest summary: Ling-a-Mor wins on price of entry near the water, no association fees, and downtown proximity, and gives ground on name recognition, inventory depth, and flood exposure that must be priced parcel by parcel.
Who It Fits
Ling-a-Mor fits the buyer who wants an established house near Big Bayou and Lassing Park without an HOA, the buyer priced out of the better-known Old Southeast blocks who still wants the same corridor, the boater who values a free public ramp 1.5 miles away, and the buyer or builder watching for infill lots in an older coastal plat. It does not fit the buyer who needs community amenities, the buyer who wants new construction at scale, the buyer who cannot carry coastal flood insurance, or anyone who needs deep inventory, since only a handful of homes exist and they trade infrequently. Anyone considering Ling-a-Mor should verify the flood zone and insurance cost for the exact parcel, confirm the legal description and the absence of an HOA on title, and inspect 1940s-1950s systems carefully before waiving anything.






