The 60-Second Overview
Melrose Landing answers a question most communities never get asked: what if the commute started in your backyard, at full throttle? Established in the mid-1980s as a private not-for-profit airpark on the Putnam/Alachua line, it surrounds a 4,600' x 150' runway — 3,400 feet of asphalt plus 1,200 of turf, lighted dusk to dawn, FAA identifier FD22 — with owned lots of two to five acres, many taxiing directly to the strip.
The economics are the surprise. Airpark living conjures Spruce Creek seven-figure imagery; Melrose Landing's lots run roughly $20K off-airport to $125K with runway access, and existing acreage homes start around $175K. Underground electric keeps the approaches clean, 'The Landing' community center anchors the social calendar, and association membership shares the airport among all owners — pilots and the non-pilots who live here for acreage and the company.
Runway frontage is the one amenity Florida cannot overbuild. Nobody is pouring 4,600 lighted feet next door.
The diligence is association-shaped: runway-access rights are lot-specific and must be documented, the POA's budget carries the strip everyone shares, and aviation covenants shape what you build. Get those in writing and Melrose Landing offers something genuinely unduplicated in our markets — taxi-out-of-your-hangar living at rural-Putnam money, 25 minutes from a university city.
POA & Costs: The Runway Is the Budget Line
Melrose Landing's cost stack centers on one shared asset, and reading it correctly is the whole financial diligence.
The association carries the airport. Runway surface, lighting, mowing, common areas and the community center all run on POA dues and volunteer energy. Before contract, get the current dues, the budget and the reserve picture — a 3,400-foot asphalt strip is a real maintenance obligation, and its funding health is your property value's foundation, whether or not you ever fly.
Access rights are lot-specific paper. On-airport premium pricing buys documented runway/taxiway access; off-airport lots buy community without it. Never assume — we verify the recorded access rights for the exact parcel on every airpark deal, because the distinction is the price.
Beyond the association: well and septic per parcel (inspect, budget), rural insurance norms, and Putnam's modest taxes. Hangars insure as outbuildings or integrated structures depending on the build — get aviation-literate quotes, which we can point you toward.
Want the POA and access picture on a specific lot? Dues, budget, recorded rights — verified in writing before you offer.
Verify the paperworkThe Runway: FD22 in Pilot Terms
The strip is the community's resume: 4,600 by 150 feet, with 3,400 feet of asphalt on the northeast end and 1,200 of turf southwest, lighted dusk to dawn. For general aviation that is comfortable margin — typical singles use half of it, light twins operate routinely, and the width forgives crosswind technique that narrower strips punish.
Operationally, FD22 is a private field: association traffic, no tower, GA culture of announced patterns and neighborly run-up habits. Gainesville Regional (GNV) sits 15 miles west for instrument needs, fuel and services — a practical pairing pilots here use constantly. The Southeast opens up accordingly: Jacksonville, Orlando, Daytona and the coasts inside an hour's flying.
For buyers with specific aircraft, the questions are individual — performance numbers, hangar clearances, taxiway condition from the specific lot. We connect serious buyers with residents flying similar equipment, because no listing sheet substitutes for a neighbor who operates the same airplane off the same strip.
Flying something specific? Tell us the aircraft — we will get your runway and hangar questions answered by people who fly here.
Ask the pilotsThe Homes: Hangar-Homes to Quiet Ranches
Four decades of owner-driven build-out produced the full airpark spectrum: hangar-homes where the living quarters share a roofline with the aircraft, conventional acreage houses with detached hangars, and ordinary rural homes whose owners simply like the neighbors. Quality and vintage vary lot to lot — this is custom country, not production builder territory.
Valuation runs on aviation logic at the top and acreage logic at the base. Hangar dimensions, door clearance, slab condition and taxiway position price the pilot properties; land, privacy and house condition price the rest. A modest house with a 50-foot-door hangar on the taxiway can out-price a nicer house off-airport — confusing to conventional appraisers, obvious to the national pilot market that actually buys these.
Vacant lots keep build-to-suit alive: design the hangar-home you mean, against current association guidelines, on dirt you choose. For many buyers that beats compromising on someone else's hangar geometry.
For Non-Pilots: Should You Buy Here?
A real fraction of Melrose Landing does not fly, and the non-pilot case is straightforward: 2-5 owned acres at rural prices, underground utilities, a genuine community center and the most interesting block parties in Putnam County. Off-airport lots price the aviation premium out while keeping the community in.
The honest screens: engine noise is the soundtrack (weekend mornings especially), dues fund a runway you will not use directly — though it underpins every property value here — and resale of non-aviation property still benefits from, but does not command, the pilot premium. If those read as acceptable or charming, the airpark is one of the area's best acreage values. If they read as costs, Interlachen's plats and Melrose's lake country price acreage without the airplanes.
Schools: Putnam Zoning, County-Line Caveat
Most airpark parcels zone to Putnam County schools, with Melrose Elementary in the village performing above the state average — a genuine local bright spot. The county line runs close, so verify zoning for the exact parcel rather than assuming. Gainesville's school options sit within commute logic for families who weigh them; we share what airpark families actually do.
Family flying in? We will confirm parcel-level zoning and current ratings in writing.
Confirm the schoolsWhat It Is Actually Like to Live Here
Hangar doors at sunrise, pattern chatter on the handheld, potlucks at The Landing and neighbors who measure weekends in tach time. What buyers ask us most:
How active is the flying community?
Genuinely active — this is a working airpark, not a vanity strip. Weekend mornings see real traffic, fly-outs happen, and hangar doors are social infrastructure. Non-pilots get adopted quickly.
Can I run a business or workshop from my hangar?
Hobby shops and aircraft projects are the culture; commercial operations run into association covenants and county zoning. Verify your specific plan before buying around it.
What is internet service like?
Rural-variable — many residents run fixed wireless or satellite. Remote workers verify at the parcel during diligence, as everywhere in border-country Putnam.
Are there rules about aircraft types or operations?
Association norms govern operations neighborly-style; the strip itself handles typical GA comfortably. Specific or unusual equipment deserves a conversation with the association before contract — we facilitate exactly that.
The Five Expensive Mistakes Buyers Make Here
Airpark purchases fail on paperwork and assumptions. The five we guard against:
Assuming runway access
Access rights are recorded, lot-specific paper — the difference between a $40K and $110K lot. Verify in writing, never by listing copy.
Skipping the POA financials
The runway is a shared liability as well as asset. Budget, reserves and dues history — read before contract, because resurfacing bills find every owner.
Buying hangar geometry blind
Door width, height and slab condition decide whether your aircraft actually fits. Measure against your equipment, not the listing's adjectives.
Pricing off Melrose acreage comps
Airpark property comps against Florida airparks — the national pilot market sets these prices, not the county's farmland.
Non-pilots ignoring the soundtrack
Visit on a clear Saturday morning. If the pattern traffic delights you, buy; if it grates, the acreage elsewhere is cheaper anyway.
Buying at the airpark? We run all five checks — paperwork to pattern noise — before you commit.
Run the five checksLot Hierarchy: What Moves Price at the Airpark
Eyeing a specific parcel? Send it over — we will tier it with the access paperwork checked.
Tier this parcelThe Melrose Landing Buyer Checklist
- Verify recorded runway-access rights for the exact lot — in writing.
- Read the POA budget and reserves. The strip's funding is your value's foundation.
- Measure the hangar against your aircraft. Door, height, slab — numbers, not adjectives.
- Confirm aviation covenants and build guidelines before designing anything.
- Inspect well and septic; budget rural-standard.
- Comp against Florida airparks, not county acreage.
- Visit on a flying Saturday. The soundtrack is part of the purchase.
- Verify school zoning by parcel — the county line is close.
Melrose Landing is the most unduplicable asset in our entire coverage area. Lakes can be approximated, gates can be built, but nobody is permitting a new 4,600-foot residential runway in North Florida — which makes documented taxiway access here a genuinely finite product at a price that still astonishes pilots from bigger airpark markets.
The discipline is paperwork: access rights, association finances, hangar specs. Treat the documents like a pre-buy inspection and the airpark rewards you with the rarest address type in Florida real estate — at Putnam money.
Melrose Landing vs. the Alternatives
The cross-shop spans acreage, lakes and the aviation niche. The honest comparison:
| Melrose Landing | Lake Santa Fe | Interlachen Lakes Estates | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Signature asset | 4,600' lighted runway | 5,856-ac protected lake | Cheapest platted acreage |
| Entry | Lots ~$20K-$125K; homes $175K+ | Village $160K; frontage $700K+ | Lots ~$8K-$40K |
| Fees | POA (runway upkeep) | None typical | None |
| Buyer pool | National pilots + acreage locals | Big-water buyers | Budget land buyers |
| Best for | Taxi-to-hangar living | Water permanence | Maximum-cheap ownership |
The verdict: Lake Santa Fe for water, ILE for the cheapest dirt, Melrose Landing when the runway is the point — and at these prices, the runway is a remarkable point.
Weighing the three? Tell us what your weekends look like — the answer usually picks the community.
Pick my communityThe Honest Pros & Cons
What Melrose Landing gets right
- The region's only residential runway — finite by nature
- Real strip: 4,600 lighted feet, asphalt main
- Owned acreage at rural-Putnam pricing
- National pilot demand under values
- Underground utilities and a true community center
- Gainesville/UF inside 40 minutes
What to go in eyes-open about
- POA dues carry real runway obligations
- Access rights and premiums are lot-specific paper
- Niche resale pool — sales take marketing and time
- Aircraft noise is the lifestyle
- Rural well/septic and service distances
- County-line zoning needs parcel verification
Our Airpark Offer Playbook
Niche assets, professional process:
- Paper before passion. Access rights and POA financials reviewed before any tour gets emotional.
- Spec the hangar like a pre-buy. Doors, slab, power, clearances — against your actual equipment.
- Comp nationally. Florida airpark sales set the market; we keep that book current.
- Talk to the association early. Covenants, build guidelines and operational norms — from the source.
- Negotiate aviation assets as line items. Hangar condition and taxiway position priced explicitly, not bundled.
Questions We Ask Before You Offer
Six questions for every airpark parcel:
- What recorded runway-access rights attach to this exact lot?
- What do the POA's budget and reserves say about the strip's next decade?
- What are the hangar's true dimensions and condition — door, height, slab, power?
- What covenants govern building and operations on this parcel?
- What have comparable Florida airpark properties actually sold for?
- What does a flying-Saturday visit tell us about this specific location in the pattern?
Is Melrose Landing Right for You?
The honest fit test:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Silence as the defining amenity
- No association obligations at all
- Walkable services and town life
- A deep, fast resale market
- Water frontage over runway frontage
- Production-built simplicity
Melrose Landing fits if you want
- Your aircraft twenty steps from breakfast
- A real lighted strip funded by modest dues
- Owned acreage among genuinely interesting neighbors
- An asset class nobody can build more of
- Border-country quiet, university city in range
- The best aviation value in Florida airpark living
