The 60-Second Overview
Jacksonville's townhome market has a quality gap. The entry tier belongs to the volume builders, Lennar, D.R. Horton, and their peers, competing on price and pace, while the design-forward builders mostly stay in single-family. North Haven is the exception forming on the Northside: David Weekley Homes, the award-stacked national known for plan design and warranty service, is bringing two-story, open-concept townhomes with one- and two-car garage options to the 32226 New Berlin corridor.
The community is officially coming soon: no pricing, no published floor plans, no model. What is confirmed is the builder, the format, a community walking path, and the geography, a preserve-side pocket near William F. Sheffield Regional Park, Pumpkin Hill Creek Preserve State Park, the Timucuan marshes, and roughly seven miles from Jacksonville International Airport.
The honest trade: you cannot tour anything yet, the feeder high school rates poorly, and the corridor is car-dependent. What the watch list buys you is position, first-release pricing is historically a builder's keenest, and in a corridor where the attached competition is almost entirely entry-builder spec, a Weekley townhome priced sensibly would be the quality outlier from day one.
Upscale builders almost never show up in attached product on this side of town. When one does, the first release sheet is the whole opportunity.
Fees: The Unwritten Stack
Nothing is published yet, which is exactly why the fee homework starts now. A townhome community of this type will carry an association, and the two questions that decide your true monthly are what the dues are and what the association actually maintains, roof, exterior paint, lawn, insurance on the structure, or some lighter scope that leaves more on you. Weekley townhome communities elsewhere in Jacksonville vary on this; do not assume.
The second question is whether a CDD or special assessment rides on the tax bill. Some Jacksonville new-construction communities carry one, some do not, and the answer can move the monthly by more than the HOA itself. The documents will say; we read them before you sign, not after.
The Builder Gap
Here is the structural story. Jacksonville's Northside townhome and entry market is a volume game: Lennar, D.R. Horton, Century, and similar names delivering attached and small single-family product fast and lean. They serve a real need, but the product is spec-grade, plans optimized for cost, finish packages chosen for speed, and warranty experiences that vary. David Weekley plays a different game: architect-driven plans, a build process with named personal builders, and a warranty reputation that has carried the brand to more than 1,550 industry awards since 1976.
Weekley usually deploys that machine in move-up single-family and in master plans like eTown and Seven Pines, where it also sells townhomes, at master-plan fee stacks. What it almost never does is bring attached product to a value corridor like 32226. That is the gap North Haven steps into: Weekley quality at a townhome payment, outside the master-plan fee structure, if the pricing and dues land where the corridor needs them.
Why it matters at resale: in a corridor of near-identical entry townhomes, the differentiated product holds value better. The Weekley badge, the plan quality, and the garage options give a future listing something the spec field cannot copy. That thesis depends on launch pricing, which is why we are watching rather than cheerleading.
The Location Truth
Builder marketing for North Haven name-drops St. Johns Town Center among the nearby destinations. Let us resolve that honestly: the community is in ZIP 32226, the New Berlin corridor of Jacksonville's Northside, about 0.6 miles from New Berlin Elementary by third-party listings. Town Center is roughly a half hour south via I-295. It is reachable, like most of Jacksonville is reachable; it is not the neighborhood.
The real location story is better than the borrowed one. This is the preserve side of Jacksonville: William F. Sheffield Regional Park minutes away with its fields, courts, and playgrounds; Pumpkin Hill Creek Preserve State Park's trails and paddle launches; the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve's salt marshes about seven miles out; and Boneyard Beach at Big Talbot Island, the driftwood shoreline that fills photographers' feeds, within a 20-25 minute drive. Supply here is naturally limited because so much of the surrounding land cannot be developed.
The practical anchors: JIA at roughly seven miles, the I-295 East Beltway minutes away, and River City Marketplace's big-box retail about fifteen minutes. The trades are real too, the corridor is car-dependent (Walk Score in the 30s), regional flood and hurricane risk ratings run relatively high near the marshes, and daily errands mean driving. Buyers who want the preserve-and-airport life accept that knowingly.
The Homes
Published so far: two-story townhomes, open-concept, with one- and two-car garage options. That garage split is the detail to watch, in townhome communities, the two-car plans usually carry the better resale exit because attached two-car storage is the first ask from corridor move-down buyers and travel-heavy households, while the one-car plans carry the friendlier qualifying math.
Expect Weekley's usual plan signatures when the set publishes: efficient stair placement, owner's retreats sized like single-family, and design-studio structural options the entry builders do not offer. Square footages, bedroom counts, and elevations are not public yet; we forward the plan set to watch-list buyers the day it drops, with our read on which plans the corridor will reward at resale.
One more confirmed thread: the community walking path and a low-maintenance positioning. That suggests a lean amenity package, no resort pool and clubhouse stack, which generally means leaner dues. Confirm against the budget when it publishes; lean amenities with heavy dues is the combination we would flag.
Schools: Verify Before You Lean
Third-party listings show New Berlin Elementary about 0.6 miles away at 5/10 on GreatSchools, Louis S. Sheffield Elementary at 6/10, and First Coast High at 2/10, with Fort Caroline Middle appearing in some feeds. The elementary picture is workable; the high school rating is the corridor's weak point and deserves clear eyes from family buyers, alongside Duval's magnet, charter, and school-choice options that many corridor families actually use. Assignment is by address, the community has not opened, and boundaries in growing corridors move, so verify the official zoning for the final address with Duval County Public Schools.
What Living Here Will Actually Be Like
Project forward from the corridor: a quiet, marsh-adjacent rhythm, the walking path and Sheffield Park doing the daily outdoor work, weekend paddles at Pumpkin Hill or driftwood mornings at Boneyard Beach, errands at River City Marketplace, and a 15-minute airport run that frequent flyers will quietly treasure.
The likely neighbor mix
Construction reality
Car-dependent honestly
Weather and water
Five Costly Mistakes North Haven Buyers Will Make
Coming-soon communities create predictable errors. These are the five we expect to see here, and how to avoid them.
Walking into the model unrepresented
Builders typically require your agent to be registered at or before first contact. Visit once without representation and you may lose it for the entire purchase, along with everyone reading the contract for your side. Register us first; it costs you nothing.
Buying the Town Center bullet
The marketing nods at St. Johns Town Center; the map says 32226, a half hour away. Buy North Haven for the preserves, the airport, and the builder, not for shopping geography it does not actually have.
Reserving before reading the fee documents
First-release pressure pushes buyers to sign before the HOA budget, covenants, and any CDD disclosure are digested. The dues scope and any tax-bill assessment decide your true monthly. Read first, reserve second, even if it costs you a lot number.
Skipping the insurance and flood quote
Regional flood and hurricane ratings near the marshes run relatively high. A real insurance quote and the FEMA zone for the specific position belong in your math before contract, not at closing week.
Assuming the Weekley badge guarantees the deal
The brand is the draw, but the thesis only works if launch pricing lands sensibly against the corridor's entry field. If the premium runs too wide, the spec competition wins on payment. We run that spread the day prices publish.
Positions and Premiums
Lot maps are not out, but townhome communities price positions on a predictable ladder, and knowing it before the release sheet drops is how you avoid paying an end-unit premium for an interior-unit view.
In attached product, the unit position is the lot
End units bring extra windows and one fewer shared wall; preserve or buffer backings bring the privacy; interior units facing parking bring the value pricing. The premiums are usually modest at launch and wide at resale, which is why position selection in the first release is where the easy money hides.
The North Haven Buyer Checklist
- Join the interest list early. Builders notify registered buyers first, sometimes with pre-launch pricing; the list is free leverage.
- Register your agent before any visit. Representation usually must be established at first contact to be honored.
- Get the HOA budget and covenants. Dues amount and maintenance scope, what the association covers versus what stays on you.
- Confirm CDD or special assessments in writing. A tax-bill line item can move the monthly more than the HOA itself.
- Pull the flood zone and a real insurance quote. Marsh-adjacent corridor; do the parcel-level homework before contract.
- Price the spread against the entry field. Compare the Weekley sheet to corridor Lennar and D.R. Horton townhomes on true monthly, not sticker.
- Verify school zoning with Duval County. The final address decides the assignment; do not rely on listing-site feeds.
- Ask the closeout question. How many units total, how many phases, and what finishes when, your construction-zone timeline depends on it.
When a builder like Weekley steps outside its usual lane, into attached product, on the Northside, I pay attention, because the first release is where they prove the concept and where buyers get the keenest pricing the community will ever offer. The mistake is treating coming-soon as a reason to wait passively. The buyers who win launches did their fee, flood, and zoning homework months earlier.
We will put you on the North Haven watch list, register as your agent before the model opens, and tell you honestly if the launch pricing kills the thesis. If it does, the corridor has alternatives we will already have lined up.
North Haven vs. the Field
Two comparison axes matter: the Northside corridor's entry new construction, and Weekley's own townhomes in the Southside master plans. Same builder or same geography, never both.
| Community | The setup | Versus North Haven |
|---|---|---|
| The Landings at Pecan Park | Century Communities tri-product near JIA, townhomes from the entry tier | Buyable today at entry pricing; spec-grade product versus the Weekley badge |
| Hansen Creek | Northside new-construction value play | Corridor alternative with inventory now; different builder tier |
| Bradley Pond | Entry-priced Northside new build | The payment-first option; trades design depth for sticker |
| Marconi at eTown | Weekley townhomes inside the eTown master plan | Same builder, Southside polish and amenities, bigger fee stack and price |
| Seven Pines | ICI master plan where Weekley also builds attached product | Master-plan amenities and Southside location at a meaningfully higher all-in cost |
| Wyndbrook | Northside value community | Available inventory versus the watch-list wait |
The verdict: if you want Weekley quality with master-plan amenities and can pay Southside prices, Marconi and Seven Pines exist today. If you need a home this quarter at entry pricing, the corridor's spec field delivers. North Haven is the bet in between, the upscale builder at corridor geography, and whether it pays depends entirely on the launch sheet.
The Honest Pros and Cons
What North Haven gets right
- Weekley design, build process, and warranty in a townhome payment
- The quality outlier in a corridor of entry-builder attached product
- Preserve-side geography: Sheffield Park, Pumpkin Hill, Boneyard Beach
- JIA in roughly 15 minutes, ideal for travel-heavy households
- One- and two-car garage options, rare flexibility in attached product
- First-release pricing leverage for watch-list buyers
What deserves clear eyes
- Coming soon: nothing to tour, no published prices or plans
- First Coast High rates 2/10; family buyers must do school homework
- Car-dependent corridor, Walk Score in the 30s, no transit
- Regional flood and hurricane ratings run relatively high near the marshes
- HOA scope and any CDD unknown until documents publish
- Town Center is a half-hour drive, not the neighborhood amenity marketing implies
Our North Haven Launch Playbook
Pre-sales communities reward preparation over speed. Here is exactly how we run a launch for our buyers.
- Position now. Interest list joined, Momentum registered as your agent, financing pre-underwritten so a reservation window never catches you flat.
- Documents first. HOA budget, covenants, CDD disclosure, and site plan read and translated into one true monthly before you pick a unit.
- Price the spread. Launch sheet versus the corridor's entry townhomes and versus Weekley's Southside product, so you know if the premium is fair.
- Pick position deliberately. End units and preserve backings on our annotated site map, premiums weighed against resale, not emotion.
- Negotiate the package. Even at launch, closing-cost help, rate buydowns through the builder lender, and design-studio credits are askable. We ask.
Questions We Ask Before You Sign
The sales office answers what you ask. These are the six we put in writing on every North Haven file.
- What are the dues, and exactly what does the association maintain? Roof, exterior, lawn, structure insurance, the scope is the real price.
- Is there a CDD, bond, or special assessment on the tax bill? In writing, with the annual amount and payoff terms if any.
- How many units, how many phases, and what is the closeout timeline? Your construction-zone years and your resale-competition window.
- What is the rental policy? Caps and minimum lease terms shape the neighbor mix and your future flexibility.
- What flood zone is this position, and what does insurance actually quote? Parcel-level, marsh-adjacent corridor, no assumptions.
- What incentives are live this month, and which lender do they require? Builder-lender math versus outside financing, run both.
Is North Haven Not For You?
A coming-soon townhome community on the preserve side of the Northside is a specific bet. Here is the honest sort.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A home you can tour and close on this quarter
- Top-rated public high school zoning out of the box
- Walkable shopping, dining, and transit at the doorstep
- Resort amenities, pools and clubhouses, in the dues
- A detached single-family home with a yard
- Certainty on fees and pricing before you start watching
North Haven fits if you want
- An upscale builder's quality at a townhome payment
- First-release pricing leverage and position choice
- Preserve access: Pumpkin Hill, Timucuan, Boneyard Beach weekends
- A 15-minute airport run and lock-and-leave travel logistics
- Low-maintenance living with garage options attached product rarely offers
- A differentiated product in a corridor of look-alike spec townhomes
