The 60-Second Overview
Starting Point Training Complex is the most specialized community in our coverage: a working equestrian development in Morriston built around a 5/8-mile irrigated racetrack with a starting gate and private viewing stand — with rights to it deeded to the community’s parcels, alongside private deeded riding trails. Four miles up the road is HITS; eighteen miles east is WEC; thirty minutes away is the OBS sales ring. This is the racing economy’s home geography, and Starting Point is its residential-commercial address on the Levy side.
The recent inventory tells you who buys here: a 17-acre turnkey equestrian facility, a 22+/- acre fully equipped training operation, and a 31-stall barn with office and bathroom plus track access and a 10.3-acre add-on parcel — product marketed on operating history (one facility cited 14+ years of income production). Individual lots exist for buyers building their own setup with track rights attached.
Everywhere else in the corridor you buy land near venues. Here you buy deeded rights to the training infrastructure itself — which means you are buying into how it is maintained, funded, and governed. Those documents are the purchase.
Pricing: facility-scale product here trades on operations — stall count, condition, documented income, track access — not on the corridor’s ~$392K equestrian-community median, which describes a different product class entirely. No association figures are published; the track-maintenance and irrigation funding structure is the first document set we pull on every file, followed immediately by the county record, since listings here tag parcels as both Levy and Marion.
Fees & the Track Structure
A community whose central asset is an irrigated 5/8-mile oval necessarily has a maintenance economy behind it: harrowing, rail and gate upkeep, irrigation water and power, insurance on a training facility used at speed. None of that structure is published — so before any offer we establish in writing: what entity owns and maintains the track, what the deeded rights actually grant (training hours, gate use, liability terms), what each parcel pays, and how special costs are assessed. The answers price the community as much as any barn does. There is no CDD.
The second structural layer is agricultural and commercial classification: working training operations here typically run greenbelt on the land and business treatment on the operations — which county processes that (Levy or Marion, parcel by parcel) materially changes the math. We confirm the county record first on every Starting Point file.
The Track & Trails
The oval is the community’s reason for existing: 5/8 of a mile, irrigated (the difference between a usable surface and a summer dust bowl), with a starting gate for race-condition schooling and a private viewing stand for owners and clockers. For thoroughbred and standardbred conditioning, gate work, and lay-up fitness, daily access to a maintained oval without trailering is the entire value proposition — ask any trainer what van time costs in a training week.
Beyond the rail: private deeded riding trails thread the community for hacking and cool-downs, with Goethe State Forest’s public miles twenty minutes away. Diligence notes: verify the deeded track rights on your specific parcel’s title (grant language varies in communities like this), current usage rules and hours, and the irrigation system’s condition — it is the track’s most expensive component and its most common deferred-maintenance item.
The Facilities: Operations, Not Houses
Product here is measured in stalls and turnout: the recent 17 and 22-acre facilities marketed as turnkey training operations, and the 31-stall barn — office, bathroom, track access — representing genuine commercial scale. Residences exist and matter, but they price as staff and owner housing attached to operations, not as the asset itself.
Underwriting follows accordingly, in three ledgers: the real estate (land, residence, location), the infrastructure (barns, stalls, paddocks, irrigation at depreciated replacement cost from inspection), and the business (documented training/boarding income, client base, and whether it transfers). Facilities citing 14+ years of income deserve the income’s paperwork — tax returns and stall-rate history, not listing prose. We run all three ledgers on every file here.
Schools
Levy-side parcels feed the Williston schools — Williston Middle High rates 4/10 on GreatSchools — while Marion-side parcels zone to Marion County. The buyer pool here is professional operations where schools are a staff-housing variable more than a family one; verify the feed per parcel regardless, because it travels with the county question you are already answering.
More on Living at Starting Point
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
The training-day rhythm
The racing economy around you
Water, wells, and irrigation
Liability and insurance
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Starting Point
Facility buying concentrates capital and mistakes alike. These five cost the most here.
Buying the track without reading the rights
Deeded means the grant language on your parcel’s title — hours, uses, gate access, transfer terms. Verify it parcel by parcel; the brochure’s version is not the recorded version.
Underwriting income from listing prose
14+ years income-producing deserves tax returns, stall-rate history, and client transferability in writing. The business is a separate purchase from the land — price it like one.
Skipping the irrigation inspection
The track’s irrigation is its most expensive system and the community’s most consequential shared asset. Its condition and funding plan belong in your offer math.
Guessing the county
Parcels here tag as both Levy and Marion in listings — taxes, greenbelt processing, and schools differ. The parcel record is a five-minute pull with five-figure consequences.
Calling the listing agent
The agent on the sign works for the seller — and in a specialized facility market, narrative carries even more pricing weight than usual. Bring representation that underwrites operations.
Which Parcels Hold Value Best
In a track community, documented operations and track-adjacency are the resale insurance
Turnkey facilities with clean income paperwork and direct track access sell to the professional pool; land with deeded rights holds the entry tier. Facilities with deferred barn and irrigation maintenance trade at discounts that exceed the repair bills.
The mistake is paying operating-facility money for deferred-maintenance product with a good barn aisle photo.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you write on any Starting Point parcel, run this list.
- Deeded track-rights language on the specific parcel’s title
- Track ownership, funding, and usage rules in writing
- Irrigation system condition — track and facility both
- County confirmation via the parcel record — Levy or Marion
- Income documentation: returns, stall rates, client transferability
- Infrastructure at replacement cost: barns, stalls, paddocks, from inspection
- Greenbelt/commercial classification plan with the correct county
- Liability architecture: association, operation, and deeded-rights terms
Starting Point is the most honest name in the corridor — it is exactly what it says: where racing careers start, four miles from HITS, on a community oval that would cost seven figures to replicate privately. Buying here is business acquisition wearing real-estate clothes, and the discipline is the three-ledger split: the land at land comps, the infrastructure at inspected replacement cost, the income at documented-paper value. The deeded track rights are the moat and the obligation in one instrument — we read the grant language before anything else, because everything in this community prices downstream of it.
Cross-shop it against Winding Oaks Estates if show-barn living matters more than an oval, and Emerald Ridge if your operation needs grass more than gate work. For trainers, there is no substitute in our coverage — this is the only deeded track on the board.
Starting Point vs. Comparable Communities
The honest comparison set for a professional equestrian buyer on this corridor.
| Community | How it compares to Starting Point |
|---|---|
| Winding Oaks Estates | The campaign-farm tier — show barns and arenas with a verified $1.35M ceiling. Sport-horse product; Starting Point is the racing-conditioning product. Different disciplines, same corridor. |
| Emerald Ridge | Eight tracts of improved pasture for grazing operations — land-first, no shared infrastructure. The opposite philosophy: nothing deeded but the dirt. |
| Saratoga South | Finished forest-edge tracts with deeded trails at a verified $175K/9.6 ac — trail riding rather than track work; recreational rather than professional infrastructure. |
| The Village at Hidden Lakes | Gated residential-equestrian living — the lifestyle product for households, not operations. |
Starting Point’s case: the only deeded community racetrack in our coverage, inside the racing economy’s home radius. The case against: commercial-grade diligence, a specialized buyer pool at resale, and shared-infrastructure governance you must read before you rely on it.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- Deeded 5/8-mile irrigated track — unique in the corridor.
- Starting gate, viewing stand, and deeded trails.
- HITS at 4 miles; OBS and WEC in easy range.
- Commercial facilities with documented operating history.
- The deepest equine vendor bench outside Lexington.
- Income potential on stalls in circuit season.
Cons
- Track funding and governance structure unpublished.
- Specialized buyer pool — patient resale by definition.
- Three-ledger underwriting: land, infrastructure, business.
- County-line ambiguity across parcels.
- Irrigation systems are expensive, aging assets.
- Liability architecture demands professional review.
The Starting Point Playbook
How prepared buyers win here, in order:
- Read the track-rights grant first — everything prices downstream of it
- Underwrite in three ledgers: real estate, infrastructure, business
- Inspect the irrigation — track and facility — like it is the roof
- Confirm the county and plan classification with the right appraiser’s office
- Demand income paperwork — returns and rates, not listing prose
Questions We Ask Before You Offer
When Momentum represents you here, these go out before the offer is drafted:
- To the title agent: the deeded track-rights grant language and any transfer conditions
- To the track entity: ownership, funding, usage rules, hours, and insurance
- To the seller: income documentation, stall-rate history, and client transferability
- To the inspector: irrigation condition (track and facility), barn systems, replacement costs
- To the county appraiser: which county, taxes, and greenbelt/commercial treatment
- To the carriers: liability and operations coverage for this facility at today’s rates
Is Starting Point For You?
The honest fit check — this community serves one profession exceptionally and others not at all.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A hobby horse property — the infrastructure outscales the need
- A simple residential purchase without business diligence
- Liquid resale to a broad buyer pool
- Show-ring rather than track-conditioning facilities
- Minimal shared-governance exposure
- A turnkey home-first property
Starting Point fits if you want
- Daily track access without owning a track alone
- Gate schooling and conditioning at home
- A working facility with income history
- HITS, OBS, and WEC inside the trailer radius
- The racing economy’s vendor bench at the door
- Commercial equestrian real estate bought on evidence
