The 60-Second Overview
Village Park is the Lake Asbury corridor's quiet value resale: a sold-out Maronda Homes community in the Coral Lane area where one- and two-story plans ran three to six bedrooms from the $290Ks - against a corridor average near $360K - with an HOA published at just $490 a year. The builder era is closed; the resale era is young.
The positioning writes itself: Village Park sits between Royal Pointe's old-guard fee minimalism and the new wave's CDD stacks - younger systems than the former, lighter bills than the latter, and bedroom counts the new communities rarely build at this money.
Five and six bedrooms from a $300Ks basis with a $490 HOA - the corridor's new models cannot say that sentence.
The diligence is young-resale standard: the CDD answer on the TRIM notice, the current HOA confirmation, neighborhood-exact comps in a market the portals fragment across three city names, and an inspection that confirms the Maronda-era systems were commissioned right.
Fees: The Light Stack
1) The HOA: $490/year as published - light for a young corridor community. Confirm the current figure and inclusions; light HOAs cover little by design, which most owners here count as the feature.
2) The CDD answer. Pull the TRIM notice per lot. The corridor mixes structures, and this answer is the difference between Village Park beating the new wave's math or merely matching it.
3) The capex picture. Younger than Royal Pointe's 2006-era stock, so roofs and HVAC carry more remaining life - one reason the value tier here trades at a premium to its era pricing.
The Homes: Size per Dollar
Maronda's plan book ran wider than the corridor norm: one- and two-story designs from 3 to 6 bedrooms (the Drexel and Miramar era), which means Village Park's resale inventory includes family sizes the new communities rarely deliver under $400K. Finish levels ran value-tier consistent - owner upgrades are what differentiate listings now.
The builder's thinner local footprint matters mainly for logistics: warranty contacts and brand-name comps take more work than with the nationals - a research problem, not a quality verdict, and one the inspection resolves house by house.
Schools
Village Park feeds the Lake Asbury chain - Shadowlawn Elementary at 7/10 and Lake Asbury Junior High at 7/10, finishing at Clay High (no current GreatSchools rating - check state grades if the high school drives your decision). Two 7/10s is the corridor's stronger feeder story and a durable part of the resale case.
Confirm exact zoning for the address with the district - corridor boundaries move with the growth.
More on Living at Village Park
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
The boat-ramp lifestyle
The corridor building around it
The Maronda question
Portal-naming chaos
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Village Park
Young value-tier resale produces predictable mistakes. These are the five.
Skipping the CDD pull
The light HOA means little if a district assessment rides the tax bill. One TRIM notice settles it - per lot, every time.
Comping from portal medians
Three city names fragment this area's data. Neighborhood-exact closings or nothing.
Ignoring the new wave's sheets
The active builders' incentives discipline every resale price here - carry them into the negotiation.
Underpricing the bedroom count
5-6 bedroom plans at this money are corridor scarcities - in both directions: do not overpay for 3 beds, do not let a 6-bed go at 3-bed pricing.
Treating the builder name as a discount
Maronda's thin footprint is a logistics item, not a defect. The inspection prices the house; the name should not.
Which Homes Hold Value Best
In a value-tier resale, size and backing lead
The 5-6 bedroom plans are the scarcity - family product the corridor's new wave prices $100K higher. Behind them, backing positions (preserve, pond, no rear neighbor) and documented owner upgrades carry the premiums.
The value play: a big plan in builder condition on a good lot, priced at era-anchored money with the capex life still ahead of it.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you write on any Village Park home, run this list.
- CDD/assessment status pulled from the lot's TRIM notice
- Current HOA dues and covenants - confirm the $490 figure and boat/RV rules
- Neighborhood-exact comps - not the portal's split-city medians
- The new wave's current sheets - your negotiation discipline
- Warranty documentation - what Maronda coverage remains and transfers
- Independent inspection - commissioning-era items on young systems
- School zoning confirmed with the district
- Leasing rules in the covenants if rental flexibility matters
Village Park is the corridor's under-narrated neighborhood - no master-plan marketing, a builder the portals barely profile, and a value proposition that holds up anyway: family-size plans from a value basis, a $490 HOA, strong schools and the ramps down the road. Young resale markets like this misprice constantly in both directions, which is exactly where prepared buyers and well-represented sellers both win. The TRIM notice, the neighborhood-exact comps and the new wave's incentive sheets are the three documents that price every deal here.
Our advice: run it as a four-way - Village Park against Royal Pointe, Bradley Creek and the Anabelle Island models, all normalized to true monthly. The corridor's value answer changes house by house, and that spreadsheet finds it every time.
Village Park vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place Village Park is the corridor four-way.
| Community | How it compares to Village Park |
|---|---|
| Royal Pointe | The established benchmark - older stock, even lighter fees (~$200/yr, no CDD), bigger trees. Village Park counters with younger systems. |
| Anabelle Island | The two-builder new wave - gas, warranties, incentives and a CDD. New-build certainty versus the light-fee resale. |
| Bradley Creek | Pulte's sold-out boutique - 60-ft lots and fiber at higher resale pricing. The premium young-resale alternative. |
| Sandridge Hills | The no-CDD new build - Mattamy's active community competing for the same fee-aware buyer. |
| Magnolia West | The amenity community - pool and slides funded by bigger fees. Lifestyle return versus fee minimalism. |
Village Park's case: the corridor's best size-per-dollar with its lightest young-community fees. The case against: thin comps, a quiet builder name, and the new wave's incentives one corridor over.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- $490/year HOA - the corridor's lightest young-community fee.
- 3-6 bedroom range - size the new wave prices far higher.
- Two 7/10 schools in the Lake Asbury chain.
- Young systems without the new-build wait.
- Boat ramps and Ronnie Van Zant Park minutes away.
- Finished neighborhood collecting the corridor's upside.
Cons
- CDD status unverified - pull it per lot.
- Thin, young resale comp set.
- Maronda's lighter local footprint complicates logistics.
- Modest amenities - the light fee buys little.
- New-build incentives compete next door.
- Portal naming fragments the data.
The Village Park Playbook
If we were buying here, this is the order of operations - and the one we run for clients.
- Pull the TRIM notice first. The CDD answer decides the whole fee comparison.
- Comp the neighborhood exactly. Split-city portal data lies here.
- Carry the new wave's sheets. Their incentives are your negotiation discipline.
- Target the big plans. 5-6 bedrooms at this basis is the corridor scarcity.
- Inspect and document warranties. Young systems, quieter builder - paperwork matters more.
Questions We Ask Before You Buy
These are the questions we put to the association, the county and the seller on every Village Park purchase.
- What does the TRIM notice show for this lot - any CDD or assessment?
- What are the current dues and covenants - boats, RVs, leasing?
- What have neighborhood-exact homes closed at in the last 12 months?
- What Maronda warranty coverage remains, and does it transfer?
- What are the active builders offering this week on comparable product?
- What schools is this address zoned for, per the district today?
Is Village Park For You?
No community fits everyone. The honest sort:
Consider elsewhere if you want
- A community pool and amenity campus.
- New-build warranties and incentives.
- A national-builder name with deep local comps.
- Established mature-tree streets - Royal Pointe's lane.
- Deep inventory this month.
- Natural gas - the new wave holds it.
Village Park fits if you want
- The most bedrooms per dollar on the corridor.
- A $490 HOA in a corridor of four-figure stacks.
- Young systems without the construction era.
- Two 7/10 schools in the feeder.
- The ramps and the park minutes away.
- A value buy the portals systematically underprice.
