TERRY WARD

REAL DIFFERENCES.   REAL RESULTS.

 

    Call 727-215-7722 or E-Mail Click Here   

 

 

                   

                                 

Home
Featured Listings
Search Local Listings (MLS)
Mortgage Calculator
Services
Neighborhoods
Local Links
Press Releases
Testimonials
Tampa Bay Real Estate Blog
Local Weather
Tourtelot Brothers Inc
Meet Terry Ward
E-Mail Me
Sitemap

  

Greater Pinellas Point St Petersburg

 

Amenities/character
Greater Pinellas Point is a culturally-diverse, casual community with the ambiance of a small town. There are ten churches, representing several different denominations. Two grade schools, a middle school, and a high school are all found within the boundaries of the neighborhood. Eckerd College, University of South Florida Bayboro, and St. Petersburg Junior College campuses are but a few minutes drive away.
If you work in downtown St. Petersburg, you can be home in ten minutes! You can commute on either Interstate 275, 4th Street or 9th (Dr. M.L. King) Street.
Do you like to exercise? One of two beautiful recreation centers includes a pool, tennis courts, and circuit- training path. The Pink Streets are favorite places for roller-bladers and bicyclists. Bay Vista Adult Center offers a variety of classes ranging from computer literacy to stained glass "and everything in between."
One of Greater Pinellas Point's two shopping centers has a department store. Speciality shops, a hardware store, optical shop, pharmacies, grocery stores, restaurants, automotive repair, and medical services are convenient, and there is only the occasional need to shop outside the area. You can even register and license your bicycle at the Skyway Community Police Resource Center.
If you are a boater, there is a nearby wet and dry-dock marina and a fine, neighborhood boat ramp. Waterfront parks, some with covered picnic pavilions, invite relaxation. If you like to go to the beach, you are just minutes away from the Gulf Beaches and Ft. DeSoto Park.


Architecture
Greater Pinellas Point offers one of the largest areas of undeveloped Tampa Bay waterfront areas in St. Petersburg. Most of the waterfront area is natural open-space frequented by herons, ibis, osprey, pelicans, seagulls, skimmers, sandpipers, hawks and owls. Several gated estates and homes overlook stunning waterfront views.
The oldest and most well-known part of the neighborhood is at the southernmost tip of Pinellas Point. The Pink Streets, so-named for their unique pink-tinted winding paths, are canopied by ancient Live Oak trees with giant spreading branches that offer shade to lush tropical gardens. Custom-built homes in various architectural styles punctuate the great expanses of flowers and trees.
Immediately north of Pinellas Point Drive are several distinctive neighborhoods of well-constructed homes built in the 1950s and 1960s. Three and four-bedroom executive homes on oversized lots and two-bedroom ranch homes well-suited for retirees and young families are throughout the area. Each home is unique by its landscaping and exterior appointments.
Several small lakes in the neighborhood are bordered by homes and apartments designed to take advantage of the view of the water and warm breezes. One lake includes a gaggle of white swans. Birdcage homes, identifiable by rooms opening onto two-story screened balconies overlook another lake. All the lakes are home to ducks and other water birds and, at night, you can fall asleep to the sound of frogs and tree toads!


History
Until the 1500s, the area was heavily populated by the now extinct Tobago Indians of Tampa Bay; the most visible remains are the well-preserved Pinellas Point Temple Mound near Pinellas Point Drive and 20th Street South.
Little activity occurred in the area until 1926, when a ferry began operating between Pinellas and Manatee Counties at what is now Bay Vista Park. The need for the ferry ceased with the mid-1950s opening of the Sunshine Skyway.
A "health resort" of sorts was located on the water near 14th Street. In the late 1920s, George E. Cook began developing The Pink Streets. Several streets were named for St. Petersburg's colorful historical icons including St. Petersburg's founder, General John Constantine Williams. Unfortunately, Cook went bankrupt during the Great Depression when those who purchased homes in his development were unable to make payments.
The largest portion of Greater Pinellas Point was developed between the 1950s to 1970s. Many homes in the area are in a busy flux of being remodeled, torn down, and rebuilt, showing the continued interest in the beautiful neighborhood of greater Pinellas Point.


Neighborhood grant projects
Greater Pinellas Point Neighborhood has been awarded three Neighborhood Partnership grants that have been used for: landscaping, a neighborhood entry sign, and a membership drive mailing to 3,200 residents of the neighborhood.


Boundaries
54th Avenue South to Tampa Bay from US 19 (34th Street) east to 4th Street and Tampa Bay (south of 64th Avenue South).
   
Information compliments of www.stpete.org

 

 

 

                                          

 

Contact Information

 

Terry Ward, Realtor®

 

Tourtelot Brothers Inc

 

390 4th St N, St Petersburg, Florida 33701

 

Office: 727-823-8383

 

Cell: 727-215-7722

 

Fax: 727-894-2504

 

E-mail: Click Here

 

Web: www.thestpeterealestatesite.com

 

 

                                                                                                Tourtelot Brothers Realty | Serving St Petersburg since 1928     Leading Real Estate Companies of The World | National Relocation Network

 

                                                                                         © 2006 Terry Ward | Real Differences Real Results

                                                                                       

                                                                                          Tampa Bay Real Estate | St Petersburg Real Estate

 

Home | Featured Listings | Search Listings | Services | Neighborhoods | Local Links | Press Releases | Testimonials | Tampa Bay Real Estate Blog

 

Local Weather | Tourtelot Brothers | Meet Terry Ward | Contact Me | Sitemap | Links

 

Disclaimer and Privacy Statements