Homes For Sale in Grove Park, NC Real Estate Market
Median sale price
Find houses for sale in Grove Park, NC from Allen Tate. We have an office conveniently located in North Asheville, just minutes from the Grove Park neighborhood and our real estate agents are experts in the community. In addition to local expertise, all Allen Tate REALTORS® are backed by an outstanding support staff and committed to the highest standards of customer service. Find a home for sale in Grove Park that’s right for you. Continue browsing this page to see all Grove Park, NC real estate listings.
Below is a selection of properties in Grove Park -- find yours today!
Median sale price
The inviting Grove Park neighborhood, just northeast of downtown, is considered to be one of the finest residential locations in Asheville.
The Grove Park Historic District is significant to Western North Carolina for its collection of single-family homes that represent the design and construction practices of early twentieth century architecture. Most of the development occurred between 1908 and 1938, illustrating a number of styles including: Georgian, Colonial, Tudor, Bungalow, and Shingle. Many of the homes are sited on wooded parcels averaging 0.5 acre, with occasional size variance due to some owners having smartly assembled plots over time. Time-honored deed restrictions concerning setback and building costs have allowed the properties to relate well to each other and maintain a high degree of integrity.
For home mortgage services through Allen Tate, visit our Mortgage Services office in Downtown Asheville, NC.
Every avenue throughout this historic neighborhood in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Western North Carolina is a living nod to the area's history, and absolutely worth a visit to take it all in. Grove Park is tucked off of Charlotte Street in north Asheville and sits just below the Omni Grove Park Inn Resort & Spa, from which guests and visitors can look out over the area, and out to the city skyline.
Asheville offers many amenities within minutes of Grove Park, including public, private, and charter schools; an extensive county library system; access to state-of-the-art medical facilities, including Mission Hospital, the largest in the region; and innumerable shopping, entertainment, and dining options. Asheville is also conveniently located near Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Pisgah National Forest, and the Blue Ridge Parkway, a sightseer's and cyclist's haven.
Downtown Asheville: 5 minutes
Weaverville: 18 minutes
Biltmore Park Town Square: 22 minutes
Asheville Regional Airport: 23 minutes
Downtown Hendersonville: 35 minutes
With a population of 87,000, Asheville is the largest city in both Buncombe County and Western North Carolina. Asheville serves as the area's economic and cultural nerve center in many ways, including as a hub for education, healthcare, local arts and crafts, entertainment, and innovative food and drink. The four-season temperate climate with average snowfall of only 13 inches makes year-round living easy, and the broad range of elevations and corresponding climates and plant growth (both in town and around the area) make it one of the most biodiverse in the United States and the world.
Asheville is the largest city in Western North Carolina, but surrounding towns in Buncombe County offer small-town flair and varied amenities. The population is approximately 240,000 in the county. The four-season temperate climate with average snowfall of only 13 inches makes year-round living easy. Average elevation is 2,165 feet above sea level with surrounding mountain elevations of up to 6,685 feet at Mount Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Mississippi River. Because of this broad range of elevations and corresponding climates and plant growth, the area is one of the most biodiverse in the United States and the world.
Asheville city residents pay both city and Buncombe County property taxes, as totaled below. Buncombe County also has many local and special tax districts. Depending on your home, you may be subject to additional fire or school taxes. Tax rates are per $100 of assessed valuation.
Asheville City: $ 1.079
Asheville CIty and City School: $ 1.229
Grove Park was the vision of Edwin Wiley Grove, a pharmaceutical magnate from St. Louis, and is North Carolina's first suburban neighborhood. The first lots were sold in 1909 in an area of curved streets, parks, and natural landscaping, an atmosphere still present today.
Like so many other Asheville residents, including another well-known "tourist", Biltmore Estate owner George W. Vanderbilt, Grove was at once impressed with the scenery and the climate. The Vanderbilt's estate, built in the late 1800's on the south end of town, led the way for Grove and others with similar visions to develop more areas. Along with other well-knowns, like architect Richard Sharp Smith, Grove's architectural planning shaped much of the look of north Asheville.
The Grove Park neighborhood achieved national status after being placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1989.
Erected in 1913 by Grove's son-in-law Fred Seely, the Grove Park Inn on Sunset Mountain was another of Grove's visions and instantly became the cornerstone of the neighborhood's identity. The stunning building has played host to a number of American presidents, diplomats, and celebrities over the last century, as well as an annual national gingerbread house competition that is featured in press all across the United States.
The Grove Park Inn's golf course serves as a large green space in the center of the resort and the neighborhood. Designed by Donald Ross in 1926, the 18-hole, par 70 course has an undulating front nine and a back nine that can be steep. Over a decade ago, the resort invested $2.5 million to restore the course in a manner that Ross would approve. The course is considered to be among Golf Digest Magazine's top ten U.S. courses that are at least 100 years old. Players who have enjoyed its challenge include golf immortals Bobby Jones, Sam Snead, and Byron Nelson, as well as other PGA stars like Doug Sanders, Gene Littler, Fuzzy Zoeller, and Chip Beck.