A family oriented resort and residential community
Bayville Shores is a quiet community of town homes in southeast with each home having either lake or bay/river views.
A quote from ResortQuest Real Estate, a local sales/rental company has: “These resort homes offer scenic lake or bay views from spacious three or four bedroom luxury townhomes that features 1st-floor master suites, vaulted ceilings, fireplaces and attached garages, with care free exteriors and maintenance free landscaping.“
An established community in West Fenwick on Route 54.
Bayview Landing is a comfortable community close to the beach, Fenwick Island and Ocean City. The community is geographically two miles from the Atlantic Ocean – making it wonderfully convenient for beach-goers yet far enough inland to be protected from severe coastal storms.
The community consists of groups of townhome “villas” and many individual single-family homes. The main amenity is a beautiful, well-maintained pool and clubhouse. Homeowners are responsible for their own lawn care which is good because the homes typically have larger yards than in communities where lawn care is part of the community association duties (and, resultant, higher fees).
The Grove development replaced a large grove of wetlands trees.
Another of the new(er) developments in the West Fenwick area is The Grove, a community of “carriage homes” along the Route 54 corridor. This community of 59 beautiful townhome designs is located convenient to the beach, to Ocean City and to nearby food stores and restaurants. The Builder’s website mentions “minutes away” – and that is not far off. We experience about 10 minutes to the beach – except on Saturday in the summer when traffic grinds to a halt.
The community offers a variety of home styles with varying levels of amenities.
Countless loads of “fill” was brought in to raise the land. Our worry is what may happen several years down the road – as the substrate changes because of the changes that were made to the surface. It might lead one to recall that the City of New Orleans was not below sea level when it was built.