|
Terra Online (St Lucia) |
Exclusive Land & Property Sales
|
Ref No: VF_048 |
|
|
Status: |
Sold |
Price Type: |
Asking Price |
Price: |
US |
Type: |
Residential Land
|
Beds: |
|
Baths: |
|
Lot Size: |
19,576 sq ft |
Location: |
Savannes Bay |
|
Email us about this listing |
or contact
TERRA ONLINE REAL ESTATE
Anse de Sable Beach
Vieux Fort
Tel: (758) 485-7400 / 485-7401 |
|
Over the past decade, Savannes Bay (in the south-east of St Lucia) has grown into a very pleasant community of higher-end homes, residences and villas without ever losing the peaceful, breezy and panoramic aspects for which the area is so well-liked. Right at the very top of the Savannes Bay hill, two flat-to-gently sloping lots of land have now come onto the market. The lots are 10,427 and 9,149 square feet in size, making for a total of 19,576 sq ft in all, or just under half an acre.
Ideally, they are to be sold together. They are bounded to the north by a ravine, which during the wet season runs with water, creating a nice ambience in an area that is otherwise fairly dry. Being high up on the hill, this lot is particularly quiet and, most importantly, offers very nice wide views over the Atlantic Ocean to the east and south, as far away as the Moule a Chique peninsula in Vieux Fort. Sandy Beach and Vieux Fort town are 8 minutes' drive away, and Castries about 50. All amenities are in place, including decent road access, electricity and telecommunications.
While there is mains water at Savannes Bay, any future homeowner would be advised to also harvest the rain water off their roof for washing and flushing. The Savannes Bay area is particularly attractive because of its easterly orientation and an almost year-round cooling sea breeze. The view incorporates not only the Atlantic Ocean, but a coastline of unparalleled beauty with waves crashing onto several off-shore reefs, a verdant green bay with the scenic off-shore Scorpion Island and a RAMSAR-protected mangrove area. It is small wonder that Savannes Bay, its various headlands and its fertile coastline were once the preferred home of St Lucia's original settlers, the Amerindians.
|
|
|