Third subdivision coming to Town Center

Palm Coast Seascape will have 110 single-family homes priced for ‘affordable luxury.’


Palm Coast Seascape will be the third subdivision in Town Center.
Palm Coast Seascape will be the third subdivision in Town Center.
Image courtesy of Palm Coast City Council meeting documents
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Palm Coast’s Planning Board approved a master plan for a 110-home “affordable luxury” subdivision in Town Center in a 7-0 vote on Feb. 15.

The proposed development, called Palm Coast Seascape, would be within the Town Center Development of Regional Impact, Environmental Planner Jordan Myers said.

It is Town Center’s third proposed subdivision and sits on 72 acres, with 32 acres set aside for conservation. The lots will be at least 40 feet wide, with a proposed density of 1.52 units per acre.

Seascape will be situated north of City Hall next to the Gables at Town Center development, which is under construction. Seascape will be priced similarly to Gables, but based on market demand, according to Killian Heth, a project manager at Toll Brothers, the applicant.

“We’re coming in at an affordable luxury price point,” said Heth said.

Michelle Widick, senior project manager with Zev Cohen and Associates, said the community will not be gated, so that the streets and a 10-foot-wide trail remain publicly accessible.

An amenity center will be built the center of the subdivision, Widick said, and Seascape will have sidewalks on each side of the roadway.

Palm Coast Deputy Chief Development Officer Ray Tyner said the trail will go encircle a lake and work its way up to the Gables development. The idea is that people could get on a bike at Palm Coast City Hall and  eventually make it to Colbert Lane.

“So ideally, the goal of that is to ultimately get this trail to the [Lehigh Greenway] Rail Trail at Royal Palms to have that connection,” Tyner said.

So ideally, the goal of that is to ultimately get this trail to the [Lehigh Greenway] Rail Trail at Royal Palms to have that connection. — Ray Tyner, deputy chief development officer

Toll Brothers bought the property in December 2021.

Tyner said the next step would be an administrative review of the subdivision’s construction plans. The final plat would be reviewed by the City Council.

 

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