Avondale

Avondale is a great place to live if you want to experience the thrill of city life. Every type of person can be found in this area, from hippie families to conventional professionals.

There are numerous trendy eateries and watering holes in Avondale. There are a plethora of locally owned shops with a charming retro vibe in this area. Visit the farmer’s market on Saturdays and sample some of the local brews at the craft breweries.

Avondale is undergoing a housing revitalization boom in addition to being famous for its beautiful riverfront lined with million dollar colonial mansions and opulent apartment buildings.

A lot of the residents here are working on various improvement projects at home and in the community to make it a better place to live and raise a family.

Around $900 is what most people pay for a monthly rent in Avondale. The national median price of a home is just over $300,000.

The areas can be traced back to the 1800s, when the majority of the land was used for farming. Most of it was sold off after the Civil War, and it was eventually developed into homes.

The former Magnolia Plantation served as the site for the new Riverside neighborhood of Avondale. Edgewood, a community planned and platted by Northern developers in 1884, failed to gain traction, and the surrounding land remained largely undeveloped; hunters continued to use the area until the 1910s. In 1920, a group of investors led by Telfair Stockton bought Edgewood and the land around it with the intention of creating a prestigious gated community.

The development, dubbed “Riverside’s Residential Ideal,” was named after the Avondale neighborhood in Cincinnati, Ohio, where former Edgewood owner James R. Challen once lived. It is appealing because the right kinds of people have recognized its value, while the wrong kinds of people can find property more to their liking elsewhere.

Avondale was the largest and most meticulously planned community Jacksonville had ever seen, but it was strictly reserved for white people. Avondale was characterized by a greater degree of uniformity in its architecture, especially in the Mediterranean Revival style, than the rest of Riverside. Its prosperity spawned a number of neighboring communities, all of which were eventually absorbed into Avondale.

On St. Johns Avenue, you’ll find the upscale The Shoppes of Avondale, which has about 46 different stores. Both Five Points and Avondale’s genesis in the 1920s. The 3556–3560 St. Johns Avenue structure, designed by Henry J. Klutho in collaboration with Fred S. Cates and Albert N. Cole in 1927, stands out among the neighborhood’s smaller, residential-scale buildings. In 2010, funding came from Jacksonville’s Town Center Program, an initiative to improve the city’s commercial districts.

LaVilla
Jacksonville Concrete and Construction