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Chesapeake VA Real Estate

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The Washington D.C. and Virginia area has always been a center of industry, commerce, government, jobs and money. If you're thinking of relocating or investing in real estate, you would do well to consider Chesapeake, Virginia. It's centrally located close to major military and government installations like those in nearby Norfolk, yet it's also quiet, suburban and has vast tracts of ecologically protected lands to act as green space.

This website can help you familiarize yourself with the Chesapeake, VA real estate market, and when you're ready, match you up with a real estate agent who will help you with your investment. If you review all the information carefully, we're sure you'll see that Chesapeake is a great place for your new investment.

Chesapeake, Virginia: Everything You Need In a Suburb

Chesapeake, Virginia is one of the seven Hampton Roads cities and is located along the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway in eastern Virginia. It consists of 340 square miles of waterfront, marshland, including large tracts of the Great Dismal Swamp, and dry land that directly borders rural North Carolina and the cities of Norfolk and Portsmouth. With a population of approximately 220,000, it is the third largest city in the state of Virginia.

shipping on the Chesapeake waterfront

The history of Chesapeake, VA as a city is not a long one. It was one of the seven cities created from the former Norfolk County in 1963 in order to stabilize the borders of the townships contained within it. Cities cannot annex territory from other cities, so eliminating rural lands from the area stopped the various cities and townships from fighting with each other over room to develop. The city of Chesapeake is known to modern newsreaders as the site of the trial of one of the 2002 Beltway Snipers, Lee Boyd Malvo. The Chesapeake jury handed the 17-year old terrorist a sentence of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole instead of the death sentence.

Norfolk County's history goes back much further and provides much of the basis of the area's entertainment. Norfolk Country was exclusively home to Native Americans until its founding as a country from the lands contained within the Colony of Virginia in 1691. The Great Dismal Canal was surveyed by George Washington himself, over 230 years ago and is the oldest continuously used man made canal in the United States. Visitors and history buffs can also visit the numerous Revolutionary War and Civil War battlegrounds that are scattered throughout Chesapeake and the surrounding area.

The vast ecological and nature preserves in Chesapeake, VA provide space for jogging, hiking, picnicking, fishing, camping, and wildlife appreciation to area residents and visitors. Golfers will enjoy the course at Chesapeake's Greenbriar Country Club, and amateur horticulturalists should visit the 47-acre Chesapeake Arboretum.

What's Available in Chesapeake, VA

Chesapeake, Virginia is a suburb, or "bedroom" community for the nearby city of Norfolk. As such you won't have the same problem finding a place there as you would if you were looking for condominiums on the Toronto waterfront, namely that all of the structures are the same bland boxes, constructed with an eye for quantity rather than quality. Chesapeake is a historic district with an emphasis on single-family stand-alone homes rather than apartments. It also has vast amounts of waterfront property and green space if you're interested in a yard or a view. It also includes all of the necessary amenities for life, from grocery stores to a place to do your cheap postcard printing.

sailing the shoreline of the Great Dismal Swamp

Chesapeake, Virginia has six boroughs: South Norfolk, Pleasant Grove, Butts Road, Great Bridge, Deep Creek, and Western Branch. They are all composed of roughly the same ratio of commercial, industrial, and retail property to homes, but Deep Creek maintains more of its original rural character, and Great Bridge has most of the bigger retail shopping areas.

The cost of living in Chesapeake, VA is a little below the United States average due to its smaller size and lower population density: only 643 people per square mile on average. As such the real estate prices tend to be very reasonable. The 2007 averages are as follows: $304,276 for any type of house, $966 per month to rent an apartment.

Contact a Chesapeake, VA Real Estate Agent

Chesapeake, Virginia is forever growing and developing. There's no time like the present for getting involved with a great real estate market like Chesapeake's. Our real estate agents can help you get started with your search and handle all the paperwork for the sale. Real estate is their business and they're good at it, so click over to our contact page and talk to one today. robseopark jenannlam


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Chesapeake VA Real Estate


Monday, February 08, 2010