Business

The newest Indian Land subdivision could have more than 1,000 homes. It isn’t alone

Lancaster County

A new subdivision planned for the Lancaster County panhandle could add more than 1,000 homes.

CLREF III Acquisitions applied to rezone five land parcels at and near 8275 Van Wyck Road for a combined 780 acres. The company also submitted a proposed development agreement. Plans for the property include 1,019 new homes.

A submitted concept plan for what is listed as Nisbet shows 285 homes east of Van Wyck Road. And that’s the smaller portion of the project. The larger piece stretches from Van Wyck Road west to the Catawba River. The property touches but sits southwest of the Tree Tops development. It’s just south of The Ivy Place.

The entire project includes two larger and two smaller lakes or ponds. There’s a community house and farmers market, pool barn and swimming hole, lodge and fish camp, kayak launch on the Catawba, a community garden and play fields.

The concept plan shows four multipurpose sports fields on the southernmost piece of the property. The plan includes more than 260 acres of open space.

There are three entrances to the project off Van Wyck Road to the east. The piece to the west has only two access points off the main highway.

The zoning change and development agreement first go to the county planning commission, then to Lancaster County Council for a final decision. That same process awaits yet more new home projects.

New home subdivisions

Century Communities submitted a development agreement for 398 homes at Shiloh Woods. That plan would put homes on 170 acres on Williamson Farm and West Shiloh Unity roads. The site is south of Roselyn and Shiloh Commons, adjacent to 500 West Shiloh Unity Road.

D.R. Horton asked for a zoning change of seven properties at almost 96 combined acres west of the Possum Hollow Road and Old Bailes Road intersection. Asbury Lane would add 196 homes.

McIlwain Holdings applied for a plat review involving more than 51 acres east of McIlwain Road between Hunters Ridge Road and Suttle Road. The site would have 99 homes.

Each project goes for planning commission and county review. Combined, they could add more than 1,700 new homes.

John Marks
The Herald
John Marks graduated from Furman University in 2004 and joined the Herald in 2005. He covers community growth, municipalities, transportation and education mainly in York County and Lancaster County. The Fort Mill native earned dozens of South Carolina Press Association awards and multiple McClatchy President’s Awards for news coverage in Fort Mill and Lake Wylie. Support my work with a digital subscription
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