

Ellen Alderman
Coldwell Banker Schmitt
KEY LARGO
100430 Overseas Highway,
Suite 100
Key Largo, FL 33037
Office - (305) 453-7548
Office fax - (305) 451-1220
Cell - (305) 942-4402
Email


Key
Largo and the Upper Keys Overview
Once
you leave civilization at Florida City, Key largo is the first town
and first island you come to as you travel down US 1 -- across a dozen
plus miles of beautiful and still totally pristine Everglades country,
then along a narrow strip of mangrove splitting Barnes Sound from Blackwater
Sound and Florida Bay, now across the old swing bridge at Jewfish Creek,
finally over Lake Surprise.
And there it is: Key Largo,
the stuff of myth, located some 55 miles and about an hour south of Miami
International Airport and just 24 miles south of Homestead. You are now on
a different planet.Since 1948, when it was the setting for the movie, "Key
Largo," starring Humphrey Bogart, Edward G. Robinson and Lauren Bacall,
the name Key Largo has become world famous. In fact, Key Largo is one
of the oldest place names on early maps of the North American continent,
dating back to the sixteenth century when the Spanish explored the area looking
for riches to take back to Spain. Today it is Miami’s Cape Cod
-- and for the rest of us it is the Gateway to the American Caribbean.The
climate is subtropical and foliage is lush. Temperatures have only
a few degrees day-night fluctuation, compared with much of the rest of Florida. There’s
a steady sea breeze, and rain tends to be passing showersKey Largo has become
synonymous with the laid-back Keys lifestyle. Yet Key Largo is also a particularly
vibrant community due to it’s being close to Miami.
On the weekends,
it is an easy drive for people to visit the Keys and their unique ambience.
For investors it means great occupancy rates, for 2nd homeowners a quick
and easy getaway. If you want to make this your home, well, Key largo was
ranked No. 11 of the 50 Best Places to Live list by Men's Journal Magazine.
If you’re looking to relocate here, there are homes as of April 2009
listed from $269,000. Of course they go up from there: the least
expensive single family home now you'll find is about $399,000. (To get an
idea on how prices work, look under the investment
page for the Florida Keys.)
• The Key Largo housing market is diverse and eclectic, and includes everything
from ultra-modern big new houses and condos to just plain old-Florida funky,
and everything in between. It is a complex market, and will take the buyer
or investor some time to comprehend.
• The market also covers a lot of physical territory: Key Largo itself,
the largest and longest of the Florida Keys, stretches for 30 miles from the
resort yachting community of Ocean Reef at the island’s north end (which
exits to the Mainland by a separate bridge over Card Sound) to the community
of Tavernier at its southern tip
• Moreover, another part of the diverse Upper Keys real Estate market is
Islamorada, the 17-mile long, half-mile wide, often handsomely groomed municipality
that picks up where Key Largo leaves off and is comprised of Plantation Key,
Windley Key, and Upper and Lower Matecumbe Keys Some Facts About Key Largo
• It has a year-round population (not counting the ebb and flow of tourists
and weekenders, and Miami daytrippers) of approximately 15,000 and a median age
of 43.
• The primary industries here are:
Arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodation and food services
Retail trade
Educational, health and social services
Construction
• Key Largo is served by a full-service hospital in Tavernier, providing
easy health care access to all residents
• Key Largo children attend award-winning public and private schools covering
grades from pre kindergarten through High School Recreational OptionsYou can’t
really get bored here, unless you just don’t like the water.
• Dive: If you snorkel or dive, Key Largo is a terrific place to
live. Long considered the sport diving capital of the world, Key Largo is home
to John Pennekamp State Park, the world’s first underwater park. I
used to camp and snorkel there on weekends with my kids. And I’ve
also had some great times diving wrecks and exploring the surrounding waters
of the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. There are lots of
dive shops for folks at all skill and preference levels.
• Fish: If you like to fish, Key Largo is (if that’s possible)
an even better place to live. Stretching down to Islamorada, the bonefishing
capital of the world, there is a fabulous “backcountry” – Florida
Bay – and offshore you’ve got the Gulf Stream and every kind of pelagic
sports fish you can imagine. If you’ve got your own boat, great;
if you don’t, you’ll find one of the largest fishing fleets per square
mile in the world, between Key Largo and Islamorada.
• Boats and Toys: See above. There is every possible sea thing
to rent and enjoy. In fact, Key Largo and the rest of the Upper Keys, including
Islamorada, are much better this way than the Middle Keys or Lower Keys with
the exception of Key West.
• Kayaking, Canoeing, Photography and Birding: These don’t
all necessarily go together. My friend and I did a lot of fishing from
our kayaks before it became the latest craze. But if you want to explore
shallow-water backcountry to enjoy birds and wildlife, and want to consider paddleboating
as opposed to motorboating as the way to do it, then this part of the Keys will
likely please you more than areas farther south and west.
• If you’re a private pilot, there’s a basic airstrip for small
planes on Tavernier, and you can even live next to the runway. Living Here – Other
OptionsSo what about the rare person who buys a home here but doesn’t want
to spend every waking minute on the water? No problem. Here’s
just a few things that contribute to the quality of life for the person who relocates
to Key Largo.
• Eating out: You’ve got tempting choices here, ranging from
easy drives to Islamorada – famous throughout the Keys for its eateries – to
the Mainland. And right here on Key Largo you’ve got excelent choices
of just about every possible cuisine. And not only that: ever noticed how
few waterfront restaurants and bars there seem to be in waterfront areas? Well,
Key Largo is an exception!
• Gallery hopping: Not exactly Key West by any means, but the Upper
Keys from Key Largo through the long slender town of Islamorada offer a lively
community of artisans, artists in residence, and galleries
• Shopping: One of the drawbacks (to some residents) of living farther “down” the
Keys (in the direction of Key West) is the “need to get off the Rock” syndrome
combined with the reality of limited shopping options. In the Upper Keys
(Key Largo, Islamorada) that’s less of a problem. You’re an
hour from Miami
• Other stuff: There’s local night life in the Upper Keys,
unlike the Middle Keys (some, but less) or the Lower Keys (not much). And
there’s lots of tennis, if that’s your game. There’s
also plenty of local shopping and services; that’s worth mentioning because
the farther south and west you go in the Keys, the less true that is. In conclusion,
Key Largo definitely feels like you’re in a different part of the country,
due partly to the aquamarine water and the Tiki bars and just the general ambience.
So if you want to be away from traffic and a rushed lifestyle, but yet want to
be near shopping and everything else that Miami has to offer, this could be just
the ticket. It’s hard to imagine a better price-value proposition in the
Keys.