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Four Seasons at Kent Island

203 Bayberry Drive, Chester, Maryland 21619

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Beautiful, Waterfront 55+ Four Seasons at Kent Island Has Single Family Homes, Condominiums, a 24,000 Square Foot Clubhouse and Direct Chesapeake Bay Access

Situated along the shores of the Chester River and Macum Creek on the Chesapeake Bay's Kent Island, Four Seasons is a beautiful 55+ waterfront community with condominiums and single family homes. Construction started across 420 acres in 2018 and continues today, with about 165 homes planned.

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The condominiums are in four multi-colored buildings, each with an elevator. Every home two to three bedrooms, two and a half baths and a garage.

The single family homes come in three collections, the Bay, the River and the Island. All residences have two to three bedrooms, two to four baths, as well as a garage.

Prices start in the high-$500,000s The HOA fee is about $265 per month. Please verify this with a Realtor as prices may change.

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The highlight of Four Seasons is its 24,000 square foot clubhouse with an indoor swimming pool, an outdoor swimming pool, a fitness center, a demonstration kitchen, a card room and much more.

Residents also enjoy tennis courts, pickelball courts, fitness classes, walking and biking trails, a long community pier, a kayak and canoe launch on the Bay and more. There is even a dog park.

Kent Island has two towns, Stevensville and Chester, and it is the largest island in the Chesapeake Bay. The closest hospital is Anne Arundel Medical Center, 13 miles away in Annapolis. It is accredited by the Joint Commission.

Summer temperatures are in the 80s and 90s. Winter temperatures are in the 20s, 30s and 40s. On average, the area receives 46 inches of rain and 13 inches of snow each year.

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Go to tinyurl.com/2p9r43un more information.

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Maryland:

English explorer Captain John Smith first saw the Chesapeake Bay in 1608. Soon after, in 1634, settlers arrived, ready to start a new life. In 1791, locals gave away a portion of land to create the District of Colombia, which is now home to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. Congress, and the White House.

British troops attempted to capture Maryland's capital city, Baltimore, in 1814, leading to Francis Scott Key writing The Star Spangled Banner. During the Civil War, Maryland was a slave state but remained in the Union.

The Old Line State spreads out from both sides of the Chesapeake Bay and has one of the country's longest waterfronts. A few vital agricultural products are chickens, soybeans and eggs. The waters from the Bay grow clams, finned fish, oysters and crabs. Minerals mined incluce coal, sand, stone, cement, gravel, and clay.

Baltimore is home to Johns Hopkins University and Hospital. Annapolis hosts U.S. Naval Academy. Popular tourist sites include Harpers Ferry, Fort McHenry, Antietam National Battlefield, the USS Constellation, the National Aquarium, Goddard Space Flight Center, Ocean City, Catoctin Mountain and the Maryland Science Center.

The first dental school in the United States opened at the University of Maryland in 1840.

The state's Tilghman Island is home to the Skipjacks, the only commercial sailing fleet in North America.

The Methodist Church of America was formally organized in 1784 at Baltimore's Perry Hall.

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Why Would Someone Age 55+ Retire in an All Ages Development?

While communities designed for people age 55 or better have a lot of benefits, not everyone wants to retire in a development where most of the residents are the same age and often of the same socioeconomic background. All ages community by law cannot discriminate based on age so they nearly always have a wide range of residents, from families and single professionals to empty nesters and often retirees. Many older all ages neighborhoods are organic, that is having grown over time and never having been "master planned." These usually do not have amenities such as a pool, tennis courts, etc. But more and more new all ages communities are master planned, gated, with covenants and HOA fees. Retirees often prefer these to 55+ communities because they allow more interaction with people from more cross sections of the country.

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Communities by State

Alabama   Arizona   California   Colorado   Florida   Georgia   Nevada   North Carolina   Oregon   South Carolina   Tennessee   Texas   Virginia   Washington  

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