GoGated is on Facebook
Pages

Posts Tagged ‘Palmetto Dunes’

Hilton Head Gated Communities Say Merry Christmas!

Leaping reindeer at Christmas, Palmetto Dunes Resort

At Palmetto Dunes this Christmas, reindeer are leaping.

 Merry Christmas!   

 

The Long Cove Club is looking good at Christmas.

 Spread the Cheer! Sea Pines and Hilton Head Island has great weather for golf and tennis at Christmas.

  

 Another Sunny Hilton Head Christmas  

A homes in Hilton Head Plantation is a great gift to yourself at Christmas.

Santa is sure to be busy in Hilton Head Plantation this year.

Santa Loves Hilton Head

Homes and villas for sale in Shipyard make great gifts to ourselves. Santa’s elves hit the beach at Shipyard on Hilton Head Island every summer.

 

Enjoy Golf, Tennis, Rest, Realaxation on Hilton Head at Christmas

Retire to Wexford and enjoy Christmas on Hilton Head Island every year.

Have a Happy New Year!  Come on down, ‘ya hear? I'll be home for Indigo Run at Christmas.

Indigo Run is one of many fine Hilton Head gated communties in the Christmas spirit.

 

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from the Hilton Head Gated Community Specialist ®

Richard Kadesch, Owner and Broker-in-Charge Go Gated Realty ® The Hilton Head Island, South Carolina 

Cell 843-684-2933, Email Rich@gogated.com, www.GoGated.com

The ‘New’ Hilton Head Resort

The Six Million Dollar Renovation Exceeds Expectations The large outdoor swimming pool at the Hilton Head Resort The outdoor swimming pool in building one at the Hilton Head Resort

The Hilton Head Resort is the place to get an economical, two or three bedroom villa near the beach on Hilton Head Island.  A few years ago, the owners voted for a mega-renovation and now, after three years and 4.5 million dollars spent, the results have exceeded most people’s expectations.  And, the renovation is not quite finished.  They still have another year of work and 1.5 million dollars more to spend.

They are not finished with other improvements either.  For many owners, these renovations mean more than just a physical makeover.  They want the renovations to help them earn a healthy share of the Hilton Head Island vacation rental market in the future.  The early results look promising.

The Hilton Head Resort has walking access to the beach across the boardwalk the spans the tidal salt water marsh.

The Hilton Head Resort has direct access to the beach via the boardwalk that spans the tidal salt water marsh.

“The Hilton Head Resort does not pretend to be the same as Sea Pines or Palmetto Dunes“, says Donna Brown, the President of the owner-elected Board of Directors.  ”For one thing, our villas are much more economical that the other Island resorts.  We have our own niche.  But, we do want more vacationers to visit our resort and discover what we have to offer.  This year, we had more vacationers at the Resort than ever before.”

The indoor heated swimming pool in the Atrium.  The building has a spa, kiddie pool, indoor track, sauna and exercise room.  The building is a free wi-fi zone.

The indoor heated swimming pool in the Atrium. The building has a spa, kiddie pool, indoor track, sauna and exercise room. The building is a free wi-fi zone.

While contractors have been renovating the Resort, owners have been renovating their individual villas. These days, it is common to see villas there with new kitchens, granite counter tops, stainless steel appliances, tiled floors and upscale furnishings – a concept of small, but good.

Many owners use their villas as vacation homes and rent to other vacationers.  Others owners use their villas as personal second homes and do not rent them.  A third group, traditionally the largest group of owners at the Resort, do not use their villas at all.  They rent to tenants for income and tax benefits.  However, over the years, more owners have purchased villas there as vacation places and they want to rent their villas to other vacationers.  This changing demographic, together with the major renovations, the best management the Resort has ever had and better security than ever before, has combined to make a ‘new’ Hilton Head Resort.

The beach at the Hilton Head Resort The beach at the Hilton Head Resort is ideal for family fun and relaxation The Resort Has a Great Location

The Hilton Head Resort is in the right place at a new time.  Owners and visitors have always enjoyed direct walking access to the beach but the boardwalk across the tidal marsh is long and it has always been too was narrow.  At the same time, many villas at the Resort have breathtaking, world-class views of the marsh, ocean and neighboring Palmetto Dunes golf course.  These views are among the best that Hilton Head Island has to offer, including the views from more expensive villas elsewhere.  I know well because I used to own a villa there that had a really big ocean and marsh view.  When I got married, I sold my villa at the Resort and built a house in Indigo Run.  Many people use the Hilton Head Resort as their ‘starter’ property on Hilton Head Island.  Others need nothing more.

Next to the Hilton Head Resort’s private beach access is Singleton Beach, Hilton Head’s newest oceanfront community with homes that list in the 1.7-4.8 million dollar range.  Before the developer of Singleton Beach bought that land, it was occupied by the old Bombay Club.  The Bombay Club used to rock on summer weekend nights and the music would drift across the marsh for Hilton Head Resort owners to ‘enjoy’.   When  Singleton Beach’s developer bought the land, the last call at the Bombay Club was from the Hilton Head Fire Department that burned it down so that they could practice fighting fires.  From the ashes rose Singleton Beach, the Island’s newest ocean front community  - a substantial neighborhood upgrade.

The three bedroom villlas are located only on the corners of each building.

Three bedroom villas of the Atrium building facing west toward the sunset.

The south side of the Resort overlooks the Trent Jones golf course of the neighboring Palmetto Dunes Resort.  The picture book views from some of the Hilton Head Resort villas of the Palmetto Dunes golf course and lagoons may be better than those from some of the homes in Palmetto Dunes.

On the north side of the Resort is the Singleton Beach Village, a luxury vacation home community with prices from $550,000-1.2 million dollars.   It does not have a private beach access or an ocean cabana bar – as does the Hilton Head Resort.  Oh, for the good old days when the land where the Village is located was owned by the Malphrus Construction Company.  It was as a yard for heavy equipment, storage for concrete pipe and wire and it was a trailer park.  ’Industrial’ would describe the view that Resort owners used to have of that property.   Thank you, Singleton Beach Village - a mega neighborhood upgrade.

The boardwalk to the beach at the Hilton Head Resort has instructional storyboards about Hilton Head Island coastal ecology. The tidal marsh at the Hilton Head Resort is an important part of the Hilton Head Island ecosystem. Hilton Head Island has one of the most beautiful beaches in the world. These are some of the plaques on the boardwalk to the beach at the HIlton Head Resort The plaques describe the naural wonders of Hilton Head Island.

The Town’s Chaplain Park is just north of the Singleton Beach Village and has soccer fields and tennis courts open to the public.  A few years ago, the Marriott Corporation built it’s newest timeshare community, Surfwatch, in that relatively undeveloped neighborhood just north of Chaplin Park.   Today, luxury homes are replacing the tear-downs throughout that area.  Two years ago, I sold a 5th row ocean lot in that neighborhood for $620,000 on a street that had not been built yet!  It was built months later.

At Surfwatch, Marriott built a beautiful boardwalk to the beach that was approved by the Town.  Since the Town approved the new boardwalk for Surfwatch, they had to approve the plans for the new Hilton Head Resort boardwalk that were at the same, high standard.  Now, it has been built.

The Village of Singleton Beach is located immediatly north of the Hilton Head Resort. Meet the neighbors: The colorful homes of Singleton Beach Village, just north of the Hilton Head Resort.  The Town’s Chaplin Park is just north of the Village. The Robert Trent Jones golf course is immediately to the south.  This is the signature tenth hole, a par five that plays along the Resort property line to the ocean.

The Hilton Head Resort is a relatively inexpensive villa community in a neighborhood of luxury ocean front and beach-oriented homes.  The cheerful new colors of the Hilton Head Resort match up well with the multicolored homes the neighboring Village of Singleton Beach, giving the impression that the communities are all part of the same master plan.  They are not.

The entrance to the Hilton Head Resort is on William Hilton Parkway at mile marker 7.  A bike path crosses the entrance and connect to all Island locations.  The Shelter Cove Mall and the Self Community Arts Center are a few hundred yards down the street.  Most all Island restaurants and shops are just a short drive from the Resort.

Across the Parkway is a piece of Town-owned land that offers beautiful, unobstructed views of Broad Creek today.  The Town bought the land about ten years ago and tore down the No-Name Beer Store (real name) and shoe cobbler’s shop that used to be there.  You could smell the cobber’s shoe polish from the gravel parking lot.  The cobbler, the only one around replaced a few leather heels on my Bass Weejuns and Cole Hahns that were worn without socks, of course – some things never change.

Behind the No-Name Beer Store was a car repair shop in a metal shed that backed up to the marsh.  Today the No-Name, the cobbler’s shop and the repair garage are gone.  The Town bought the land, tore them all down and created a park-like setting there, our tax dollars at work and another major neighborhood upgrade.

The Hilton Head Resort has three swimming pools. The outdoor swimming pool next to building four, the tennis building The Resort Had a Tax Sheltered Life

The Hilton Head Resort was built in 1981 and 1982, before the 1986 tax reform.  The developer built and sold the Resort villas in pre-construction, as tax shelters.  The amount of tax that the buyer needed to save determined how may villas they bought.  Vacation rentals didn’t concern the developer because the villas carried themselves with tax advantages and without any rental at all.  Buyers knew that any rental income or personal use was just ’icing on the cake’.

When President Regan reformed the tax code in 1986, he lowered the tax brackets and eliminating many tax loop holes.  My clients who were accountants were the first to lower their prices and sell.  They knew that the price of tax shelter real estate across the country would plummet, and it did.  Suddenly, rental income was important – imagine that!

The Island never needed 468 more villas for the vacation rental market and the Hilton Head Resort could not compete with what Sea Pines and Palmetto Dunes anyway.  But, the Island did have a housing shortage and the Resort offered a much needed supply of economical villas where Islanders could live.  This became the economic position of strength for the Resort and it has remained that way since then.  Now, according to Donna Brown, the Board President, this has changed.  She says that vacation rental use is increasing and that long-term tenant occupancy that once was 70% is less than 50% today.

The Hilton Head Resort has two racketball courts with a sundeck on top.

The sun deck of building two is on top of two racket ball courts. The masonry deck surface will be the surface of all the Resort's walkways as they are renovated. All of the railings in this building are aluminum and they are new.

Second home and vacation rental owners at the Resort see the future of the Hilton Head Resort having a more viable vacation rental business.  They believe that the Resort should be just that – a resort.  The renovations have removed many longstanding problems of poor quality and deferred maintenance.  The tenants who live there today must meet higher standards than in the past thanks to background checks required by the Board.  More about this later.  As more people vacation at the Resort and have a good experience, the reputation of the Resort should improve and vacationers should return.  The future of the Resort will likely be an attractive mix of vacation rentals, owner occupants and tenants.

I have more than a passing interest in the progress of the Resort.  I used to work in the front office at the Resort for the developer’s first-ever resale company, the Capital Marketing Group.  It was a good job because the developer planned to make Capital Marketing a national real estate franchise.  As the first on site resales Broker at the Four Seasons Resort (that’s what it was called back then), I sold every resale there for the first two years.  Then, the developer scrapped the plans for a resale company and I left to start my own business, with a sales and rental inventory at the Hilton Head Four Seasons Resort.  Over the years since then, I have enjoyed selling more villas at that location than I can remember.  Low-priced villas near the beach have always been in demand.  It is still a pleasure to represent buyers, sellers and rental owners there today.

  The Recreational Amenities Are Better Than Ever The exercise center in the Atrium has been enclosed and has new equipment.

The exercise center in the Atrium has been enclosed and has new equipment. It is free for owners and guests.

The developer knew that good recreational amenities sold villas.  Therefore, he built two outdoor swimming pools, six tennis courts and two racket ball courts. He enclosed building three and called it the Atrium.  In the Atrium, he built an indoor heated swimming pool, indoor track, spa, sauna and an exercise area.  He built a boardwalk to the beach and a beach front cabana bar.  He provided under-building parking and built a 24-hour, manned security entrance.  It was a good sales story then and it is still a good one today – and even better.  The amenities have all been renovated and are better than ever today.

 

 Coco’s Ocean Front Cabana Bar

For example, the oceanfront cabana bar was shuttered and unused for many years.

Coco's is open from Memorial Day to Labor Day.  The ocean front cabana is for families and serves food.  It has a liquor license and also serves frosty drinks.

Coco's serves food and drinks at the beach.

It opened with a liquor license as Coco’s in 2007 and now, it’s a big success.  Coco’s serves frosted drinks, breakfast and lunch from 10 am-7 pm Memorial Day to Labor Day.   The oceanfront location, music and family atmosphere attracts visitors from the Resort and also neighboring Palmetto Dunes and Singleton Beach.  It’s a bit of a hide-away.  To get there, you have to walk or take the shuttle shuttle from the Resort or walk in from the beach.

 ”The Glorious, Ecological Boardwalk!”

A great feature of the Hilton Head Resort has always been the boardwalk to the beach.  Now, the boardwalk has been rebuilt to be wider and shorter.  The Resort provides shuttle service to and from the beach by electric carts.  On foot, it only takes six minutes to walk.

Day or night, summer or winter, enjoy the indoor heated swimming pool, spa and track in the Atrium.

The Atrium has an indoor heated swimming pool, spa, exercise room and track for year-round use. The entire building is a free wi-fi zone.

Board President Donna Brown says that one day in the early morning, she walked down the “glorious, ecological boardwalk to the beach” and her eyes filled with tears of joy and appreciation for the beauty of Hilton Head Island.  She said, “I felt like I was in paradise.  I felt very fortunate to be here”.

Whether by foot or by the shuttle, everyone today can access the beach on the new boardwalk faster and easier than ever before.   By the way, “ecological” refers to the storyboards about nature that are here and there on the boardwalk.

The beach at the Hilton Head Resort is very similar to rest of Hilton Head Island’s ocean front beach.  Beach goers can also rent umbrellas and beach chairs there if they want them, another service not available previously at the Resort.

All Four Buildings are Being Renovated

The Hilton Head Resort is comprised of four, interconnected quadrangular shaped buildings with 468 two

All villa doors have new number plaques.

All villa doors have new number plaques.

and three bedroom villas (condominiums) and four elevators.  Each building has a large courtyard where recreational amenities are located that include a swimming pool, tennis courts, sun deck and  indoor track.  Each building has been painted a cheerful color and is clearly numbered  The door of every villa has a new number plate with a sunrise design.  The buildings are all interconnected on every floor by walkways that are being reconstructed and surfaced with decorated masonry.  This will allow the walkways to be easily cleaned and they will be much more durable than the outdoor carpets that they replace.

Buildings One and Two

Building one is closest to the beach and has a large, outdoor swimming pool.  It also has the convenience store that serves breakfast, lunch and other convenience items.  Every villa in every building has a full kitchen.  The walkway and porches of buildings one and two have new, aluminum walkway and balcony railings that give the Resort a clean and modern look.  Building two has two racket ball courts with a sun deck on top.  The racket ball courts have been closed for six years because of maintenance needs but as part of the renovation, one racket ball court is scheduled to open for play in 2009.  The sun deck has been resurfaced and has new aluminum railings too.

Two unused paddle ball courts used to be on either side of the racketball courts and they have been removed.  One has been replaced with palm trees and attractive landscape.  The other is scheduled to  become a shuffleboard or boccie court or both that will open in 2009.

Tennis courts on Hilton Head Island at the Hilton Head Resort. The Hilton Head Resort has six hard tennis courts that have all been resurfaced. The Atrium and Tennis Buildings Three and Four

Building three is the enclosed Atrium that has the indoor heated swimming pool, one of only six heated, indoor pools on Hilton Head Island that is not a private pool.  The Atrium has always been the Resort’s signature feature.  It has a kiddie pool, spa, indoor track, exercise room and sauna.  The Resort’s full name is the Hilton Head Resort, Four Seasons Centre.  About ten years ago, when the Resort erected a new sign on the highway, it dropped ’Four Seasons’ from its name and became just the Hilton Head Resort.

The gravel running track of the Atrium has been paved, the Spa has been resurfaced and the exercise room has been enclosed with tinted casement windows for privacy.  The exercise room has a new  universal gym, stair stepper, exercise bike and one television.

New landscape in building two.

The new landscape in building two.

The Atrium has new Washingtonian Palms and synthetic pine straw.  This softens the area visually and creates a more restful, tropical setting.  The entire building is a wi-fi zone, meaning free Internet service.  Several porch-style swinging benches have been suspended from arched trellises.

The Tennis building four has four tennis courts within the quadrangle and two others next to the building, outside.  All of the tennis courts have been resurfaced in the last year and they have new wind screens.   There is a swimming pool next to building surrounded by a new aluminum fence.  Buildings three and four have under-building parking that is unreserved for use by all owners and guests.

Better Security, Management and Tenants

Historically, most rental demand has come from tenants.  Today, the Resort has better tenants than in teh past.  To achieve this, the Board installed a standardized lease application with tenant screening that included mandatory background checks.  ”Just that knowledge that a background check will be done has deterred some tenants from applying”, according to the Chief of Security A.T. Wilcox.

The HIlton Head Resort is a gated community on Hilton Head Island at the beach.

The Hilton Head Resort is a gated beach community with a 24-hour guarded security entrance.

Chief Wilcox, a former Marine who has worked security at the Resort since 1993 credits the Board of Directors with better security.  ”The biggest improvements in security have come because the Board is allowing us to enforce the master deed and all the rules and regulations”, he says.  He sites great teamwork between Allied Management, the regime management company and security guards as another reason for improvement.  Still another is the security position the Board has created specifically to communicate with owners and rental agents about any misbehavior from tenants such as noise, parking or registration issues.  The Resort uses picture IDs and keeps a copy of all leases on file.

And, the Resort has a serious menu of fines for rule violations that Security enforces.  “Things are definitely better than they used to be”, says Chief Wilcox.  ”These days, we mostly spend our time enforcing regulations about window blinds, doors and balconies and not behavior problems”.   He says that next year the Board will focus more on villa inspections so that owners maintain a minimum standard of quality, as allowed by the Master Deed.

Ocean front real estate on Hilton Head Island The sun reflects off of the ocean in winter at the Hilton Head Resort The Owners Get Their Money’s Worth

David Howard is the owner of Allied Management, the Resort’s regime management company.  He says that the Hilton Head Resort is in good financial condition and that there will not be any increase to the regime fee in 2009.  He expects the insurance costs which are part of the regime fees to be lower next year.

Most owners pay $363/mo for a ‘standard’ two-bedroom villa but owners of a few larger two-bedroom villas and three bedroom villas pay more.  The regime fee includes insurance for hurrican, fire and flood, water and sewer, basic cable TV, buildings and grounds maintenance, trash pick-up, pest control, security and use of all amenities by owners and guests.

To fund the renovation, owners have paid three years of special assessments with the forth and last to be paid in 2009.  Owners of the standard two bedroom villas paid $6,640 in 2006 and the same again in 2007.  They paid $3,320 in 2008 and will pay $3,320 in 2009.  Owners of larger two-bedroom and three bedroom villas paid more in special assessments.

David Howard says that the most expensive renovations were done first, that the work has been on schedule and that the work is under budget by about $180,000.  Many of the renovation items have already been mentioned but others include the new coal tar pitched roofs on all four buildings, major improvements to the stairwells, new walkway and balcony railings, new masonry surfaces to all outside balconies, rebuilt sub floors of the walkways and many new signs.  The buildings have been completely painted and numbered and all villas have attractive new number plaques.

Buyers at the Resort will benefit from this marvelous renovation with the cost of the work built into every purchase price.

The beach on Hilton Head Island at sunset Sunset on the beach at the Hilton Head Resort The Story Continues with a New Chapter Every Year

The story will hopefully never end and always improve.  The Hilton Head Resort remains the lowest-priced location along the beach on Hilton Head Island with two and three bedroom villas.  Did I mention that the Resort is better than ever?

As good changes continue, I think that the Hilton Head Resort will become more of a vacation resort than it has been in the past.  But I also believe that it will improve as a residential community too.  There will be more second home owners, snow birds and baby boomers (like me) in retirement or pre-retirement who will want to own a place near the beach but not pay a high price for it.  Boomers may want more than one residence but not for more money than it takes to live in one large and expensive house.  The Hilton Head Resort may be part of this trend and these boomers will want to just pay a regime fee and avoid exterior maintenance whether in residence or while they are away – just like retirees today and forever more.  They will want convenience to all Island locations and good recreational amenities and the Resort has them.

The Hilton Head Resort is at 663 William Hilton Parkway near mile marker 7.

The Hilton Head Resort is at 663 William Hilton Parkway near mile marker 7.

Vacationers want convenience and good recreational amenities too.  As more vacationers are comfortable at the Resort, they will return for their vacation and buy a villa there.

As the Resort becomes a more attractive place to live, better tenants will want to own and live there.  If they move away, they may keep the villa as a rental property or second home.

The Hilton Head Resort has come a long way and the story continues.   To talk about your story and whether this property or another one is the best for you, please call or email today!

Richard Kadesch, Owner and Broker-in-Charge The Gated Community Specialist ® Go Gated Realty ® Hilton Head Island, South Carolina Rich@gogated.com www.GoGated.com 1-800-333-5025 Read Some of My Clients’ Success Stories

Election Day on Hilton Head Island and Bluffton, 2008

Little or No Wait at Most Island Polling Places  No Wait at Christ Lutheran Church for Palmetto Dunes residents of precinct 7A who voted at 6:30 pm on November 4

No Wait for evening voters at Christ Lutheran Church, the polling place for residents of Palmetto Dunes in precinct 7A

Hilton Head Islanders and Bluffton residents voted early yesterday at 28 polling places that included schools, churches, libraries, community pavilions and meeting rooms.   Many voters were at their  polling places before they opened and when opened, voters waited up to one hour during the morning at many locations.  There was no wait in the afternoon or evening according to Poll Managers and Observers at Indigo Run,  the Arts Center of Coastal Carolina at Shelter Cove, the First Lutheran Church on William Hilton Parkway near Palmetto Dunes and the Hilton Head School for the Creative Arts.  According to scvotes.org, 58,960 Beaufort County registered voters voted, or 64.87% compared to 70.87% of all  South Carolina registered voters that voted.  

The Hilton Head Land Acquisition Bond Referendum and the Bluffton Town Election Results

Mayorial Candidate Votes Per Cent Lisa Sulka 1,738 53% Charlie Wetmore 1,499 46%

  • The Bluffton Town Election for the two vacant Town Councilmen seats had the results below, but these results are now void because of a protest by Jeff Fulgham that was upeheld by the County Election Commission.  A new election will be held but a date for the new election has not been set.  In his letter of protest, Jeff Fulgham said:  ”It appears that approximately 100 Bluffton citixens were not allowed to vote for town candidates.  At least 88 of these are in the Buckwalter area where statistically I have the strongest support base.  With only a deficit of 22 votes, projections show I would have more than likely won had these individuals been allowed to vote.  As a combat vet who has fought for the right of Iraqis to vote, I am disturbed that Mitchell and Hamilton have not joined me in demanding that our fellow citizens are allowed to vote.  If the roles were reversed, I would risk my Council seat to let anyone vote: black, brown, white and from my neighborhood.”   

Town Council Votes Per Cent Fred Hamilton, Jr. 1,550 29.54% Allyne Mitchell 1,445 27.53% Jeff Fulgham 1,423 27.12% Norman ‘Gus’ Thomas 796 15.17%  Beaufort County is Voter-Friendly 

A touch-screen voting machine at Indigo Run

Tamela Maxim, President of the League of Women Voters of  Bluffton, South Carolina says that Bluffton and Hilton Head Island are friendly places to vote.  ”South Carolina in general is considered a State that is friendly to voters.  It’s easy to register in this State and there are not a lot of restrictions at the polling places that would make it difficult for people to vote.  You still must have your identification but I know from experience as a poll worker that they really do bend over backwards to try and help people when they show up at the wrong place or don’t have the right identification.  They are polite.  If somebody wants to vote a challenge ballot, they go to a lot of trouble to let them do that.  So, there are a lot of things that are always going to be difficult, but Beaufort County tries hard to make it easy for people to be able to find where they are supposed to be so that they can vote.  

One of the reasons that this can be a challenge for some people is because of our population growth.  Growth changes the amount of space and the number of polling places that we need and their locations.  Beaufort County tries not to change polling locations too much but it can’t be helped.  We’ve grown so fast in Beaufort County.  We do our best to keep up!  

Every once in awhile, I get phone calls  from people who ask me where they are supposed to go to vote.   If I don’t have the map in front of me then I direct them to the newspapers which are usually the best source for that information.”  

Indigo Run Residents Vote Within Indigo Run

Indigo Hall is the community pavilion of Indigo Run. This first-year polling place is one of only five polling places that are located within gated communities on Hilton Head Island and in Bluffton.

This is the first year that Indigo Run residents were able to vote within their community.  Indigo Hall, the community pavilion within Indigo Run became a polling place for the  presidential primaries in June and the presidential election on November 4.  Indigo Run is now one of five Hilton Head Island and Bluffton gated communities to have polling places within their community security gates.  The other four gated communities are Sea Pines Resort and Hilton Head Plantation on Hilton Head Island and Moss Creek, Belfair and Sun City Hilton Head in Bluffton.

No wait at Indigo Hall at 4 pm for residents of Indigo Run, precinct 2C

No wait at Indigo Hall at 4 pm for residents of Indigo Run, precinct 2C

Ms. Terry Leary, General Manager of Indigo Run says that it took three years for Indigo Run to become a first-year polling site.  ”The Beaufort County Election Commission anticipated the need for an additional polling place in this area because of the anticipated building and population growth outside of Indigo Run on nearby Leg O’Mutton Road and Marshland Road.  They expected growth there and knew that the development would impact our precinct.  So, they came to me over three years ago – this didn’t happen overnight – and asked  if we would be willing to use Indigo Hall as a precinct polling place.   They felt like it would be justified to have a precinct just for the people within Indigo Run because there were enough numbers here – approximately 1,500 people.  I thought that this would be phenomenal!  So, we proceeded and it took the Department of Justice until June of 2007 to approve it – about two years.  I was thrilled!  We were able to include all areas of  Indigo Run that include the River Club and Broad Pointe so that all Indigo Run residents can vote within our gated community.  Every Indigo Run resident that I have talked to about this has been satisfied with this convenience.  I think that it’s another advantage to living here – an improvement in our quality of life.  We are always working for that.”

Your Voting Experience?

Feel free to share something about your election day experience or observations with the Go Gated Blog!

Richard Kadesch, Owner and Broker-in-Charge The Gated Community Specialist ® Go Gated Realty ® Hilton Head Island, South Carolina Rich@gogated.com www.GoGated.com 1-800-333-5025 Read Some of My Clients’ Success Stories
Pre-Forclosed Residential