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Trinity Lake

Price Range:
$195,000 - $250,000
Greensboro
336-465-6436
2183 McLaughlin Drive, Greensboro, NC 27406
Map/Directions
Builder(s): - K. Hovnanian Homes

Overview:

Trinity Lake is the ideal location for K. Hovnanian Homes to offer our impressive single family homes. With natural woodlands serving as the backdrop and inspiration for our beautiful new neighborhood, we offer 179 alluring homesites. We are building you a dynamic single family home crafted with brick and stone which ranges in size from 2,500 square feet to 3,978 square feet.  Our clubhouse, pool, and tennis courts are now open!

With a stunning array of homesites to choose from, including wooded, cul-de-sac, corner, and interior homesites - Trinity Lake remains one of the most popular communities in the Southeast.

Features:

  •  Great Amenities
  •  Club house, pool, 2 tennis courts
  •  2,500 - 3,900 sq. ft
  •  8 floor plans
  •  Minutes from I-40/ I-85
  •  Beautiful lake in community
  •  Large homesites available
  •  Customize your New Home at the Home Design Gallery
  •  Quick move-in homes available
  • 100% Financing

Brokers Welcome
Builder:  K.Hovnanian Homes
Model:  On-site model open By appointment only
Marketed by ReMax Realty Consultants/ Team Smart
Amber Honeycutt
ahoneycutthashomes@yahoo.com
336-465-6436

Map/Directions

Directions to this community:

From Business I-40 East:

Take I-40 East to Lee Street exit - #41. Turn right at bottom of the ramp onto East Lee Street. Follow East Lee Street all the way to the stop sign for Youngs Mill Road. Turn left on Youngs Mill Road. Trinity Lake will be approximately 1/3 mile on your left

From the new I-40 Loop around Greensboro:

Travel east on the I-40 loop. Take exit #129 for Youngs Mill Road. Turn left onto Youngs Mill Rd. Travel approximately 1/2 mile and Trinity Lake will be on your left.

Photos & Information

About the Area:

Greensboro, North Carolina, chartered in 1808, celebrated its bicentennial in 2008 with great fanfare.  Two hundred years ago it was a marketplace for small farmers and home industry like many small communities in that day.  Its independent citizenry, composed of Ulster Scots, Germans, and Quakers, chose to name it Greene’s Borough after Nathanael Greene, the Vermont blacksmith. Greene’s army fought so valiantly in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. The battle is considered by many to be the turning point of the Revolutionary War. Today a 150-acre military park commemorates the land where Greene fought that battle.

Among Greensboro’s famous are Dolly Madison, wife of President James Madison; William Sydney Porter (O. Henry), and Edward R. Murrow.  The Greensboro Historical Museum is a repository of memorabilia of Mason, Porter and many others.  The restored estate of Blandwood, the home of another influential citizen of the mid-19th century, Governor John Motley Morehead, is a popular tourist site.

Greensboro is home to UNC-Greensboro, NC A&T State University, Greensboro College, Guilford College and Bennett College plus campuses of Guilford Technical  Community College. It has hosted an internationally famous PGA tournament since 1938 (originally the Greater Greensboro Open; today’s Wyndham Championship). It is also the home of the Eastern Music Festival where young musicians gather every summer to perform under the direction of master conductors.

As Greensboro evolved into North Carolina’s third largest city, changes began to occur within its traditional social structure. On February 1, 1960, four black college students from North Carolina A&T College sat down at all-white Woolworth's lunch counter, and refused to leave after they were denied service. Hundreds of others soon joined in this sit-in, which lasted several months. Such protests quickly spread across the South, ultimately leading to the desegregation of Woolworth's and other chains. The original lunch counter and stools now sit in the Smithsonian, but a museum is in the original building where the event took place.

Today Greensboro has grown to be part of a thriving metropolitan area called the Triad, encompassing High Point and Winston-Salem, and more than a million people. Evolving from an early 1900s textile and transportation hub, Greensboro is emerging as one of the South's up-and-coming centers for relocating businesses and is still collecting accolades for its beauty and livability. In 2004,  the Department of Energy (DOE) awarded Greensboro with entry into the Clean Cities Hall of Fame.