Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale – Suwanee Ga Homes

Suwanee Ga homes for sale

Start your Suwanee new home search with Jeff Barnwelland Remax Center.  As an added convenience properties are sorted by County and price range.  For more information on these and other properties please register using your email and telephone number.  The IDX engine allows custom searches, map views, birds eye view, virtual tours, and scheduled showings.  Once logged in you may visit as many times as you like.

All information is used exclusively by Jeff Barnwell for customer follow up and will not be shared for any other purpose.

Suwanee Georgia homes for sale – $100,000 – 150,000 

Suwanee Georgia homes for sale – $150,000 – 200,000 

Suwanee Georgia homes for sale – $200,000 – 250,000 

Suwanee Georgia homes for sale – $250,000 – 300,000 

Suwanee Georgia homes for sale – $300,000 – 400,000 

Suwanee Georgia homes for sale – $400,000 – 750,000 

Suwanee Georgia homes for sale – $750,000 – 15,000,000 

  

Suwanee Foreclosures / Short Sales 

Suwanee Georgia Foreclosure / Short Sale – All price ranges

Award-winning Suwanee is a friendly, progressive community committed to maintaining a high-quality of life for its approximately 16,000 residents. Recognized by Money Magazine as one of the country’s best small communities in which to live in 2007. Located about 30 miles north of Atlanta, Suwanee is well-known around the region for its distinctive parks, crowd-pleasing events, and high-quality mixed-use developments. Like many Gwinnett County communities, Suwanee began as a small agricultural town with strong ties to the railroad. Today, the City works hard to retain its charm and sense of neighborliness and to manage growth in smart, innovative ways.

Suwanee Ga zip code 30024.

.

Over 100 Listings,
Showing 1-10
save Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes Save Search
Get Alerts
plus Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes Share &
Bookmark
Click Listings Below
For More Details
New Search Page of 10 Next arrow1%20right Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

1) 5196 Belmore Ct, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4064950 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
20 pictures
$999,900
6 beds, 6 full & 2 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4064950
Status: Active  
Details | Virtual Tour
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

2) 1155 River Laurel Dr, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4120053 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
17 pictures
$589,000
5 beds, 5 full & 1 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4120053
Status: Active  
(Updated 9/7/10)
Details | Virtual Tour
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

3) 1825 Chattahoochee Run Dr, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4089167 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
8 pictures
$400,000
5 beds, 3 full & 1 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4089167
Status: Active  
Details
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

4) 1835 Chattahoochee Run Dr, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4099862 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
7 pictures
$385,000
4 beds, 3 full & 1 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4099862
Status: Active  
Details
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

5) 640 Willow Haven Way, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4094813 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
10 pictures
$355,150
4 beds, 4 full & 1 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4094813
Status: Active  
(Updated 9/8/10)
Details
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

6) 3450 Lake McGinnis Dr, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4115087 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
9 pictures
$349,900
4 beds, 3 full & 1 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4115087
Status: Active  
(Updated 9/8/10)
Details
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

7) 630 Willow Haven Way, Suwanee GA 30041, Gwinnett Co.  
4094796 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
10 pictures
$349,900
4 beds, 4 full & 1 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4094796
Status: Active  
(Updated 9/8/10)
Details
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

8) 3784 White Sands Way, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4111174 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
22 pictures
$315,000
6 beds, 4 full & 0 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4111174
Status: Active  
Details
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

9) 3401 Lake McGinnis Dr, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4119005 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
18 pictures
$299,900
6 beds, 4 full & 0 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4119005
Status: Active  
(Updated 9/7/10)
Details
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

10) 381 Hickory Haven Ter, Suwanee GA 30024, Gwinnett Co.  
4063626 0 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
18 pictures
$299,900
5 beds, 3 full & 0 half baths
Single Family Home
MLS ID 4063626
Status: Active  
(Updated 8/27/10)
Details | Virtual Tour
fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

The content on this page relating to listings of real estate for sale comes from First Multiple Listing Service, Inc. Real estate listings held by brokerage firms other than the owner of this website are identified with the FMLS BR trademark and the listing broker is also identified on any Details page.

fmls br Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
Information is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed.
&copy 2010 First Multiple Listing Service, Inc.
DISCLAIMER: Data updated as of: 09/10/10, 3:45 AM

The data relating to real estate for sale on this web site comes in part from the Internet Data Exchange/Broker Reciprocity Program of Georgia MLS. Real estate listings held by brokerage firms other than Remax Center are marked with the Internet Data Exchange/Broker Reciprocity logo and detailed information about them includes the name of the listing brokers.
The broker providing this data believes it to be correct, but advises interested parties to confirm them before relying on them in a purchase decision.

gamlsbr Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
Information is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed.
&copy 2010 Georgia MLS. All rights reserved.
DISCLAIMER: Data updated as of: 09/09/10, 6:15 AM


New Search Page of 10 Next arrow1%20right Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes
 Suwanee Georgia Homes For Sale   Suwanee Ga Homes

Suwanee Ga History

.
Suwanee began as an Indian village about 3 miles southwest of the current downtown area along the banks where Suwanee Creek runs into the Chattahoochee River. For hundreds of years prior to the beginning of the Town of Suwanee, a large Indian village flourished on both sides of the river. The village was originally settled by Shawnee Indians, but later, according to U.S. government documents, both Cherokee and Creek Indians came to the area they referred to as Suwanee Old Town. The village/town is shown on maps indicating land ceded to the U.S. government by the Cherokees in 1817 and the Creeks in 1818.

There are various accounts regarding the naming of the City of Suwanee. One suggests that Suwanee is an Indian word meaning “echo” while another maintains that it is the Creek word for Shawnee. Another account credits the name to the early white settlers’ way of pronouncing the word “Shawnee.” Either way, the name Suwanee appears to be closely tied to the City’s Native American heritage.

The federal government recognized Suwanee as a town when the Suwanee Post Office was established in 1838. As is the case with many communities throughout the South, Suwanee’s growth is tied to the evolution of transportation. As transportation evolved, so did the community of Suwanee.

 

On May 21, 1869, Abram Moore sold a right of way to the Georgia Airline Railroad. The Southern Railroad and depot were constructed through this section of Gwinnett County in 1871. The village of Suwanee grew around this depot. A second small railroad station, called Shadow Brook, was added on the south side of the railroad tracks at what is now the intersection of the tracks and Lawrenceville-Suwanee Road. “The Belle,” which stopped at this station, was in operation from 1879 to 1931. In 1881 the Richmond & Danville railroad opened a narrow-gauge railroad, known as the Lawrenceville-Suwanee Narrow-Gauge Railroad, which ran from Lawrenceville to Suwanee. Suwanee became a changing station as people transferred from this line to the Southern Railroad line that could take them into Atlanta.

In 1880 the Town of Suwanee consisted of 39 dwelling units and 216 people. A hotel, department store, and other commercial establishments existed in the town. A 1923 Sandborn Map Company detailed map of the town showed 12 stores in operation, cotton gin house, feed mill, two auto repair garages, two blacksmith shops, coffin factory, gristmill, planing mill, and livery stable. Pierce’s Corner, built in 1910, remains standing today and currently is owned by the Suwanee Downtown Development Authority. Cotton served as the town’s economic foundation. Until 1830 the majority of Suwanee area farmers grew cotton. The first cotton gin house was built between 1872 and 1875 on the northeast corner of Jackson and Scales Street.

Suwanee was incorporated in 1949, but remained a small agricultural-based community into the 1970s. Then with the growth of the highway system, including I-85, in the 1970s, more development occurred along the interstate and Lawrenceville-Suwanee Road. While growth and new development have occurred throughout the City of Suwanee over the past several decades, the historic downtown area has remained much the same as it must have appeared in the early part of the 20th century.

At the time of its incorporation in 1949, Suwanee was about 3.1 square miles. Today, Suwanee incorporates nearly 7,000 acres, about 10.8 square miles. And the City’s 1970 population of 615 has mushroomed to more than 16,000. 

Suwanee began as an Indian village about 3 miles southwest of the current downtown area along the banks where Suwanee Creek runs into the Chattahoochee River. For hundreds of years prior to the beginning of the Town of Suwanee, a large Indian village flourished on both sides of the river. The village was originally settled by Shawnee Indians, but later, according to U.S. government documents, both Cherokee and Creek Indians came to the area they referred to as Suwanee Old Town. The village/town is shown on maps indicating land ceded to the U.S. government by the Cherokees in 1817 and the Creeks in 1818.

There are various accounts regarding the naming of the City of Suwanee. One suggests that Suwanee is an Indian word meaning “echo” while another maintains that it is the Creek word for Shawnee. Another account credits the name to the early white settlers’ way of pronouncing the word “Shawnee.” Either way, the name Suwanee appears to be closely tied to the City’s Native American heritage.

The federal government recognized Suwanee as a town when the Suwanee Post Office was established in 1838. As is the case with many communities throughout the South, Suwanee’s growth is tied to the evolution of transportation. As transportation evolved, so did the community of Suwanee.

 

On May 21, 1869, Abram Moore sold a right of way to the Georgia Airline Railroad. The Southern Railroad and depot were constructed through this section of Gwinnett County in 1871. The village of Suwanee grew around this depot. A second small railroad station, called Shadow Brook, was added on the south side of the railroad tracks at what is now the intersection of the tracks and Lawrenceville-Suwanee Road. “The Belle,” which stopped at this station, was in operation from 1879 to 1931. In 1881 the Richmond & Danville railroad opened a narrow-gauge railroad, known as the Lawrenceville-Suwanee Narrow-Gauge Railroad, which ran from Lawrenceville to Suwanee. Suwanee became a changing station as people transferred from this line to the Southern Railroad line that could take them into Atlanta.

In 1880 the Town of Suwanee consisted of 39 dwelling units and 216 people. A hotel, department store, and other commercial establishments existed in the town. A 1923 Sandborn Map Company detailed map of the town showed 12 stores in operation, cotton gin house, feed mill, two auto repair garages, two blacksmith shops, coffin factory, gristmill, planing mill, and livery stable. Pierce’s Corner, built in 1910, remains standing today and currently is owned by the Suwanee Downtown Development Authority. Cotton served as the town’s economic foundation. Until 1830 the majority of Suwanee area farmers grew cotton. The first cotton gin house was built between 1872 and 1875 on the northeast corner of Jackson and Scales Street.

Suwanee was incorporated in 1949, but remained a small agricultural-based community into the 1970s. Then with the growth of the highway system, including I-85, in the 1970s, more development occurred along the interstate and Lawrenceville-Suwanee Road. While growth and new development have occurred throughout the City of Suwanee over the past several decades, the historic downtown area has remained much the same as it must have appeared in the early part of the 20th century.

At the time of its incorporation in 1949, Suwanee was about 3.1 square miles. Today, Suwanee incorporates nearly 7,000 acres, about 10.8 square miles. And the City’s 1970 population of 615 has mushroomed to more than 16,000.

Suwnaee Georgia Neighborhoods

Abbey Hill Road

Aberdeen

Arden Ridge

Ashleigh Walk

Ashley Woods

Ashton

Bears Best Estates

Belmont at Sugarloaf

Berkshire

Bridle Ridge

Brushy Creek

Buckingham Park

Burgess Mill

Camden Woods

Canterbury Place

Cascade Run

Chartwell

Chattahoochee Run

Edinburgh

Fairgreen

Gates at Luberon

Grand Cascades

Highland Lake

Keystone

Lansdowne

Laurel Springs

Madison Place

Meadow Brooke

Miller Brooke

Morningview

Northwicke

Oak Park on the River

Olde Atlanta Club

Olde Suwanee Crossing

Olde Savannah Square

Olde Suwanee Park

Park at Townsend Creek

Peachtree Horizon

Peachtree Manor

Pierce Point

Richland

River Glen

River Laurel

Riverbrooke

Riverglen

Rivermoore Park

Riverwalk

Rosemoore Lake

Royal Oaks

Ruby Forest

Settlers Cove

Settles Cove

Sharon Pointe

Southers Lake

Shakerag Farms

Shadowbrook

St. Marks

Stone Ridge

Summerwind

Suwanee Station

Taylor Woods

The River Club

Timberlost Acres

Village Grove

Westchester Commons

Wildwood at McGinnis Ferry

Wildwood Forest

Wildwood Lakes

Woodland Gardens

Woodward Park

Wyndam Hill

Comments on this entry are closed.