Savannah's most beloved early-20th-century streetcar suburb — oak-canopied avenues and grand revival homes.
Ardsley Park, developed beginning in 1910, was Savannah's first major automobile-oriented suburb and is listed on the National Register (1985) as part of the Ardsley Park–Chatham Crescent Historic District. Wide, oak-lined avenues run east-west between Victory Drive and 52nd Street, with Colonial Revival, Tudor, Mediterranean, and Craftsman homes on each block.
The neighborhood is a tight-knit residential community with an active association. Rentals turn over slowly and tend toward 3–4 bedroom single-family homes within a quick drive of Daffin Park, downtown, and Habersham Village shopping.
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New listings are added as they turn over — check our full inventory or contact us to be notified.
Browse all rentalsSavannah's downtown core — 22 surviving Oglethorpe squares, brick rowhouses, and the most walkable address in the city.
Savannah's first post–Civil War streetcar suburb — gingerbread porches, wide avenues, and Forsyth Park at its northern edge.
Savannah's creative corridor — Bull Street galleries, breweries, food-truck yards, and a steady stream of new makers.
Tree-lined streetcar suburb wrapping Starland — broad avenues, restored cottages, and Forsyth Park a few blocks north.
Quiet eastside residential pocket between the Historic District and Truman Parkway.
Historic westside neighborhood with deep Savannah roots — a National Register district under active restoration.