Beaux-Arts sister to Ardsley Park, planned around Washington Avenue's grand boulevard and radial streets.
Platted alongside Ardsley Park in 1910 and listed on the National Register in 1985, Chatham Crescent breaks from Savannah's grid with a Beaux-Arts plan organized around Washington Avenue's landscaped "grand mall." Streets fan out in gentle radials lined with some of midtown's largest homes — Colonial Revival, Mediterranean, and Tudor — often on lots that exceed a quarter acre.
The scale and landscaping make it one of the most distinctive residential addresses in the city.
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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.