Deering Park is one of the most significant planned developments coming to the Edgewater and New Smyrna Beach area. Located west of I-95 near SR 442 / Indian River Boulevard, the project is designed as a large-scale, mixed-use master-planned community with residential neighborhoods, commercial space, employment centers, parks, trails, conservation land, and major roadway improvements.
For buyers, sellers, investors, and homeowners watching the Edgewater real estate market, Deering Park matters because it has the potential to reshape growth patterns, housing inventory, local job creation, transportation access, and long-term property demand across southwest Edgewater and the surrounding Volusia County area.
According to the City of Edgewater, Deering Park North is a 5,187-acre project planned to include 6,600 housing units and 2.8 million square feet of office, industrial, and commercial space. The city also notes that 3,732 acres are required to be set aside for perpetual conservation, with development proposed over a 20- to 30-year period.
Deering Park represents a major shift for Edgewater because it brings together residential growth, job creation, infrastructure planning, and conservation in one long-term development vision. Rather than being a single neighborhood, the project includes multiple connected development areas, including Deering Park North, Deering Park Center, and the broader Deering Park / Farmton-area planning vision.
The project is expected to include a range of home types and price points, with distinct residential neighborhoods, non-residential spaces, parks, trails, and conservation areas. The Farmton Tree Farm description notes that homes are expected to range in style and price, from smaller homes to larger family dwellings, while shopping and employment areas are intended to support connected neighborhoods.
Here are the most important dates and details to include:
Deering Park North is the largest Edgewater component currently described by the City of Edgewater. The city identifies it as a 5,187-acre project that may include 6,600 housing units, 2.8 million square feet of office, industrial, and commercial space, and 3,732 acres of land set aside for perpetual conservation.
The city also notes that the project is intended to encourage mixed use, creative urban design, environmental protection, employment centers, and sustainable development practices for a large-scale master-planned community.
Deering Park Center is planned near the “gateway” to Edgewater at the southwest corner of I-95 and SR 442. The City of Edgewater describes it as nearly 900 acres with a mix of single-family and multi-family residential development, medical facilities, hotel accommodations, shopping, dining, and industrial/distribution areas. At completion, Deering Park Center could include up to 1.5 million square feet of non-residential space.
This is important because it positions the west side of Edgewater as more than a residential expansion area. It may become a future center for services, jobs, retail, dining, and medical access.
The Deering Park Innovation Center is the New Smyrna Beach portion of the broader Deering Park vision. New Smyrna Beach describes the proposed Innovation Center as a 1,618-acre mixed-use Planned Unit Development located west of I-95 and south of SR 44. It was proposed to include 6 million square feet of commercial and light industrial space, 2,150 residential units, and 400 acres remaining as natural vegetation.
Kolter’s project page states that the Innovation Center is projected to create 5,300 jobs at full build-out, with space for retail, commercial, and light industrial uses.
One of the biggest reasons Deering Park matters to the local housing market is infrastructure. The City of Edgewater states that approval and start-up of Deering Park North will require major road improvements, including extending SR 442 west of I-95 and extending Williamson Boulevard south to Edgewater at SR 442. The city also says infrastructure such as roads, water, sewer, trails, and parks are included in the development agreement and will be paid for by the developer.
For buyers, Deering Park could eventually create new opportunities for homes in Edgewater with access to planned amenities, trails, parks, employment areas, and nearby commercial services. Kolter states the broader project is approved for 8,312 residential units and 4.3 million square feet of nonresidential uses in Edgewater, with initial phases totaling 6,349 acres and more than 4,000 acres in permanent conservation.
Buyers watching Edgewater homes for sale may want to follow Deering Park closely because builder announcements are expected in mid-2026, and first home deliveries are expected in early 2027.
For sellers, Deering Park may help bring more attention to Edgewater as the area gains new infrastructure, commercial development, employment opportunities, and residential growth. Existing homeowners may benefit from increased awareness of Edgewater as more buyers search for homes near New Smyrna Beach, I-95, SR 442, and future development corridors.
At the same time, sellers should understand that new construction can also increase competition. Pricing, presentation, location, condition, and marketing strategy will matter even more as more housing options come online over time.
Deering Park is one of the biggest long-term developments shaping the future of Edgewater, New Smyrna Beach, and the surrounding Volusia County housing market. Whether you are buying, selling, relocating, investing, or watching future new construction opportunities, Hayley can help you understand how local growth may affect your options. Reach out today to talk through your goals, timeline, preferred area, and what this next phase of Edgewater development could mean for you.
All project timelines, builder announcements, amenities, pricing, and development details are subject to change as approvals, construction, and market conditions evolve. The official Deering Park site also states that development details are informational and may change without notice.