A Lot 15-Minute Drive From Finlay, TX by L of G
Payment Options
Payment Note(s)
If you are interested in reserving this parcel, click “Reserve Now” button for any of the payment options. You will be redirected to our payment page to make the initial reservation payment. The Finance Terms is $1,250 Down with $249 Doc Fee and then $247/mo for 120 months. Call/text (386) 251-5263 for questions. Buyer is responsible for ALL DUE DILIGENCE. Please let us know if there’s an error on this page.
Description
- No Credit Check.
- No HOAs and no flood zones.
- Zoned Residential.
- Perfect for off grid life.
- Your land. Your way.
- Nearby places: EI Paso Zoo, Fort Bliss Museum, Franklin Mountains State Park
Property Information
Parcel Size
20.64 Acre(s)
State
Texas
County
Hudspeth County
Nearest Cities
Sierra Blanca, Mile High
Parcel Number
23562
Legal Description
69 TSP 1 SEC 42 T & P VISTA HEIGHTS #3 LOT 20 (20.64 ACRES)
Features
Acres
20.64
Dimension
310 x 360 ft
County
Hudspeth County
Access
Public Road – Gravel
Coordinates
31°54’02.1″N 105°15’42.9″W
Zoning
Residential
Elevation
3837ft
Purchase Information/Fees
$249/land
Doc Fee
A additional fee of $249 to reserve the property is required to begin the purchase process. This is a non-refundable fee.
$20/month
Note Fees
A additional fee of $20 per month will be added for banking note fees.
$20/month
Prorated Tax
An additional fee of $20 will be added for Prorated Taxes.
Nearby City
Sierra Blanca, Texas
Sierra Blanca, the county seat of Hudspeth County, is at the intersection of Ranch Road 1111, Interstate Highway 10, and U.S. Highway 80, eighty miles southeast of El Paso in the south central part of the county. It is also at the junction of the Southern Pacific and Missouri Pacific railroads. The town owes its existence to the competition that surrounded the construction of the nation’s second transcontinental rail link. Collis P. Huntington’s Southern Pacific line began building eastward from the Pacific in 1869, while Jay Gould’s Texas and Pacific Railway began building westward from Central Texas in 1872. By November 25, 1881, the two crews had built to within ten miles of each other, and neither had any intention of yielding to the other. On the next day Huntington and Gould agreed to a compromise, and on December 15 Gould drove a silver spike to join the two roads seven miles southeast of Sierra Blanca Mountain.
More info at https://www.texasalmanac.com/places/sierra-blanca