Craftsman porches, walkable East Boulevard, and a neighborhood John has called home since 1999.
Myers Park sits at the emotional center of Charlotte — an entire neighborhood built around tree canopies, parkways, and a notion of permanence that the rest of the city looks up to. Laid out by John Nolen in 1911 and planted with what must now be a hundred thousand willow oaks, Queens Road and the streets that branch from it remain the most sought address in the Carolinas' largest city.
The homes here are not just expensive; they are anchored. A Queens Road estate is, by design, the last stop. Residents don't move out of Myers Park; they move within it, sometimes across three generations. Architecture spans Georgian Revival, Tudor, Colonial, and the occasional restrained Modern — but every era shares a vocabulary of slate roofs, brick, wrought iron, and deep front lawns that form a kind of civic horizon.
For the buyer, Myers Park is a long-term commitment dressed as a transaction. You are not flipping here; you are joining a rhythm. The neighborhood has its own shorthand — Queens Road and Queens Road West and Queens Road East, all three different; the Hopedale-Roswell pocket; the quieter streets south of Colony Road — and learning it takes years.
John has represented Myers Park sellers and buyers for more than two decades. The off-market network matters as much as the MLS here; the neighborhood's best homes are often sold quietly, between neighbors, before they're ever listed.
Nearby enclaves.
A closer read on Myers Park.
Streets, schools, what trades and why — the things you only learn living and working here. Tell me where to send it and I’ll get the Myers Park guide to your inbox.
When you’re
ready, so am I.
Whether you’re quietly considering a move or simply curious about what your home might bring today, I welcome the conversation. Every relationship begins over coffee.