Business & Tech

Greater Sayville Chamber Of Commerce: A Gateway To Fire Island, Sayville Draws Visitors To Its Walkable Main Street

THE SCOOP

(Greater Sayville Chamber of Commerce)

2022-02-15

Source: Newsday

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THE SCOOP In Sayville, you’re never far from the Great South Bay and a ferry ride to Fire Island communities like Cherry Grove, Fire Island Pines and the Sunken Forest, says Eileen Tyznar, president of the Greater Sayville Chamber of Commerce. In addition, the Sayville train station is on the Montauk branch of the Long Island Rail Road. “A lot of times people use Sayville as a halfway mark from Manhattan to Montauk,” she says.

THE SCOOP

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“And we even have our own winery, which we’re very proud of,” Tyznar says, referring to Loughlin Vineyard, which is on the grounds of one of the area’s original estates, Meadowcroft. It’s surrounded by San Souci Lakes Nature Preserve, a 316-acre county park with hiking trails and lily pad-filled lakes.

Sayville was founded by John Edwards in 1761 when he built a house on what is the northwest corner of Foster Avenue and Edwards Street. The hamlet was known for its timber and oyster businesses, but its ongoing reputation as a summer tourist destination began when the South Side Railroad arrived in 1868. At one point there were more than 30 hotels in the area.

Dubbed the “friendliest town in America” by California State University at Fresno in 1994, Sayville has a walkable Main Street with boutiques, restaurants and specialty shops like a spice store and the 40-year-old Sayville Chocolatier. There’s also a movie theater, bowling, miniature golf and the bayfront Bathing Beach, as well as an annual August Summerfest.

All these features contribute to the fact that housing inventory moves quickly in Sayville. Tyznar says that’s partly because once people move there, they tend to stay.

Though homes along the water can go for around $1 million, Tyznar says Sayville is still a good place to find a starter home, which go for an average $590,000, and some less than $500,000. “There are a lot of young families that start here with their first homes like a small ranch and then they move up into bigger homes,” she says.

Carine Powers, an agent with Century 21 Bays Edge Realty, adds that home styles include Colonials, Capes and high ranches, and Victorian-style homes that are 100 years old or more. “But they’ve all been renovated,” she says. “Everyone in Sayville keeps up their properties.”

CONDOS AND CO-OPS There is one condo on the market, priced at $382,990.

CONDOS AND CO-OPS

SALE PRICES Between Dec. 31, 2020, and Jan. 31, 2022, there were 155 home sales with a median sale price of $535,000, according to OneKey MLS. The low price for that period was $ 250,000 and the high was $1.6 million. During that period a year earlier there were 144 home sales with a median sale price of $480,000. The price range was $250,000 to $1.2 million.

SALE PRICES

OTHER STATS

OTHER STATS

Town Islip

Town

Area 5.3 square miles

Area

ZIP code 11782

ZIP code

Population 16,569

Population

Median age 44.9

Median age

Median household income $116,005

Median household income

Median home value $565,000*

Median home value

Monthly LIRR ticket from Sayville $405

Monthly LIRR ticket from Sayville

School districts, graduation rates, Sayville (97%), Connetquot (95%), Sachem (94%)

School districts, graduation rates

Parks Sayville Marina Park, Gillette Park

Parks

Libraries Sayville, Connetquot, Sachem

Libraries

Hospitals South Shore University, Long Island Community Hospital

Hospitals

Transit Suffolk County Transit Routes 40, 57, 59

Transit

SOURCES: 2019 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates; OneKey MLS; LIRR, data.nysed.gov *Based on 73 sales in the past six months, according to OneKey MLS

SOURCES

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON HOUSES NOW ON THE MARKET

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON HOUSES NOW ON THE MARKET


This press release was produced by the Greater Sayville Chamber of Commerce. The views expressed here are the author’s own.