Ashland Land for Sale
PRICE REDUCED — Normal Neighborhood Gateway | ±9.71 Acres | 2082 & 2090 E Main St, Ashland OR
Now offered at $2,900,000. A rare opportunity to acquire ±9.71 acres of prime, plan-aligned land at the eastern gateway of Ashland's adopted 93-acre Normal Neighborhood District — the City's designated area for sustainable, walkable, mixed-use growth. The assemblage of three contiguous tax lots (addressed as 2082 & 2090 E Main St) offers excellent visibility and direct East Main frontage, approximately one mile from Southern Oregon University and downtown Ashland. It lies within the Urban Growth Boundary and is contiguous to existing City limits — the only parcel in the Plan area with stand-alone annexation-readiness in the chain of contiguity to City services, creating a defined pathway for Type III annexation (subject to City process and approvals). The property also carries the only commercial overlay frontage (NN-1-3.5-C) in the entire 93-acre district. Pricing is supported by a six-comparable land adjustment grid of UGB-adjacent and East Main corridor sales together with structural attributes unique to this parcel, and reflects the buyer's pre-entitlement, as-is position.
Why Ashland & Southern Oregon
Ashland anchors Southern Oregon's most active growth corridor, pairing renowned small-town livability with real development fundamentals. Home to Southern Oregon University and a celebrated performing-arts community, the City of roughly 21,000 sits within a Rogue Valley regional market exceeding 200,000, with a highly educated population and a broad economy spanning healthcare, education, manufacturing, tourism, and technology (major employers include Asante Health, Lithia Motors, and Harry & David). Positioned on Interstate 5 midway between Portland and San Francisco — Rogue Valley International–Medford Airport ~15 miles north — Ashland has absorbed roughly 13% growth since 2010 almost entirely through infill.
A Plan-Conformant, De-Risked Entitlement Pathway
Adopted by the Ashland City Council in 2015, the Normal Neighborhood Plan establishes the policy and design framework for this site. Use, density, and street network are plan-conformant by design — the entitlement question is master-plan-level coordination and Type III annexation, not whether development is permitted in principle. Indicative timing from acquisition to vertical construction: 18–30 months. Anticipated zoning under the Normal Neighborhood framework includes NN-1-5, NN-1-3.5, NN-1-3.5-C, and NN-2, supporting a graduated mix of single-family, cottage, attached, mixed-use, and small-scale neighborhood commercial uses.
Phased Infrastructure — Frontage-Scale, Not Full Corridor
The Plan expressly contemplates phased completion of East Main Street improvements calibrated to development impact. A phase-one frontage development is responsible for proportionate frontage-scale improvements, not full corridor buildout. Importantly, the site does not abut the rail line — full Normal Avenue buildout and the rail-crossing upgrade are not phase-one obligations for this parcel. The City's Advance Financing District (AFD) mechanism is available to reimburse qualifying off-site sewer oversizing and qualifying frontage improvement segments, contingent on execution of a Development Agreement, materially improving the project's cash-on-cash position.
Stackable Incentives May Be Available to Qualifying Buyers
Beyond the AFD, qualifying buyers may have access to System Development Charge (SDC) offsets, Ashland's Affordable Housing Trust Fund, Oregon state grants for childcare and early-learning facility build-out, federal 45L energy-efficient new home credits, Investment Tax Credits on qualifying solar installation, and USDA Community Facilities financing. Eligibility, application, and award are subject to program-specific rules; several programs operate on competitive cycles with defined funding windows, and availability is the buyer's responsibility to verify and pursue at time of application.
Defined Buyer Audience
The site is well-suited to three identifiable buyer profiles, each with materially different underwriting frameworks:
Regional multifamily and mixed-use developers delivering 50- to 150-unit projects in regional Pacific Northwest markets
Mission-aligned partnerships pairing market-rate residential with community-serving programming such as affordable, workforce, or childcare/early-learning components — directly supported by the NN-1-3.5-C overlay
Phased small-builder strategies entitling the full parcel and phasing vertical construction over a multi-year window, with intermediate lot sales as appropriate
The NN density mix and Plan phasing structure accommodate all three.
Illustrative Development Capacity
Conceptual planning materials illustrate one representative program of approximately 88 dwelling units across single-family detached, cottage, attached, and mixed-use formats, plus ~7,000 SF of ground-floor neighborhood-scale commercial. This program is illustrative only — not the basis on which the asking price is set, and not represented as achievable on any specific timeline. Buyers should develop their own program and underwriting.
Strategic Advantages
Stand-Alone Annexation Readiness: The only parcel in the Plan area with stand-alone contiguity in the relevant chain to City services
Sole Commercial Overlay: NN-1-3.5-C — the only commercial overlay frontage in the entire 93-acre district
Plan-Conformant: Use, density, and street network already established under the City's adopted 2015 Plan
Phased Infrastructure: Frontage-scale obligations only — no rail-crossing or full-corridor buildout in phase one
AFD Reimbursement: Defined pathway for qualifying sewer oversizing and frontage improvement segments
Stackable Incentives: AFD, SDC offsets, state childcare grants, federal energy credits, and USDA programs may be available to qualifying buyers
Existing Improvement: 3,819 SF structure (1995, good condition; 2024 County improvement value $258,920; County-classified residence, historically a community building) for interim, caretaker, or compatible use
Strong Locational Fundamentals: Direct East Main frontage with arterial access to I-5; ~1 mile to SOU and downtown Ashland; ~15 miles to Rogue Valley International–Medford Airport
Constrained Supply: One of the last remaining large, contiguous development parcels within Ashland's UGB
Market Drivers
Ashland's residential market combines limited new-construction inventory with steady absorption and strong locational fundamentals. Surrounding single-family home values within one mile of the site averaged more than $550,000 in 2025, with active comparable new-construction product (Kestrel Park) currently selling from the mid-$700,000s. The City's Comprehensive Plan emphasizes infill and mixed-use development within the UGB, presenting a limited-window opportunity for developers to secure a plan-aligned position ahead of the district's broader buildout.