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Gregg Dunlap
Homer Bluff Horizons
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Land for Sale from Gregg Dunlap

Homer Bluff Horizons
$395,000
5.2 Acres
Homer, Alaska, 99603
Discover an unparalleled opportunity to own a slice of Alaskan paradise with this breathtaking 5.2-acre lot, majestically perched on the bluffs of Homer, Alaska. This extraordinary property offers a front-row seat to nature’s grandeur, boasting unobstructed panoramic views of the iconic Homer Spit, the rugged Chigmit Mountains, and the shimmering waters of Cook Inlet, with the awe-inspiring Mt. Augustine volcano perfectly framed in the distance.Improvements Electrical is adjacent to the property. Driveway and culvert have been placed. Initial dirt work for building pad is complete.Recreation With exclusive private beach access, this lot invites you to indulge in serene seaside strolls, kayaking adventures, or simply basking in the tranquility of your own coastal retreat. Whether you envision a luxurious custom-built home, a cozy vacation cabin, or an eco-friendly escape, this expansive parcel provides the perfect canvas to bring your dreams to life.

Mountain Air
$1,590,000
0.95 Acres
Anchorage, Alaska, 99516
Create your dream home on this nearly one-acre lot in Anchorage's Shangri-La neighborhood, with stunning views of the city skyline, Cook Inlet, and Sleeping Lady mountain. Partner with Crown Pointe Homes, Anchorage's premier custom home builder, to craft a bespoke residence to your vision. Envision an elegant great room flowing into an open kitchen and dining area, seamlessly connected to outdoor decks that capture the breathtaking vistas.Land 16074 Mountain Air Dr, Anchorage, is an almost one-acre, gently sloping parcel in the prestigious Shangri-La neighborhood. It boasts stunning panoramic views of the Anchorage city skyline, Cook Inlet, and Sleeping Lady mountain. Perc testing has been completed, confirming suitability for septic system installation, making it ready for your custom dream home.Location Serene South Anchorage community off Golden View Dr via Rabbit Creek Rd, offering privacy and proximity to urban conveniences.Airport Access: Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport ~14 miles away, ~20-25 minute drive via Seward Hwy and Minnesota Dr.Nearby Amenities:Fred Meyer grocery store: ~6 miles, ~10-minute drive.Old Seward Hwy dining options: ~6-7 miles, ~10-12 minute drive.Hillside Park for hiking: ~5 miles, ~8-minute drive.Dimond Center (shopping, dining, entertainment): ~7 miles, ~12-minute drive.Hospital Drive Times:Providence Alaska Medical Center: ~9 miles, ~15-minute drive via Seward Hwy.Alaska Regional Hospital: ~12 miles, ~20-minute drive via Glenn Hwy.Alaska Native Medical Center: ~11 miles, ~18-minute drive via Tudor Rd.

Lower Hillside Home-Your home, your vision
$879,000
0.26 Acres
Anchorage, Alaska, 99516
Seize a rare opportunity to own a custom-built, ADA-compliant ranch-style home in Anchorage's Lower Hillside, crafted by Crown Pointe Homes, a premier builder. This to-be-built home blends timeless elegance with modern accessibility, featuring a spacious single-level layout with wide hallways and an open-concept design that maximizes natural and flow.Land Large treed residential lot size at 0.26 acres. The terrain is flat with good drainage.Improvements This is a to-be-built ADA, 2075 sf traditional ranchRecreation Nestled in the serene Lower Hillside, this home is steps from the Alaska Zoo, a family-friendly destination showcasing Alaska’s wildlife, and the Anchorage Golf Course, a championship-level course with stunning mountain views.Region & Climate Lower Hillside in Anchorage has that classic Alaskan vibe… cold, snowy winters and cool, mild summers. Winters are comparitivly mild, dipping to 5–30°F, with lots of snow, like 75 inches a year, but it’s not as brutal as interior Alaska thanks to the ocean nearby. Summers hit 55–68°F, rarely hotter, with long, bright days… think 19 hours of daylight in June! It’s often cloudy, though, with some rain. Spring and fall are quick transitions… spring thaws out, fall gets chilly fast with rain or early snow.Location The Lower Hillside in Anchorage, Alaska, is a serene, residential neighborhood nestled against the scenic Chugach Mountains, offering a perfect blend of natural beauty and urban convenience. This area boasts a peaceful, wooded setting with stunning views, yet it’s just minutes from downtown Anchorage. Residents enjoy easy access to the Alaska Zoo, a beloved family attraction, and the Anchorage Golf Course, a championship-level course with breathtaking mountain backdrops. Essential services like shopping, dining, top-rated schools, and medical facilities are nearby, making daily life convenient. The neighborhood’s slightly elevated position provides a tranquil retreat while remaining close to recreational trails and Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport. With its mix of quiet charm and proximity to city amenities, the Lower Hillside is ideal for those seeking a balance of Alaskan wilderness and modern accessibility.

Denali Views and Moose Dreams
$410,000
4.49 Acres
Trapper Creek, Alaska, 99683
Turn-key and fully furnished hunting and recreational property! Exquisite hand-hewn spruce log cabin with Swedish cope construction, featuring a 3/4 wraparound deck with steel-reinforced posts and stunning views of Denali and the Alaska Range. Savor your coffee on either deck, immersed in breathtaking scenery.Land The terrain is flat to sloping with tributary wetlands of Moose Creek.Improvements Built on an ICF foundation, the main level offers open living space, with upper and lower levels for bedrooms and additional living areas. The fully finished interior showcases refined craftsmanship, and is being sold turn-key, fully furnished for your immediate enjoyment. Powered by an upgraded inverter system with deep cycle batteries and recently installed solar panels for sustainable energy, the cabin is heated by a wood stove, complemented by a small Toyo fuel heater for the lower level. A gravel pad is prepped for a garage, and a reverse osmosis water purification system ensures pristine drinking water. A tributary flows through the property, with the main Moose Creek in your backyard. Located just 2 miles off Petersville Rd on Oilwell Rd in Trapper Creek, a premier recreational area, this unrestricted parcel borders state land on the west. Move-in ready, this cabin is ideal for year-round living or a recreational escape.Recreation Property is adjacent to state owned lands on two boundaries. There is extensive access to summer and winter trails that allows multi-use recreation.Region & Climate Oilwell Road is a short, remote access route in Trapper Creek, Alaska, situated in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough within the expansive Mat-Su Valley. This area serves as the southern gateway to Denali State Park, nestled at the foothills of the towering Alaska Range, offering stunning vistas of Denali (North America’s highest peak) and surrounding peaks like the Tokishna and Curry Ridge. The landscape features vast wetlands, meandering streams such as Kroto Creek—where the road provides stream access for fishing and monitoring—and rolling hills ideal for homesteading, mining history, and outdoor pursuits like hiking, snowmobiling, and wildlife viewing. Originally tied to early 20th-century gold prospecting via nearby Petersville Road, the region blends rugged wilderness with a sparse population of around 500, emphasizing self-reliant living and natural resource access along the George Parks HighwayTrapper Creek experiences a transitional subarctic climate, bridging the milder maritime influences of Cook Inlet to the south with the drier, more extreme continental conditions of Alaska’s interior. Summers are short and mild, with average highs around 65–70°F (18–21°C) in July, featuring long daylight hours for outdoor activities but occasional rain from Pacific weather systems. Winters are long and cold, with average lows dipping to 0–10°F (-18 to -12°C) in January, abundant snowfall (over 80 inches annually) transforming the terrain into a snowmachine haven, and occasional chinook winds bringing brief thaws. Spring and fall are brief, marked by muddy transitions, while the area’s elevation (about 350 feet) and proximity to the Alaska Range amplify temperature swings and frost risks, supporting a growing season of roughly 100–120 days.History Originally tied to early 20th-century gold prospecting via nearby Petersville Road, the region blends rugged wilderness with a sparse population of around 500, emphasizing self-reliant living and natural resource access along the George Parks Highway.Location Oilwell Road in Trapper Creek, Alaska, is a remote area along the George Parks Highway, with limited local services but accessible key facilities within a 1–2 hour drive. The closest town, Talkeetna, is 31 miles away (45 minutes), while Houston is 40 miles (50 minutes), Willow is 50 miles (1 hour), Wasilla is 70 miles (1 hour 15 minutes), and Anchorage is 116 miles (2 hours). For medical needs, Mat-Su Regional Medical Center and Mat-Su Urgent Care in Wasilla are both 70 miles away (1 hour 15 minutes), and Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage is 116 miles (2 hours). The nearest airports are Talkeetna Airport, 31 miles away (45 minutes), and Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, 116 miles (2 hours). Local amenities like gas stations and grocery stores are available within a mile in Trapper Creek (2 minutes), and the entrance to Denali State Park is 10–15 miles away (15–20 minutes).

North Star Homestead
$1,550,000
40 Acres
Talkeetna, Alaska, 99676
Rare road-accessible, on-grid 40-acre property in Talkeetna! Flat land with great potential for private airstrip & hangar. Very private (no neighbors in sight) yet close to paved road, downtown, school, library, lake, park & trails. Stunning 2,700 sq ft scribe log home, heated greenhouse, dual boilers (wood/oil), shop/garage, and many, many more improvements. Turnkey Alaskan homestead or getaway!Land Discover the perfect blend of privacy, productivity, and true Alaskan freedom at North Star Homestead, a rare road-accessible, on-grid 40-acre property in Talkeetna. This mostly flat, highly usable land offers incredible seclusion with no neighbors in sight, yet sits conveniently close to a paved, state-maintained road. What truly sets this property apart is its outstanding potential for a private airstrip and hangar, ideal for pilots who dream of flying in and out of their own homestead. The open, level terrain makes it an excellent candidate for a runway, giving you direct access to the skies and the vast wilderness beyond.Improvements At the heart of the homestead stands a stunning full-scribe log home built with massive white spruce logs, offering approximately 2,700 square feet of warm, inviting living space. A lush green lawn and beautifully terraced backyard create an idyllic setting, complemented by a productive veggie garden, heated greenhouse, and bee hive platform with electric fencing, deluxe chicken coop, and many more improvements. Self-sufficient living is made easy with dual boilers (a remote wood boiler or oil) that provide all heat and domestic hot water, along with a large woodshed for ample fuel storage.Power reliability is assured with a generator transfer switch on the main house, allowing seamless switching from grid to generator during any interruption. This turnkey property is ready for your Alaskan dreams… whether you’re a pilot looking to land at home, raising animals, growing your own food, or simply enjoying the quiet wilderness privacy–and your own private trails–that make Talkeetna so special. Recreation Just minutes from downtown Talkeetna, you’re close to the elementary school, public library, Christiansen Lake, XY Talkeetna Lakes Park, the river boat launch, the paved bike trail along the Talkeetna Spur Road, and endless miles of additional public land trails for horseback riding, cross-country skiing, ATVing, snow machining, running and more.Region & Climate Talkeetna is a charming, historic pioneer town nestled at the confluence of three rivers and serving as a popular gateway to Denali National Park. The local area offers abundant outdoor recreation including flightseeing tours over Denali, river rafting, jet boat tours, fishing, hiking, and winter activities like cross-country skiing, snowmachining, and dog mushing. Summers are mild with highs around 68°F, while winters are cold and snowy with lows near 8°F. The area receives about 27–29 inches of annual precipitation and roughly 110–120 inches of snowfall, creating a true four-season Alaskan lifestyle surrounded by vast wilderness and stunning mountain views.History Talkeetna and the surrounding region have deep roots in Alaska’s pioneer past. For thousands of years, the Dena’ina people used the confluence of the Susitna, Chulitna, and Talkeetna Rivers as a seasonal gathering and trading site. Gold discoveries in the 1890s drew miners and trappers, establishing Talkeetna as a supply hub. The town boomed in 1915 when it was chosen as a district headquarters for the Alaska Railroad, reaching nearly 1,000 residents by 1917. After the railroad moved north, the area transitioned to a quieter life of homesteading, small-scale mining, and bush living. Today’s properties on roads like Comsat and E Forest Lane reflect this homesteading heritage—private wooded parcels carved from the vast wilderness, offering the same seclusion and self-reliant spirit that has defined the region for over a century.Location North Star Homestead is located on a quiet, wooded 40-acre parcel in the Talkeetna area of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough. The property sits just minutes from downtown Talkeetna via the Talkeetna Spur Road, offering easy access to this historic pioneer town at the base of the Alaska Range and gateway to Denali National Park. The nearest airport is the Talkeetna Airport (PATK), only about 4–5 miles away, with additional local options including Christiansen Lake Seaplane Base. Larger commercial service is available at Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport, roughly 115–120 miles south (about 2.5 hours drive). Closest amenities include grocery stores, gas, restaurants, and shops in Talkeetna, with bigger services in Wasilla (about 70 miles) or Palmer (about 80 miles).

RadioShack on the Harbor
$1,250,000
0.15 Acres
Valdez, Alaska, 99686
Rare turnkey Valdez opportunity: profitable mixed-use commercial property plus going-concern business. ~6,300 sf with an active RadioShack-authorized electronics and firearms store downstairs and a 3BR/2BA owner's residence upstairs (harbor and Chugach views). General Commercial zoning permits short-term rental. Real estate plus business. Financials under NDA.Land The lot occupies 6,342 square feet (approximately 0.15 acre) in the heart of downtown Valdez. The parcel is fully improved and efficiently configured: the two-story, roughly 6,300 sf mixed-use building anchors the site, and the balance of the lot is developed as 8 on-site, asphalt-paved parking spaces serving both retail customers and the residential unit upstairs. The site is served by municipal water and sewer and is zoned General Commercial, which supports the current electronics and firearms retail use on the ground floor and permits use of the second-floor 3-bedroom, 2-bath residence as a short-term rental.Street frontage runs along Chitina Avenue, with pedestrian access directly from the public sidewalk into the retail showroom and dedicated vehicle access to the on-site parking. The downtown location places the parcel within easy walking distance of Valdez’s small-boat harbor, restaurants, banks, the post office, the public library, and Providence Valdez Medical Center. Surrounding parcels are a mix of commercial, retail, and lodging uses consistent with the General Commercial designation and the downtown commercial corridor’s character.Improvements The property at 203 Chitina Avenue is improved with a single, integrated, two-story mixed-use commercial building totaling approximately 6,300 square feet on a 6,342 sf lot. The structure was built in 1983 and underwent a major renovation in 1991.Ground floor (approximately 3,940 sf). The ground level is configured for active commercial use. Roughly 2,940 sf is finished retail showroom currently operating as an authorized RadioShack electronics dealer and firearms retailer, with direct customer entry from the Chitina Avenue sidewalk, display fixtures and shelving in place, point-of-sale and security systems installed, and exterior signage along the front facade. Adjoining the showroom is approximately 1,000 sf of warehouse, receiving, and secure-storage space, configured to support retail back-of-house operations and firearms-specific secure storage. Mechanical, electrical, and plumbing services for the building are routed through this floor.Second floor (approximately 1,940 sf). The second story is built out as a self-contained, 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom owner’s residence with private access. The unit looks out over Port Valdez harbor and the Chugach Mountains. The residence is fully separated from the commercial space below, suitable for owner-occupied use or, under the General Commercial zoning, use as a short-term rental.Site improvements. The balance of the lot is developed as a 8-space, asphalt-paved, on-site parking area serving both customers and the upstairs residence. Exterior signage along Chitina Avenue provides street-level visibility. The site has no fencing, no agricultural improvements, no outbuildings or shops, and no separate storage structures; none would be appropriate to the downtown commercial setting. Recreation Few places in Alaska or the Lower 48 pack as much outdoor recreation into so small a footprint as Valdez. Step out of town and within minutes you can be casting for halibut, lingcod, rockfish, or one of five species of Pacific salmon in the protected waters of Prince William Sound. Valdez hosts some of the largest sportfishing derbies in the state, including the Silver Salmon Derby and the Halibut Derby. Sea kayakers and boaters paddle out past Shoup Bay to the calving face of Columbia Glacier, one of the largest tidewater glaciers in North America, while day cruisers run Prince William Sound for orca, humpback whales, sea otters, puffins, and Steller sea lions.In winter the recreation only intensifies. Thompson Pass averages more than 500 inches of snow per year, making it one of the snowiest places in North America and a global magnet for heli-ski operators, backcountry skiers, and snowboarders; it has hosted the World Extreme Skiing Championships and remains a fixture on the international big-mountain circuit. Ice climbers ascend the frozen ribbons of Bridal Veil Falls and Horsetail Falls in Keystone Canyon, snowmachiners thread the high country, and the long, dark winters deliver some of the best Northern Lights viewing in the state.Hikers tackle the historic Mineral Creek trail, the Goat Trail, and the alpine bowls above town. Hunters take moose, black bear, mountain goat, and waterfowl within the surrounding game-management unit, with Sitka blacktail deer a short boat ride away. Add river rafting, mountain biking, glacier flights, photography, and the Valdez Fly-In and Air Show each May, and Valdez delivers a recreational menu most small Alaska towns can only dream of.General Operations Two distinct, recession-resistant revenue streams operate under one roof: a full-line consumer electronics store (components, accessories, audio, computing, special-order) and a firearms retail and FFL transfer business serving Valdez and the surrounding Prince William Sound region. The store is a long-standing community fixture with established walk-in traffic, repeat clientele, and strong local recognition built over decades.Established profitable operation; the business currently runs in the blackAuthorized RadioShack dealer, Valdez’s recognized destination for consumer electronics, with full brand recognition, signage, and an established dealer relationship (assignment subject to brand-owner approval)Two complementary revenue categories: electronics + firearmsTransferable Federal Firearms License (subject to ATF approval); current owner will train the buyer and provide a transition period of [length, e.g., 30–60 days]Loyal local customer base anchored by Valdez’s pipeline, port, fishing, and contractor economiesInventory, FF&E, POS, security systems, and vendor accounts included in the saleDetailed financial information (revenue, owner’s discretionary earnings, and full P&L) is available to qualified buyers upon execution of a non-disclosure agreement.Region & Climate Valdez sits at the head of Port Valdez, a deep, ice-free fjord at the eastern edge of Prince William Sound on Alaska’s south-central coast, ringed by 5,000-foot peaks of the Chugach Mountains and anchored economically by the southern terminus of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline and the Valdez Marine Terminal. The climate is maritime subarctic and surprisingly mild for the latitude. Summers are cool and long-daylight, with highs typically in the 60s, ideal for halibut and salmon fishing, sea kayaking past tidewater glaciers, glacier tours of Columbia Glacier, and hiking the historic Mineral Creek and Goat trails. Winters bring snow more reliably than almost anywhere in North America: the town averages roughly 300 inches at sea level, and Thompson Pass just outside town regularly tops 500 inches, drawing heli-skiers, backcountry skiers, snowmachiners, and ice climbers from around the world to its big-mountain terrain and the frozen ribbons of Keystone Canyon. Annual precipitation runs near 65 inches, most of it falling as winter snow. The combination of a stable industrial economy, world-class year-round recreation, and dramatic alpine-meets-ocean scenery is what gives Valdez its unusual blend of small-town livability and global outdoor draw.History The shores of Prince William Sound were home for thousands of years to Alutiiq and Eyak peoples, and the name “Valdez” was applied to the bay by Spanish explorer Salvador Fidalgo in 1790, who named it for Spanish naval officer Antonio Valdés y Fernández Bazán. The modern townsite began as a port of entry during the Klondike Gold Rush of 1898, when ships unloaded would-be miners onto the beach to attempt the brutal Valdez Glacier Trail north to the goldfields. The route claimed many lives but, once improved as the Richardson Trail and later the Richardson Highway, established Valdez’s enduring identity as the only ice-free, year-round port linking interior Alaska to tidewater.On March 27, 1964, the magnitude 9.2 Great Alaska Earthquake devastated the original Valdez town site, which sat on unstable glacial outwash. An undersea landslide killed 32 people at the harbor, and damage was so severe that the entire town was eventually relocated about four miles west onto more stable ground. The current downtown grid, where 203 Chitina Avenue sits today, was largely platted and built between 1967 and the early 1970s and represents one of the few fully relocated municipalities in United States history.The next chapter was the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. Construction of the pipeline and the Valdez Marine Terminal between 1974 and 1977 gave the local economy a stable industrial anchor; the first tanker loaded with North Slope crude departed Valdez in August 1977. The 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Prince William Sound ushered in modern oil-spill-response infrastructure that remains a major local employer today.203 Chitina Avenue itself was built in 1983 during the peak pipeline era and underwent a major renovation in 1991, placing it firmly within the modern post-relocation downtown commercial core. The property has served as a downtown retail fixture ever since.Location Valdez sits at the head of Port Valdez, a deep-water, ice-free fjord on the eastern edge of Prince William Sound on Alaska’s south-central coast. The community of approximately 4,000 year-round residents is the southern terminus of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline (TAPS) and home to the Valdez Marine Terminal, the largest crude-oil shipping port in the United States. The property at 203 Chitina Avenue is in the heart of downtown Valdez, within walking distance of the small-boat harbor, restaurants, banks, the post office, Providence Valdez Medical Center, the public library, Prince William Sound College, and Valdez K-12 schools. A full-service Safeway, hardware stores, fuel, and seasonal cruise-ship and ferry terminals are all minutes away.Air access is straightforward. Valdez Pioneer Field (VDZ) sits about three and a half miles from downtown and offers commuter service to Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport (ANC). The flight is roughly 40 minutes. Ted Stevens Anchorage International is the regional hub for the state, with direct service to Seattle, Portland, Minneapolis, Chicago, Honolulu, and a number of seasonal mainline destinations.By road, Valdez is approximately 305 miles from Anchorage. The drive runs east from Anchorage on the Glenn Highway (AK-1) through the Matanuska Valley, past Matanuska Glacier, Sheep Mountain, and Eureka Summit, to Glennallen (about 190 miles, three and a half to four hours). From Glennallen, the Richardson Highway (AK-4) heads south for another 115 miles through Copper Center, over Thompson Pass, and down through the cliff-walled spectacle of Keystone Canyon into Valdez. The full drive takes about five and a half to six hours in good conditions and is widely considered one of the most scenic stretches of paved highway in North America.Valdez is also reachable by the Alaska Marine Highway System, with ferry service across Prince William Sound from Whittier and Cordova providing a working freight and passenger link to the rest of coastal Alaska. Fairbanks is approximately 365 miles north via the continuation of the Richardson Highway, a six-and-a-half to seven-hour drive.