Bend Neighborhood
Bend's prestige address — Cascade views from your doorstep
Custom homes terraced into a basalt butte 600 feet above the Deschutes River, with panoramic views from the Three Sisters to Mt. Bachelor. Bend's most established west-side neighborhood, where you trade walkability for privacy, mature pines, and the kind of view people fly in to see.
Morning coffee on a deck overlooking the Cascades. Drop down the hill for an oat latte at Looney Bean. Mountain bike from the driveway onto Phil's Trail. Pick up groceries at Newport Market. Dinner downtown six minutes away — and you're back home before sunset hits the snowfields.
Awbrey Butte's median sale price sits around $1.2M — well above Bend's overall median. Custom homes on larger lots, hillside views, and mature landscaping drive the premium. Entry-level Awbrey Butte homes start in the high $800k range; estate-class properties on view lots can exceed $3M.
Downtown Bend is about 7 minutes by car from most of Awbrey Butte. Mt. Bachelor is roughly 25 minutes for skiing, and Redmond Airport (RDM) is about 24 minutes for travel. Close enough to be in the action; far enough to feel like a retreat.
Yes — it's one of Bend's most retirement-friendly neighborhoods. Quiet streets with no through-traffic, established neighbors, Cascade views from most homes, and proximity to downtown amenities without being in the bustle. The main trade-off for retirees is the hilltop location — walkability to coffee shops and restaurants is limited, so it's better for people who drive than people who want to walk everywhere.
Almost entirely custom architecture, not spec-builder subdivisions. Homes average around 2,746 square feet on lots averaging 0.39 acres — substantially larger than newer Bend communities. The neighborhood was built out over decades, so styles range from 1990s mountain-modern to recent contemporary builds. Privacy, mature ponderosas, and view lots are the consistent themes.
Three things: views, privacy, and architecture. The hilltop location offers Cascade panoramas you can't get from valley-floor neighborhoods. Lots are larger and there's no through-traffic, so the street feel is genuinely quiet. And because the neighborhood is custom-build (not spec), every home is different — you won't see the same floor plan three doors down.
The hill itself. You can't walk to coffee, dinner, or anything else — it's a real grade, not a gentle slope. Biking out for groceries isn't realistic. And garage space is tighter than the lot sizes suggest, since most driveways are long and properties are designed for view orientation rather than vehicle storage. If you want walkability, look at Old Bend or River West instead. If you want the views and privacy, this is the place.