Taylors Ferry At Bankhead Lake is a unique recreational getaway located just 45 minutes from Birmingham, Alabama that combines waterfront, woods and wildlife. Taylors Ferry is a private, secluded enclave fronting the 9,200 acre Bankhead Lake and is adjacent to the 35,000 acre Mulberry Fork Wildlife Management Area.
Bankhead Lake offers fishing, swimming, boating, skiing and other water sport opportunities plus access to the Gulf of Mexico via the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway.
Mulberry Fork is managed by the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources and offers hunting, hiking and riding. This area is well known for producing trophy deer and turkey. The best part about having this vast landholding as a neighbor is protection from development for the foreseeable future.
Only three lot packages remain and are priced to sell:
Lots 1 and 2: $79,900
Lots 6 and 7: $69,900
Lots 11...
Lots 11, 12 and 13: $99,900
Covenants protect your investment and ensure enjoyment of this lifestyle for the future.
This combination of virtually all outdoor sporting activities, plus the privacy and location cant be beat.
Search for detailed parcel information including; Elevation & Vegetation Maps, Ownership Information, Detailed Parcel Information, Crop History Map, Soil Survey Productivity Data, and more.
Research Parcel InformationFrom Downtown Birmingham, go West on I-59 for 2 miles. Take Exit 123, the Highway 78/Jasper Exit.
Exit Right and go North 11.5 miles to the intersection of the new I-22/ Corridor X. You will cross over the bridge and go take the Right loop, going West towards Jasper.
Take I-22 West 12.6 miles, to Exit 72, the "Cordova" Exit.
At the bottom of the ramp, take a left and go approximately 4.5 miles to where the highway dead-ends at Highway 269. Turn Right on Highway 269 and go 3.5 miles to a crossroads called "Goodsprings" and you will see a Chevron on the Left. Turn Left at the Chevron, onto Goodsprings Rd., then go 0.1 mile (roughly one block) and turn Right onto Tutwiler Rd.
Go 3.6 miles on Tutwiler Rd. Along the way you will cross a steel bridge.
Turn Left onto High Hill Rd., approximately 1 mile after the steel bridge. Start your odometer.
At 0.6 mile, you will come to a four-way stop. Go straight. This is a Walker county-maintained gravel road. You are headed out into a 35,000 acre wildlife management area wilderness and will not pass but a few houses at the start.
At 6.3 miles the road will fork. Take the Right fork.
At 6.9 miles the road will "T" and you will go straight. (The road will take a hard right - do not go that way. If you get to 3 houses a mile later, you have gone too far.)
At 7.3 miles, you have arrived at Taylors Ferry. Take a left and go all the way to the water.
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