3105 Deans Court is a four-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath single-family home in Chesapeake's Country View subdivision — a quietly established neighborhood in the 23321 zip code that offers generous lot sizes and an easy pace without sacrificing proximity to everyday conveniences. At 2,714 square feet on just over a quarter acre, this 1994-built property delivers meaningful square footage for the price in one of Hampton Roads' most cost-efficient cities.
Country View sits in the northwestern corner of Chesapeake, in the stretch of the city that borders Portsmouth and feeds naturally toward the Western Branch corridor. It's the kind of subdivision that doesn't announce itself loudly — no grand entrance monument, no manicured commercial strip at the gate — just well-maintained streets with mature trees, established lawns, and homes that have settled comfortably into their lots over the past three decades. The neighborhood was built out largely through the 1990s, which gives it a cohesive architectural character: traditional two-story colonials and transitional designs with attached garages, brick accents, and the kind of lot spacing that means your neighbor's grill isn't in your living room.
Deans Court itself is a cul-de-sac address, which carries real practical value. Traffic is minimal by definition, the street dead-ends into a turning circle rather than a through route, and the lot configuration tends to be slightly wider and more private than mid-block addresses on a straight street. For households with kids, dogs, or simply a preference for a quieter front yard, a cul-de-sac position in a neighborhood like Country View is a genuine quality-of-life feature rather than a marketing afterthought. COUNTRY VIEW homes reflect a consistent mid-size suburban character that has aged well and continues to attract buyers relocating from denser urban submarkets within Hampton Roads.
Living in Chesapeake
Chesapeake is a city that rewards buyers who do the math. It consistently offers larger lots, lower property tax rates, and more square footage per dollar than Virginia Beach or Norfolk — and that arithmetic becomes especially clear when you're comparing a 0.276-acre lot in the 23321 zip code to what a similar footprint costs a few miles east. The city covers an enormous geographic footprint, from the rural Dismal Swamp corridor in the south to the more densely developed northern tier near the Portsmouth and Suffolk lines, and Country View sits in that northern tier where infrastructure and services are mature.
Buyers considering homes for sale in Chesapeake often find themselves weighing the city against Suffolk for raw land value, or against Virginia Beach for school access and beach proximity. Chesapeake's answer to that comparison is usually: more house, more yard, lower carrying costs, and a commute structure that works well for anyone tied to the naval or shipyard corridor. Northern Chesapeake in particular has seen steady demand from buyers who want a suburban feel without the full rural tradeoff — Edinburgh, Bells Mill, and the Cahoon area are all nearby reference points, but Country View's 1990s vintage gives it a slightly more established, less cookie-cutter feel than the newer-construction pockets a few miles away.
What's Nearby
The walkability story at 3105 Deans Court is more interesting than most cul-de-sac addresses in suburban Chesapeake. Within roughly eight-tenths of a mile — close enough that a motivated person could walk it in under fifteen minutes — there's a legitimate cluster of daily-use destinations that removes a surprising number of car trips from the week. An ALDI sits right in that radius for grocery runs, and Lilley Farms Strawberries + More adds a local, farm-market option that's a rarity this close to a residential street. For a neighborhood built in the early 1990s, that's a convenience layer that wasn't part of the original design and has simply grown up around it.
Coffee options in the immediate area are almost comically well-represented: a Starbucks, a Dunkin', and JoJack's Espresso Bar & Cafe all fall within a mile, which means the morning-coffee debate is less about driving and more about preference. For quick meals, B's Soulfull brings local character to the dining mix, and the usual fast-casual options — Subway, Little Caesars — are right there for the nights when cooking isn't happening. Full Potential Fitness and Wellness is within a seven-tenths-of-a-mile radius, which removes the "it's too far to go" excuse from the gym conversation entirely.
Broader retail and dining expand quickly once you're in the car. The Western Branch corridor along Route 17 and the Portsmouth/Chesapeake border area along Portsmouth Boulevard bring big-box retail, medical offices, and a full range of chain and independent dining within a five-to-ten minute drive. Interstate 664 is accessible without a long surface-street slog, which opens up the rest of Hampton Roads — downtown Norfolk, the Monitor-Merrimac Bridge-Tunnel, and the Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel — in reasonable drive times.
Commuting to NSA Northwest Annex
The nearest military installation to 3105 Deans Court is NSA Northwest Annex, which sits approximately 4.6 miles away — a drive that typically clocks in around nine minutes under normal conditions. That's a short commute by any measure, and it places this address in a genuinely convenient position for personnel assigned to the Annex or to commands that operate out of that installation.
NSA Northwest Annex is a smaller, lower-profile facility compared to the major Hampton Roads installations, but its proximity to the broader Portsmouth-Chesapeake military corridor makes it a relevant data point for a wide range of active-duty households. Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth is also within reasonable reach from this address — typically fifteen to twenty minutes depending on the route and time of day — and Naval Station Norfolk, the largest naval base in the world, is accessible via I-664 in roughly twenty to twenty-five minutes. Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Hampton is a longer drive, generally forty to fifty minutes, which puts it at the outer edge of reasonable daily commuting but well within PCS-assignment range for families who want to stay in the western Hampton Roads submarket.
For homes near NSA Northwest Annex, the Country View area offers a practical combination: sub-ten-minute base access, no HOA restrictions on vehicles or modifications, a cul-de-sac setting that suits families, and lot sizes large enough to accommodate the storage needs that military households often accumulate. The 23321 zip code has a steady PCS market, and the price-to-size ratio in Chesapeake means BAH stretches further here than in comparable submarkets.
A Walk Through the Property
Built in 1994, 3105 Deans Court reflects the transitional architectural moment of that era — the point at which new construction in Hampton Roads moved away from the boxy ranch and split-level forms of the 1970s and 1980s toward the two-story colonial and traditional configurations that still define suburban residential construction today. At 2,714 square feet across four bedrooms and two and a half baths, the floor plan is sized for a household that needs genuine separation between living and sleeping spaces — not a stretched two-bedroom pretending to be more.
The half-bath placement on the main level is a practical feature that buyers with guests or young children consistently appreciate; it keeps traffic out of the private upper-level bathrooms during the hours when the house is most active. The 0.276-acre lot provides meaningful outdoor space without tipping into the maintenance burden of a half-acre property. There is no pool and no HOA, which means the yard is yours to configure without committee approval — a detail that matters more than it sounds when you're thinking about fences, outbuildings, playsets, or garden layouts. The garage configuration and foundation type are consistent with 1994-era construction standards in this part of Chesapeake, built on a region where slab and crawl-space foundations are both common depending on the builder and specific lot.
A Day in the Life
Morning at 3105 Deans Court starts quietly — cul-de-sac streets don't get commuter traffic, so the front of the house stays calm even during the 7 a.m. rush. Coffee is a short walk away in multiple directions. The quarter-acre lot gives the backyard enough room for a morning routine that doesn't involve looking directly into a neighbor's kitchen window. Grocery runs to ALDI take fifteen minutes including the drive. Weekends open up quickly: the Western Branch area has parks and recreational options, the Portsmouth waterfront is a short drive for dining and events, and the broader Hampton Roads recreation corridor — beaches, marinas, state parks — is accessible within thirty to forty-five minutes in most directions. It's a low-friction daily life in a part of Chesapeake that has enough infrastructure to be genuinely convenient without the density that makes some Hampton Roads neighborhoods feel compressed.
For Military Families Considering This Address
The nine-minute drive to NSA Northwest Annex is the headline, but the broader military-commute picture from Country View is strong across multiple installations. No HOA means no restrictions on work vehicles, trailers, or the kind of equipment that accumulates across a military career. The four-bedroom floor plan accommodates the family configurations that PCS orders tend to produce — a home office that doubles as a guest room, kids in separate rooms, space for the inevitable home gym. Chesapeake's property tax structure tends to produce lower annual carrying costs than Virginia Beach for comparable properties, which matters when you're projecting a three-year assignment and thinking about resale.
For Hampton Roads Families Upgrading from a Starter Home
A 2,714-square-foot, four-bedroom home on a cul-de-sac in an established Chesapeake neighborhood is a recognizable step-up profile. The lot size is large enough to feel like a real yard, the bedroom count supports a growing household, and the no-HOA status removes the monthly fee and the rulebook. Country View's 1990s vintage means the neighborhood infrastructure — streets, utilities, drainage — is mature and settled, without the growing-pains quality that sometimes affects newer developments.
For First-Time Buyers Exploring Chesapeake
At 2,714 square feet, this property sits above the typical first-time buyer floor in the Hampton Roads market, but buyers new to the region who are stretching toward a longer-term home rather than a transitional one will find the 23321 zip code a productive place to look. Chesapeake homes in Country View offer the kind of value-per-square-foot ratio that makes the math work for buyers coming from higher-cost markets — the Mid-Atlantic corridor, Northern Virginia, or out-of-state relocations where this size and lot would carry a significantly higher price tag.
For Buyers Comparing 1990s-Era Homes in Chesapeake
The early-to-mid-1990s construction window produced a specific type of Hampton Roads home: larger than the postwar ranches, more traditionally styled than the 1980s contemporaries, and built before the cost-cutting that characterized some 2000s-era tract construction. Buyers comparing houses for sale in Chesapeake VA across different eras often find that 1990s homes in established subdivisions like Country View hit a sweet spot — enough age to have mature landscaping and settled lots, recent enough that mechanical systems and structural components haven't reached end-of-life in the way that 1960s and 1970s homes sometimes have.
Tom and Dariya Milan at LPT Realty know the Country View neighborhood and the broader northern Chesapeake market in detail. Whether 3105 Deans Court is the right fit or a useful comparison point on your way to the right fit, the conversation starts at vahome.com or by phone — one call connects you with local knowledge across all four of the buyer profiles above.
Summary generated by AI from public records and publicly available information.