Riverfront Tucked along the water's edge inside Grand Harbor, East Harbor Village is the community's most direct expression of riverfront living — a quiet enclave of custom estate homes and riverfront condominiums sharing the same unbroken frontage on the Indian River. Several of the single-family homes here date to the early 2000s, custom-built by regional builders, with more than one rising three full stories to capture river views from every level. Interiors run to marble floors, wet bars, and in some residences a private elevator connecting to a top-floor terrace built for watching the water. Homes typically run from roughly 4,000 to 4,500 square feet, three to four bedrooms, with the mature, established landscaping that only twenty-plus years affords. For buyers who want the river view without the upkeep of a full estate, East Harbor Village's condominium buildings offer the same direct frontage in a lock-and-leave format — ground-floor and upper units with screened riverfront porches, roughly 2,800 square feet, and quarterly dues that fold in exterior maintenance, insurance, and security. From the porch, it's boats and dolphins rather than passing cars, on the same stretch of the Indian River that shelters Grand Harbor's marina. As with every address inside the gates, ownership here carries access to Grand Harbor's full amenity package: the Pete Dye–designed Harbor Course and the Joe Lee–designed River Course, a 32,000-square-foot Mediterranean-style clubhouse, a protected deep-water marina, tennis and fitness facilities, and a private oceanfront Beach Club a short drive away on the barrier island.