County-wide, including Charles Town and Ranson, there were 612 permits issued to begin new home construction in the first half of 2024, according to data provided by the Jefferson County Office of Impact Fees (a part of the county’s Department of Engineering). That number compares to 776 permits issued for all of 2023. Roger Goodwin, the Chief County Engineer, noted during a recent presentation to the County Commission that he expects the full year number for new permits issued in 2024 will exceed 1,200.
The chart at right shows the breakdown between single family homes, townhomes, duplexes, and multi-family housing (apartment units). The large bump in the number of townhome permits that started in 2023 has continued in 2024, and the overall pace is close to doubling what was permitted last year.
The county’s Office of Planning and Zoning estimates that there are currently over 6,000 buildable lots in the county without structures. Not all of these fall within large subdivision developments, but that number suggests that there is a significant reserve of already approved building lots that are likely to be added to the permit numbers over the next few years.
The size of new developments presented for concept plan reviews continues to grow as well. The most recently approved request, the Birdhill subdivision between Kearneysville and Shepherdstown, proposed 720 residential units. The larger numbers are in part due to an increase in the density, with a shift to more townhome units in these new developments.
Snapshots Of Some New Neighborhoods
By Steve Pearson