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Real Estate in Mountview Business Park, Grande Prairie

Mountview Business Park is an industrial-designated area in Grande Prairie, not a residential neighbourhood.

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No active listings in Mountview Business Park, Grande Prairie right now

There are no active MLS® listings in Mountview Business Park right now. Keep the neighbourhood in view on the map, or expand to nearby listings across Grande Prairie.

Buying in Mountview Business Park

Who fits here

Mountview Business Park is an industrial-designated area in Grande Prairie, not a residential neighbourhood. Properties here are zoned for commercial and light-industrial uses — think warehousing, trades contractors, distribution yards, and service businesses that power the region''s oil and gas, forestry, and logistics economy. If you arrived here searching for a home to live in, this area won''t fit the bill: you won''t find detached houses, condos, or rental suites inside the business park boundaries. Home buyers who want to live close to this part of the city have several established residential communities nearby. Mountview (the residential neighbourhood sharing the name) sits just adjacent and offers affordable single-family homes on established streets. Patterson and South Patterson are popular family-oriented choices a short drive away, with good school access and a settled neighbourhood feel. Hillside and Crystal Heights are further options in the same general corridor. Any of these communities put you within easy reach of Grande Prairie''s northwest employment lands while keeping you in a true residential setting. Browse listings in those neighbourhoods on hômm to find the right fit.

Current market in the neighbourhood

Grande Prairie''s residential market context: the city-wide average home sale price sits, with a median sold price near for single-detached homes. Homes have been spending roughly on market before selling, and the tightest demand has been in the $300,000–$350,000 price band where sale-to-list ratios reflect competitive conditions. There are currently active residential listings across the city, giving buyers a reasonable range of options at different price points. Grande Prairie''s housing market benefits from the region''s resource-sector wages — household disposable income runs roughly double the national average — which underpins steady demand across the – spectrum. Note that these figures reflect city-wide residential MLS activity; Mountview Business Park itself is industrial-zoned and does not contribute residential sales data to these numbers.

Commute and lifestyle

Workers based in Mountview Business Park or the broader northwest industrial corridor enjoy one of Grande Prairie''s genuine advantages: the entire city is easily commutable in under 15 minutes, according to the City''s own economic development materials. Whether you live in Patterson, Mountview residential, or Crystal Heights, a drive to work in the business park area is short and largely free of urban congestion. Grande Prairie sits 485 kilometres northwest of Edmonton at the intersection of three major highways — routes connecting south to Edmonton, west to British Columbia, and north toward the Northwest Territories. That highway network makes the city a genuine logistics hub, which is precisely why the business park attracts transportation, warehousing, and trades-supply operations. For day-to-day lifestyle, residents in nearby communities have access to the Eastlink Centre (a 42,000 m² recreation facility with Olympic-length pool, waterslides, and fitness), extensive trail networks, and a full retail and restaurant scene. Northwestern Polytechnic''s main campus on 106 Avenue offers trades training and university-transfer programs, giving families a post-secondary option right in the city.

Long-term context

Grande Prairie''s long-run real estate story is driven by its role as the economic and service hub for a trading area of nearly 290,000 people across northwestern Alberta and northeast BC. The city''s economy — anchored by oil and gas, forestry, agriculture, and a growing transportation and logistics sector — has historically supported steady housing demand even through commodity cycles. Municipal annexation added over 2,000 acres of industrial land, signalling continued confidence in employment-area growth that indirectly supports residential neighbourhoods nearby. Housing in the city remains affordable relative to most Alberta urban centres, and the combination of resource-sector wages with sub-$400K median pricing creates a favourable price-to-income ratio. For buyers considering residential communities adjacent to Mountview Business Park, proximity to established employment lands has historically been a stabilising factor in local property values.

About Mountview Business Park

Overview

Mountview Business Park is a commercial and industrial zone situated just west of the Grande Prairie city limits in the County of Grande Prairie No. 1. Characterized by rural industrial zoning, the area serves as a strategic hub for fabrication shops, oilfield services, and equipment rental businesses rather than a traditional residential community.

Location

Located immediately west of Grande Prairie along Range Road 65, the business park offers excellent connectivity to major transport routes, including Highway 43 and Highway 40. This positioning is ideal for heavy equipment transportation and regional commercial transit across Northern Alberta.

Housing character

As a dedicated industrial area, Mountview Business Park lacks a typical residential housing market. Real estate here primarily consists of large acreage lots, steel-framed warehouses, and functional commercial shops. Buyers looking to invest in this commercial node will find active listings with an average list price.

Schools

There are no schools located within the industrial park itself. Families living in adjacent rural county areas typically commute to nearby schools within the City of Grande Prairie or attend facilities operated by the Peace Wapiti Public School Division.

Transit

The area is not serviced by Grande Prairie's municipal public transit system. Access is entirely dependent on personal or commercial vehicles, though the wide roads and highway proximity are specifically designed to easily accommodate heavy truck and industrial traffic.

Shopping and dining

Mountview Business Park does not feature retail shopping or dining establishments. However, its close proximity to Grande Prairie's west end means that a variety of restaurants, big-box retailers, and daily commercial services are just a short drive away along the Highway 43 corridor.

Parks and recreation

As a purpose-built industrial and commercial hub, the area does not contain public parks or recreational green spaces. The land use is strictly dedicated to functional business operations, manufacturing facilities, and large-scale equipment storage.

Lifestyle

The local environment is purely business-oriented, catering to the strong energy, agricultural, and heavy industry sectors of the region. The daily pace is defined by commercial enterprise, making it an ideal location for industrial workers and entrepreneurs rather than those seeking a residential neighborhood lifestyle.

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Frequently Asked Questions

No — Mountview Business Park is designated as an industrial and commercial area, not a residential neighbourhood. There are no houses, condos, or residential lots for sale within the business park boundaries. If you''re looking for a home nearby, consider the adjacent Mountview residential neighbourhood, or Patterson, South Patterson, Hillside, and Crystal Heights, all of which offer established residential housing within a short drive.