Positioned at the signalized intersection of 66th St N (CR-693) & 46th Ave N, these adjacent parcels total ±2.45 acres in the heart of mid-Pinellas. The site enjoys frontage on three public roads with 800+ linear feet combined and multiple existing curb cuts providing exceptional ingress/egress and site-circulation options. 66th St N is a major north–south arterial with ~50,000 average daily trips (AADT) in this corridor (FDOT/Forward Pinellas), offering unrivaled visibility for retail, service, and mixed commercial users. forwardpinellas.org
This trade area is one of Florida’s densest, set within Pinellas County—the most densely populated county in the state (±3,425 people per sq mi), supporting deep retail and service demand profiles. The immediate node already draws shoppers to national co-tenancies at the same intersection (Sprouts/At Home retail project at 66th & 46th), underscoring the corridor’s proven retail gravity. fuquadevelopment.com
Regional access: quick connections to I-275, US-19, Tyrone/Tyrone Square area, Downtown St. Petersburg, and St. Pete–Clearwater International Airport (PIE) place the site within short drive-times to the metro’s employment, residential, and visitor bases (regional routes and mapping referenced). Waze/MapQuest
4600 66th St N (St. Petersburg, FL) and 6675 46th Ave N (St. Petersburg, FL) are being offered together as a ±2.45-acre redevelopment opportunity at a hard, signalized corner with three-road frontage and multiple curb cuts. The assemblage’s scale and geometry support multi-building or single-tenant formats, generous on-site parking, and efficient truck/service circulation.
Exposure & Access: ~50k AADT on 66th St N, signalized full-movement access, and three-road frontage for branding and signage potential. (Traffic data sources: FDOT Florida Traffic Online; Forward Pinellas traffic count maps.) tdaappsprod.dot.state.fl.us
Zoning: C-2 (General Commercial & Services) in Pinellas County—intended for regional-scale retail and services with more intensive commercial uses than neighborhood commercial. Typical allowable use families include retail sales, restaurants/food service, personal & professional services, offices/medical, select automotive-service and light industrial/R&D at appropriate locations, subject to standards and approvals per the Land Development Code. (Always verify site-specific jurisdiction and any overlays.) Municode Library/Pinellas County
Why it’s rare: Pinellas’s countywide density and built-out character mean large, corner, signalized redevelopment sites are scarce—particularly with ±2.45 acres at a major arterial—and trade-area fundamentals here are reinforced by new national-tenant investment at the same intersection.