Las Vegas luxury buyers chasing acreage and quiet typically tour three or four communities before they commit. The Estates at Lone Mountain is almost always on that short list. Tucked against the south face of Lone Mountain peak in the northwest valley, this guard-gated enclave delivers what Summerlin's master plan stopped building years ago — half-acre to two-acre lots with custom estates oriented for mountain views and city-light panoramas.
This guide answers what every buyer asks before a tour: where The Estates sits, what homes cost in 2026, how it stacks up against Summerlin and Iron Mountain Ranch, what schools serve the gate, and what annual ownership actually costs. Numbers come from the GLVAR MLS, Clark County Assessor records, and the 789 transactions my team at Nevada Real Estate Group closed in 2025.
The Estates at Lone Mountain is a guard-gated luxury subdivision of about 160 custom and semi-custom homes at the south base of Lone Mountain peak in northwest Las Vegas (ZIP 89129). Lots typically span 0.4 to 1.5 acres, homes range 3,500 to 7,500+ square feet, and 2026 closings run $1.1M to $3.8M. The community trades on lot size, mountain views, and 215 Beltway proximity — buyers cross-shop Iron Mountain Ranch, Providence's larger villages, and lower-village Summerlin. The 2026 median is approximately $1.45M at $375 per square foot.
- The Estates sits in ZIP 89129 just east of the 215 Beltway and south of Lone Mountain peak.
- Homes typically run 3,500–7,500+ square feet on 0.4–1.5 acre lots, built mostly 1996–2010.
- 2026 median price is roughly $1.45M with a $375 per-square-foot median across recent closings.
- HOA assessments range $215–$340 monthly depending on the lot tier and view orientation.
- Most buyers cross-shop Iron Mountain Ranch, Providence Ridge, and lower Summerlin villages.

What Makes The Estates at Lone Mountain Different from Other Las Vegas Luxury Pockets?
Las Vegas has roughly a dozen communities people call "luxury." Summerlin owns the brand. Henderson's MacDonald Highlands and Ascaya own the trophy price tier. Lake Las Vegas owns the waterfront niche. The Estates at Lone Mountain owns a quieter category — established acreage in the northwest valley, priced below Summerlin's per-square-foot premium, without the Henderson commute.
The differentiators that drive most Estates buyer conversations come down to three things. First, lot size — half-acre minimums with a meaningful share of one-acre-plus lots is rare inside Clark County's urban grid. According to Clark County Assessor parcel data, the average valley single-family lot is approximately 7,200 square feet (0.165 acre); an Estates buyer purchases three to nine times the typical lot. Second, mountain orientation — the south face of Lone Mountain forms the northern boundary of most lots, putting daily mountain views out the kitchen and great-room windows. Third, gate calm — staffed entry filters cut-through traffic, and the absence of master-plan amenities (no district pool, no club, no shopping village) keeps streets residential.
According to the 2024 American Community Survey, the 89129 ZIP has a median household income of approximately $94,500 — above the Clark County metro median of $73,800 but below the $134,000+ median in Summerlin's 89135. That gap keeps Estates pricing rational: surrounding northwest neighborhoods are upper-middle-class, not trophy-tier, so the community doesn't carry Summerlin's speculative premium.
Where Exactly Is The Estates at Lone Mountain Located?
The community sits roughly bounded by Lone Mountain Road on the south, Hualapai Way on the east, and the natural Lone Mountain ridgeline on the north. The 215 Beltway loop runs three to four minutes east via Lone Mountain Road, giving residents single-stop access to US-95 north (Skye Canyon, Centennial Hills, and the Spring Mountains) and the full 215 loop south through Summerlin to the 15 corridor and the airport.
The peak itself — Lone Mountain — rises to approximately 3,343 feet according to the USGS, placing it about 1,100 feet above the homes at its base. That elevation gap matters more than it sounds. The northwest valley sits at roughly 2,800 feet elevation versus 2,000 feet at McCarran International, which translates to summer temperatures running 3–7°F cooler than the central valley on a typical July afternoon. According to the National Weather Service Las Vegas office, that elevation differential is the single biggest reason northwest pockets like Lone Mountain and Skye Canyon hold landscape and feel cooler in shoulder seasons.
The ZIP is 89129. The school district is Clark County School District (the fifth-largest in the United States, per the National Center for Education Statistics). The water district is the Las Vegas Valley Water District, the gas utility is Southwest Gas, and the electric provider is NV Energy. The 215 Beltway, the closest major arterial, was completed in segments through the early 2000s — the section adjacent to The Estates opened in 2004, which dovetailed with the community's early build-out.

What Do Homes at The Estates Cost in Twenty Twenty-Six?
Pricing inside The Estates moves with three factors: lot size, view orientation, and remodel vintage. A 4,200-square-foot home on a 0.45-acre interior lot with a 2003 build and original kitchen typically lands $1.1M–$1.35M. The same square footage on a 0.85-acre view lot with a 2022 down-to-studs remodel lands $1.8M–$2.4M. And the trophy tier — 6,500+ square feet on an acre-plus lot with mountain views and a recent build — clears $3M routinely, with a 2025 closing at $3.85M setting the recent ceiling.
According to Las Vegas REALTORS March 2026 housing data, the Las Vegas valley median single-family home price was $465,000. The Estates at Lone Mountain therefore trades at roughly 3.1x the valley median — a premium that's actually below Summerlin's 4–6x premium for comparable lot-to-square-footage ratios.
Here's how 2026 closings have distributed across price tiers:
| Price Tier | Typical Size | Lot Range | Share of Sales |
|---|---|---|---|
| $1.1M – $1.5M | 3,500–4,800 sqft | 0.40–0.60 acre | ~38% |
| $1.5M – $2.2M | 4,800–5,800 sqft | 0.55–0.90 acre | ~36% |
| $2.2M – $3.0M | 5,800–6,800 sqft | 0.80–1.20 acre | ~18% |
| $3.0M+ | 6,500–7,500+ sqft | 1.00+ acre | ~8% |
A few patterns. View premiums add $180–$280 per square foot for true mountain-frame lots versus interior parcels. Single-story configurations carry an additional $75–$130 per square foot premium over two-story plans of comparable size — pronounced here given the 55+ demographic mix. Pool-and-spa combos add $90,000–$180,000 to comparable un-pooled homes.
Who Built The Estates and What Defines the Architecture?
The community built out over roughly fifteen years, primarily 1996 through 2010, with a handful of custom infill builds completed since 2018 on the few remaining lots. There was no single master builder. Custom builders worked individual lots under architectural guidelines administered by the HOA, which is why exterior styles vary far more than they would in a Toll Brothers or Pulte master-planned village. Across our MLS history pulls covering 89129, the architectural mix breaks down roughly:
- Mediterranean / Tuscan: approximately 42% of homes. Stucco exteriors, clay tile roofs, arched windows, paver driveways, and courtyard entries. Most date 1998–2007.
- Contemporary Spanish / Santa Barbara: approximately 28%. Cleaner roof lines, more glass, often two-story with single-story owner suites. Dominant in builds 2005–2012.
- Modern transitional / contemporary: approximately 18%. The newer custom infills since 2018 lean this direction — flat or low-slope roofs, steel windows, polished concrete and limestone.
- Traditional / colonial: approximately 12%. Brick and stucco mix, hipped roofs, more formal symmetric facades. Mostly early builds 1996–2002.
The HOA architectural review board sets exterior palette standards (earth tones only — no navy, no charcoal) and roof material restrictions (concrete tile or clay only; asphalt shingle is prohibited). The CCRs run roughly 80 pages and were comprehensively updated in 2019; we share a current PDF with serious buyers before they write an offer.
According to the National Association of Home Builders, the average U.S. single-family home in 2024 was approximately 2,411 square feet — meaning the typical Estates home is double the national median at 4,800+ square feet, with corresponding cost-of-ownership implications.
How Do The Estates Compare to Other Northwest Luxury Communities?
The Estates trades against four main alternatives in the northwest valley and a fifth on the Summerlin side of the 215. Below is the comparison sheet I walk through with most cross-shopping buyers:
| Community | 2026 Median Price | Typical Lot | Gate Type | HOA / Month | To 215 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Estates at Lone Mountain | $1,450,000 | 0.50–1.20 acre | Guard-gated | $215–$340 | 3 min |
| Iron Mountain Ranch (NW) | $1,180,000 | 0.35–0.85 acre | Guard-gated | $190–$290 | 5 min |
| Providence Ridge (north Providence) | $880,000 | 0.18–0.40 acre | Manned gate | $145–$220 | 4 min |
| Skye Canyon Estates | $1,050,000 | 0.30–0.70 acre | Roving security | $165–$230 | 6 min |
| Summerlin — The Trails / Willows | $1,650,000 | 0.20–0.45 acre | Mixed gate | $290–$520 | 8 min |
| Summerlin — The Mesa / Hills | $2,950,000 | 0.30–0.80 acre | Guard-gated | $480–$780 | 10 min |
Three practical takeaways from that comparison:
First, The Estates is the only northwest community with broad half-acre-plus inventory under $1.5M. Iron Mountain Ranch competes on lot size but inventory there has thinned to roughly a dozen active listings most months. Across the 89129 listing history we monitor, The Estates has held 8–14 active listings month-over-month through 2025–2026 — enough float that buyers actually have choices.
Second, HOA assessments at The Estates are lower than equivalent Summerlin gated villages by roughly $150–$400 monthly. That savings adds up to $1,800–$4,800 annually, which over a typical ten-year ownership window equates to $18,000–$48,000 — meaningful when the alternative gate at Summerlin's Mesa or Hills carries the additional cost of a master-plan assessment on top.
Third, the architectural variety inside The Estates is both a feature and a friction point. Buyers who want everything dialed in (matching mailboxes, identical landscape design language, coordinated paint palettes) tend to gravitate toward Summerlin's later villages or Iron Mountain Ranch's tighter HOA. Buyers who want their home to look like theirs — not a master-builder's prototype — lean into The Estates' looser architectural framework. For more on how the broader guard-gated tier ranks across the valley, see the Las Vegas guard-gated luxury tier ranking.

What Schools Serve The Estates at Lone Mountain?
The Estates sits within Clark County School District boundaries, with three primary attendance schools for 2025–2026:
- Bertha Ronzone Elementary — 7/10 GreatSchools, 1.4 miles from the gate, K–5 enrollment ~750.
- Sig Rogich Middle School — 8/10 GreatSchools, among the strongest CCSD middles in the northwest. Grades 6–8, enrollment ~1,650, honors program.
- Centennial High School — 7/10 GreatSchools. Grades 9–12, ~3,200 students, full IB diploma, strong 5A athletics.
According to Nevada Department of Education accountability reports, Centennial posts a four-year graduation rate of ~88% and an ACT composite of 21.4 — both above CCSD averages of 81% and 18.6. Sig Rogich has held a four-star NV School Performance Framework rating for three consecutive cycles.
Private alternatives within a 12-minute drive include Mountain View Christian, The Meadows School (upper school), and Faith Lutheran. Faith Lutheran tuition runs $14,500–$17,200 per the school's 2025–2026 rates. For more on northwest education, see the Centennial Hills northwest family guide.
How Far Is The Estates from the Strip Major Employers and Red Rock Canyon?
Commute math drives more luxury buyer decisions than most agents acknowledge. Here are the drive times from The Estates gate based on Google Maps median traffic timing across weekday mornings:
| Destination | Distance | Off-Peak | Rush Hour |
|---|---|---|---|
| Las Vegas Strip (Bellagio/Caesars) | 18 mi | 22 min | 35 min |
| Harry Reid International Airport | 22 mi | 25 min | 38 min |
| Downtown Summerlin | 12 mi | 16 min | 24 min |
| Red Rock Canyon Visitor Center | 17 mi | 22 min | 28 min |
| Henderson (Green Valley Ranch) | 28 mi | 34 min | 52 min |
| Mt. Charleston (Lee Canyon ski) | 38 mi | 48 min | 50 min |
| North Las Vegas (Apex industrial) | 24 mi | 26 min | 34 min |
| UNLV main campus | 19 mi | 24 min | 36 min |
The 215 Beltway is the asset that makes The Estates work as a luxury location. Without the loop, a Strip commute would need US-95 surface streets — at least 15 minutes longer in rush. According to the Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada, the 215 corridor between Lone Mountain Road and Charleston averages ~145,000 daily vehicles — high volume but consistently flowing.
For buyers working at MGM Resorts, Caesars, Wynn, Station Casinos corporate, or Allegiant Air, the commute adds 8–15 minutes versus central Summerlin. Buyers who fly more than 3 times monthly often prefer Henderson or Summerlin South for airport proximity; everyone else slots The Estates in.
Red Rock proximity is the underrated win. According to Bureau of Land Management data, the conservation area drew over 4 million visits in 2024. From The Estates, residents reach the visitor center in 25 minutes — a quality-of-life draw most Henderson buyers can't match.
What Outdoor Recreation Sits Within Fifteen Minutes of The Estates?
The northwest valley's recreation density is a meaningful part of the Estates pitch. Within a 15-minute drive:
- Lone Mountain Regional Park (1.2 miles) — 68-acre Clark County park, 1.5-mile loop trail, dog park, and the trailhead to the Lone Mountain summit (1,100 vertical feet, 2.5 miles round-trip).
- Centennial Hills Park (4.8 miles) — 79-acre regional park with amphitheater, splash pad, and 2.2 miles of paved trails.
- Floyd Lamb Park at Tule Springs (6.4 miles) — 680-acre former dude ranch with four stocked lakes (largemouth bass, trout, catfish — fishing license $15 daily via Nevada Department of Wildlife) and 4 miles of trails.
- Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument (5.1 miles) — 22,650-acre National Park Service unit established 2014, with Pleistocene mammoth and dire wolf fossil deposits. Free admission, ranger-led walks weekly.
- Mount Charleston / Lee Canyon ski area (48-minute drive) — 1,000+ acres of skiable terrain, lift tickets $99 weekday / $129 weekend 2025–2026 season. Summer hiking and camping May through October.
Tule Springs Fossil Beds added approximately 4 miles of improved trails between 2022 and 2025 — a quiet upgrade to the entire northwest valley. For a broader amenity overview, the Centennial Hills hub covers the surrounding region.
Why Do Buyers Choose The Estates Over Summerlin or Henderson Trophy Communities?
This question comes up in roughly 80% of my Estates buyer consultations. Buyers who tour Summerlin's Ridges or Henderson's MacDonald Highlands and then tour The Estates almost always articulate the trade-off the same way:
For: more lot, lower HOA, quieter streets without master-plan event programming, direct view orientation, architectural variety, 22 minutes to the Strip via 215.
Against: no clubhouse, no member golf, no private wellness facility, none of the cachet of The Ridges or MacDonald Highlands. If those amenities matter to lifestyle or resale exit, buyers belong further west or south.
According to a NAR 2024 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, 67% of luxury buyers cite "neighborhood quality" as the top purchase factor, ahead of home size (54%) and amenities (41%). The Estates wins on neighborhood quality for buyers who define that as quiet, private, established, and architecturally varied. Summerlin Mesa wins on neighborhood quality for buyers who define it as curated, branded, and amenity-rich.
A 2025 data pull across 89129 versus 89135 (Summerlin's flagship ZIP) showed The Estates trading at approximately a 17% discount to comparable Summerlin square-footage and lot combinations. For a 5,200-square-foot home on a half-acre lot, that's $300,000–$425,000 in front-end cash savings. For more, see the Las Vegas luxury gated communities guide and the luxury communities hub.

What Should First-Time Luxury Buyers Know Before Touring The Estates?
A short pre-tour checklist I walk every Estates prospect through:
Jumbo financing. Conforming loan limits in Clark County are $766,550 for 2026 according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency — almost every Estates purchase exceeds that, putting buyers in jumbo territory. Jumbo loans typically need 20–25% down, 740+ credit, and 6+ months of reserves. Underwriting runs 21–35 days, not the 12–18 typical of conforming loans.
Water supply. The Estates is fully on Las Vegas Valley Water District municipal supply, but some surrounding northwest custom pockets are on private wells. Always check disclosure. According to the Southern Nevada Water Authority, the valley draws approximately 90% of its water from the Colorado River via Lake Mead — a supply under sustained drought scrutiny since 2000.
Half-acre maintenance reality. A 0.65-acre lot with mature landscaping and a pool typically runs $480–$780 monthly for landscape and pool service. Add $260–$420 monthly in summer water bills, plus $3,500–$8,500 annually for landscape refresh.
Tile-roof underlayment. Concrete tile on early-build Estates homes is now 22–28 years old. Tile is rated 40–50 years; the underlayment beneath fails at 18–25 years. Full underlayment replacement runs $32,000–$58,000 — price that into your offer if disclosure hasn't.
Pool equipment age. Pools built 1998–2005 are typically due for equipment refresh at $8,500–$14,000. Re-plastering runs $9,500–$16,000 every 12–15 years. Pool decks run $14–$22 per square foot installed.
HOA financials. We pull three years of HOA financials before every Estates offer. Community reserves are funded at approximately 85% per the most recent third-party study — special assessments unlikely near term, but below the 95%+ standard for newer HOAs.
According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, closing costs on a $1.5M Nevada home in 2026 run $24,000–$38,000 — title, escrow, lender fees, prepaid items. Cash buyers save $4,500–$8,500 in lender fees but still face the rest.
How Liquid Is the Resale Market Inside The Estates?
Liquidity is the question most rate-sensitive luxury buyers care about. Here's the resale pattern across 89129 closings 2020–2026:
- Median days on market: 38 days sub-$1.5M, 64 days $1.5M–$2.5M, 98 days $2.5M+.
- List-to-close ratio: 97.2% median across the past 24 months — sellers close ~2.8% under initial list.
- Active inventory: 8–14 listings month-over-month, 2–4 pending. Annual turnover ~12–18 closed sales out of ~160 homes (7.5–11%).
- Cash share: ~41% of 2024–2025 Estates sales closed cash — well above the valley's ~26% cash share per LVR data.
According to Las Vegas REALTORS 2025 statistics, the valley-wide median days on market in 2025 was 41 days. The Estates trades in line with the valley at sub-$1.5M and longer at the trophy tier — typical luxury behavior per Freddie Mac housing research.
Trophy homes ($3M+) sometimes need price adjustments before they trade. A 2024 listing at $4.2M closed at $3.65M after 142 days — a 13% discovery, steeper than the community median. Top-tier buyers should expect listings to move on patience, not urgency.
What Does Annual Ownership Cost Look Like at The Estates?
Here's the real cost-of-ownership math for a representative Estates home — $1.6M purchase, 4,800 square feet on a 0.65-acre lot, pool and spa, mature desert landscaping, built 2004:
| Category | Annual Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Property tax | $9,600–$11,500 | 0.60–0.72% of assessed value per Clark County Assessor |
| HOA assessment | $2,580–$4,080 | $215–$340/month based on lot tier |
| Homeowners insurance | $3,200–$4,800 | High-value contents + replacement-cost rider |
| Pool service (weekly) | $2,600–$3,400 | $50–$65 per week year-round |
| Landscape service | $4,800–$6,600 | $400–$550/month incl. water-feature care |
| Water + sewer | $3,100–$4,800 | Tiered rate; outdoor use is the variable |
| Power (NV Energy) | $3,400–$5,200 | 4,800 sqft + pool pumps + summer cooling |
| Gas (Southwest Gas) | $720–$1,200 | Heating, water heater, fireplace, grill |
| Pest control (quarterly) | $480–$720 | Scorpions and ants are the pressure |
| Tile roof reserves | $1,800–$3,200 | Sinking fund for underlayment replacement |
| HVAC service | $480–$720 | Two zones typical; semi-annual |
| Total annual | $32,800–$46,220 | ≈ $2,730–$3,850 per month |
The biggest variable is water. According to Southern Nevada Water Authority tiered rates, consumption above 30,000 gallons monthly triggers the top tier — and a 0.65-acre lot with mature plants and a pool routinely hits that July through September. The grass-to-desert conversion rebate pays $3.00 per square foot of converted turf.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI, Las Vegas household utility costs rose ~7.8% in 2024 versus the national average of 6.2%. Budget 4–6% annual utility inflation going forward.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is The Estates at Lone Mountain a master-planned community?
No. The Estates is a custom-home subdivision with its own HOA and gated entry, not part of a larger master plan with district amenities or shared facilities. Residents pull from surrounding northwest amenities — Lone Mountain Regional Park, Centennial Hills Park, the 215 commercial corridors.
What is the typical HOA fee at The Estates?
HOA assessments run $215–$340 per month depending on lot tier and view orientation. The HOA covers staffed gate service, common-area maintenance, roving security, and reserve contributions. Reserves are funded at approximately 85% per the most recent third-party study; special assessments have been rare.
Can I build a custom home on a vacant lot in The Estates?
The Estates is essentially built out, with fewer than five remaining buildable parcels. When vacant lots trade, they sell for $480,000–$880,000 depending on size and view. Architectural plans require HOA review board approval before permit submission to Clark County Building Department.
Are short-term rentals (Airbnb/VRBO) allowed at The Estates?
No. The HOA CCRs prohibit rentals under 30 days. Long-term leases of 6+ months are permitted with HOA notification and a copy of the lease on file. According to Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 116, HOAs may regulate but not categorically prohibit long-term residential leasing.
What is the property tax rate at The Estates?
Nevada property tax runs on assessed value (35% of taxable) times the local rate. For 89129, the effective rate is roughly 0.60–0.72% of full market value annually per the Clark County Assessor. A $1.6M home typically pays $9,600–$11,500 — well below California, Texas, or New York equivalents.
How does The Estates compare to The Ridges in Summerlin?
The Ridges in Summerlin is a trophy community with a member country club, TPC golf access, and a 2026 median of $3.4M — roughly 2.3x the Estates median. The Ridges trades on amenity programming and Strip-side cachet; The Estates trades on lot size, mountain views, and lower carrying costs.
Is The Estates a good investment community for appreciation?
Mountain-view luxury enclaves with limited inventory typically appreciate at or slightly above broader valley luxury. According to the FHFA House Price Index, Las Vegas metro top-quintile homes appreciated approximately 6.4% annually 2020–2025 versus 5.1% for the broader metro. The Estates is a long-hold lifestyle community, not a speculative play.
What's the average age of homes at The Estates?
The community built out primarily 1996–2010, with sporadic custom infills 2018–2024. The typical home is 18–24 years old as of 2026 — roof underlayment, HVAC, pool equipment, and water heaters all due for refresh in the next 5–10 years. Pre-listing inspections regularly surface $40,000–$120,000 of deferred maintenance.
Why Should You Work With Chris Nevada When Touring The Estates?
My team at Nevada Real Estate Group closed 789 transactions across the valley in 2025, with $4.1B+ in lifetime sales and 9,061+ verified five-star reviews across our review platforms. Nevada Real Estate License S.181401 under LPT Realty.
For Estates buyers, three operational advantages matter. First, 89129 history depth — we've worked over 60 transactions inside that ZIP since 2018 and track lot tiers, view orientations, and resale patterns at the parcel level. Second, HOA file access — we maintain current CCRs, reserve studies, and architectural correspondence for The Estates and 14 other guard-gated Clark County communities. Third, fast routing — every inquiry hits our CRM and my direct email simultaneously, with replies inside an hour during business hours.
Which Sources Inform This Estates at Lone Mountain Guide?
Numerical claims are tied to the linked source at the point of mention; this section consolidates the rotation:
- Las Vegas REALTORS housing statistics — MLS data on median price, days on market, inventory, cash-share.
- Clark County Assessor — parcel-level assessed values, tax rates, lot size.
- U.S. Census American Community Survey — ZIP-level income and demographics for 89129.
- Nevada Department of Education — accountability reports and NV School Performance Framework ratings.
- GreatSchools — comparative school ratings.
- Bureau of Labor Statistics CPI — Las Vegas metro inflation data.
- Southern Nevada Water Authority — water supply and tiered residential rate structure.
- Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada — 215 Beltway traffic counts.
- FHFA House Price Index — long-run appreciation data.
- FHFA conforming loan limits — 2026 Clark County threshold.
- NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers — luxury buyer decision research.
- NPS Tule Springs Fossil Beds — trail and visitation data.
- BLM Red Rock Canyon — visitation and scenic loop access.
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — closing-cost and luxury-mortgage guidance.
- Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 116 — HOA statute.
The Estates at Lone Mountain keeps showing up as the answer for one buyer profile: established families and right-sizing professionals who want acreage and quiet without the Henderson commute or the Summerlin price premium. Next move is a private tour.
Call or text (702) 637-1759, email info@nevadagroup.com, or schedule from the Lone Mountain community page.




