University Heights Real Estate is a market that has not met its full potential. Houses and Condos for sale in University Heights have been and will remain low for sometime. University Heights is a great location for a starter home for young families or young professionals. The available condos in University Heights are on the lower end of the San Diego housing prices, but that is a plus because it is one of the more affordable places to purchase your house or condo. The area is filled with a number of restaurants, coffee shops, boutiques, and artist's studios primarily on Park Boulevard and Adams Avenue. Live entertainment can be found most nights. Adjacent to Hillcrest and Normal Heights, additional restaurants, bars, coffee shops, and night clubs are within easy reach.
Trolley Barn Park on Adams Avenue, just east of Park Boulevard, is popular with young families and hosts free concerts on Friday evenings during the summer. This park, as noted by its name, was the site of the "trolley barn" where trolley cars went for repairs and down time until the system was replaced by busses in the 1950s. Sidewalks around the playground in the park are laid out in a pattern mimicking the local street plan, a design also echoed on the carved stone plaque. The majority of the streets in the area are named after states and past Presidents.
The neighborhood sits in a central San Diego location with a broad spectrum of housing options, from cottages, apartments and condominiums, to million-dollar homes. Downtown, Balboa Park, Mission Valley San Diego State University, are only a few minutes away.
The name "University" (both for the neighborhood and nearby University Avenue) derives from a plan, originally boosted during the land boom of the 1880s, to build a university in the area, to be located on a tract of land later used for the State Normal School (predecessor to San Diego State College [now a State University]). The headquarters of San Diego Unified School district currently occupies the site near the corner of El Cajon and Park Boulevards.
On the far northern edge of this mesa, at the scenic rim of Mission Valley, an ostrich farm and public garden spot was constructed near what is now the corner of Adams Avenue and Park Boulevard. The little neighborhood of homes subsequently built on the site is still called Mission Cliff Gardens and still sports the original garden boundary wall of rounded stones. The gardens were a popular tourist site, and were served by trolley car.
University Heights is home to a wide variety of residents who enjoy the area for its convenient location, strong sense of community, and its unique combination of history, architecture, theatre, music, art, and great restaurants.--source: http://www.wikipedia.com