Eighteen luxury townhouses priced from the upper $900,000s are rising on North Broad Street in Doylestown Township, representing a potential $16 million-plus in new home sales on a corridor that has already transformed in recent years.

Toll Brothers has begun marketing the first phase of the project, branded "280 North at Doylestown." The company's website lists the community as "Coming Soon" with homes anticipated from the upper $900,000s. Sales are scheduled to begin in fall 2026, according to the McKnight Team real estate group, which tracks Bucks County listings.

The townhouses come in two floor plans, the Courtland and the Courtland Elite. Both exceed 2,500 square feet and include at least three bedrooms, 3½ bathrooms, a two-car garage, an elevator, and a rooftop terrace. Toll Brothers markets the community as "low-maintenance," with lawn care and snow removal included. The homes fall within the Central Bucks School District.

At the upper $900,000s, the townhouses are priced about 46% above the Doylestown area's median home sale price of $617,000 for the three months ending May 2026, according to Redfin.

The three-acre development sits directly across North Broad Street from 333 North Broad, the 233-unit apartment and retail complex built on the former Intelligencer newspaper site. Access to the 280 North community will be a single driveway off North Broad Street, positioned as far from the Atkinson Road intersection as possible to reduce traffic conflicts. Karyn Hyland, Doylestown Borough's director of planning and zoning, described the parcel as "somewhat unusual" in an interview with the Bucks County Herald.

The larger 280 North project also includes 60 age-restricted, one-bedroom apartments in a separate four-story building for seniors and veterans age 60 and older. Arcadia Land Development is handling that phase, with Pennrose overseeing construction. Monthly rents are expected to run about $1,100 for residents earning less than $47,000 a year, according to the Bucks County Herald.

Doylestown Borough manager John Davis said during municipal discussions over the project that the development's residents would become "de facto Doylestown Borough residents" given the site's proximity to the borough line. A one-acre dog park at the south end of the property will be owned and maintained by the borough under an agreement signed with the township.