An Enoch community
Rendezvous Real estate & homes.
A quiet Enoch neighborhood where the lots are generous, the streets are established, and Cedar City is ten minutes south. Three Peaks trails start a short drive northwest, and the I-15 on-ramp is close enough that you never think about the drive.
I am Scott Buehler. I have spent 20+ years in Iron County, and this page is the honest version of what Rendezvous offers, what it costs, and what you should know before you make an offer.
New to the area? Start with the Enoch guide, then come back for the neighborhood.
Current listings
Homes for sale in Rendezvous.
No active listings today. Rendezvous is a settled, established pocket of about seventy homes in central Enoch, and owners here tend to stay put for years, so a quiet listing stretch is typical. Prefer to hunt on your own? Open the map search or start from the homepage.
Buying here
Be first in line when one lists.
Rendezvous trades so infrequently that a single listing can be the neighborhood's whole year, which is why it sits pinned in my daily Iron County MLS routine. Give me your short list and the park-adjacent house you are picturing will find you the day it goes live.
Selling here
Own a home in Rendezvous?
Buyers check this exact page hoping to find your street. When you are ready, list it with me and get featured on MovingUtah. Start with an honest read on what your home is worth.
Listing information comes from the local MLS and is deemed reliable but not guaranteed.
On this page
Life in Rendezvous
What a day in this part of Enoch feels like.
Morning in Rendezvous starts quiet. The neighborhood sits in a residential pocket of Enoch where the streets bend gently, the landscaping is mature, and the loudest thing you hear is the birds and maybe a neighbor's garage door opening. The sun rises over the Markagunt Plateau to the east, and by the time it clears the mountains, the valley is gold and the sprinklers are running on the lawns of homes that have been here since the early 2000s.
Midday is when Enoch shows its practical side. The I-15 on-ramp at Exit 62 is about five minutes east, and from there it is one exit south to the Providence Center shopping area, Lin's Marketplace, and the rest of Cedar City's retail corridor. Your grocery run, your doctor's appointment, your kid's school drop-off, all of it happens within a fifteen-minute radius. You get Enoch's space and quiet without giving up Cedar City's convenience.
Evening is the part that keeps people here. The valley cools off after sunset, the breeze picks up, and the neighborhood settles into that calm that only a small subdivision can deliver. People walk their dogs, kids ride bikes on the sidewalk, and the mountain holds the last color long after the valley floor goes dark. It is not dramatic. It is just good. And that is the point.
Neighborhood highlights
The highlight reel, all within reach.
Enoch City Park
A few minutes from the neighborhood: playground, pavilion, ball fields, and open green space. It anchors Enoch's community calendar with summer concerts, youth sports, and the kind of evening walk where you wave at half the people you pass.
Golf at Cedar Ridge
Cedar City's 18-hole municipal course, about fifteen minutes south. Mountain views, affordable rates, and a local crowd that knows the greens by heart. Open March through November.
Three Peaks Recreation Area
About twelve minutes northwest. BLM land with hiking, biking, OHV trails, rock crawling, and dispersed camping. The full story is in the trails section below.
Enoch Recreation Complex
Ball fields and city recreation facilities nearby. Youth baseball and softball run spring through fall, and the complex keeps growing as Enoch adds programs and fields.
Cedar City in ten minutes
SUU, the hospital, the Shakespeare Festival, the aquatic center, Main Street dining. Rendezvous gives you the Enoch lifestyle with Cedar City's amenities one exit away.
Established and settled
This is not a brand-new plat with sapling trees and construction dust. Rendezvous has been filling in since the early 2000s, and the landscaping, the street trees, and the neighborhood rhythm all reflect it.
Homes & lots
Built across two decades, on lots with room to breathe.
Rendezvous started going in during the early 2000s and has filled out steadily since. The homes are predominantly single-family, with a solid mix of ramblers and two-story builds. Brick, stucco, and stone exteriors give the streets a traditional Enoch feel, and the quarter-acre to half-acre lots mean there is actual space between houses. You see three-car garages on a good number of properties, and RV parking or a detached shop is not uncommon.
The build quality is what you would expect from mid-to-upper range Enoch construction of this era: functional floor plans, decent lot coverage, and the kind of yards people actually use. The neighborhood has settled into itself over the last twenty years. The trees are mature, the landscaping has filled in, and the streets have that comfortable, lived-in rhythm that brand-new subdivisions take a decade to earn.
Rendezvous is not the flashiest name in Enoch. It is one of the most comfortable.
One note for anyone coming from out of state: Enoch lots are generous by subdivision standards, and Rendezvous is no exception. If you are used to postage-stamp yards in a bigger metro area, the space between houses here will surprise you. You can have a garden, a trampoline, a dog run, and still have room for a patio set that is not squeezed against the fence.
Trails & outdoors
Three Peaks, a short drive northwest.
Three Peaks Recreation Area is about twelve minutes from Rendezvous. It is the primary outdoor amenity for anyone living in Enoch: thousands of acres of BLM-managed land with trails for hiking, mountain biking, OHV riding, and rock crawling. The terrain is classic high desert, pinyon and juniper with granite outcrops that the off-road community knows by reputation. It is not the groomed singletrack of Iron Hills or the alpine drama of Cedar Breaks. It is raw, rugged BLM desert, and for the crowd that loves it, that is the whole point.
Multi-use trails
Marked routes for hiking, biking, and OHV across thousands of acres. The network is wide open, and even on weekends you can find a stretch of trail to yourself.
Rock crawling
The granite formations at Three Peaks draw Jeeps and buggies from across the region. Weekend trailhead parking fills early, and the lines on the rocks have names the regulars all know.
Dispersed camping
Free BLM camping with no hookups and no reservations. Find a spot, set up, enjoy the stars, and leave it cleaner than you found it. Some of Iron County's best night skies are out here.
Trail facts: BLM, Three Peaks Recreation Area. For Cedar Breaks, Brian Head, and the broader outdoor picture, see the Enoch guide.
Errands & drive times
Errands, measured in minutes.
Here is the practical answer to "how far is everything." Most of your daily stops are in Cedar City, ten to fifteen minutes south. The I-15 on-ramp at Exit 62 makes it a straight shot.
| The errand | Where it happens | From the neighborhood |
|---|---|---|
| Full grocery run | Lin's Marketplace, Providence Center | ~10 min |
| Second grocery option | Smith's, Main Street, Cedar City | ~12 min |
| Big-box and shopping | Walmart Supercenter, S Main, Cedar City | ~15 min |
| Fuel and quick stops | I-15 Exit 62 interchange | ~5 min |
| Movie night | Megaplex screens at Providence Center | ~12 min |
| Campus and games | Southern Utah University | ~12 min |
| Dinner downtown | Historic Main Street, Cedar City | ~12 min |
| Healthcare | Cedar City Hospital, north Main | ~15 min |
| Flights | Cedar City Regional Airport (CDC) | ~18 min |
Farther out: Brian Head skiing about 45 minutes, St. George 50 minutes south, Zion roughly an hour. The full day-trip map is in the Enoch guide.
Schools & education
Schools, by the facts.
Rendezvous is served by the Iron County School District. Enoch Elementary is in town, and most Enoch students feed into Canyon View Middle School and Canyon View High School in Cedar City. Boundary assignments can vary, so confirm the current assignment for any specific address directly with the district. For independent school information, GreatSchools and Niche both publish data you can weigh for yourself. Southern Utah University is about twelve minutes away.
I cover the bigger education picture in the Enoch guide.
What locals know
Notes from the neighborhood, honestly.
No listing photo tells you this part. After more than 20 years in Southern Utah, here is what I would tell a friend about living in Rendezvous.
The neighborhood has settled into itself. Rendezvous has been filling in for over twenty years, and it shows. The trees are mature, the landscaping is established, and the streets have that comfortable rhythm you only get when a subdivision stops being "new construction" and starts being a neighborhood.
You are ten minutes from everything that matters. Cedar City handles your groceries, your doctor, your university, and your restaurants. Enoch gives you the lot size, the quiet, and the open sky. You get both without a long commute.
Winter is real, and the roads get plowed. Enoch sits at about 5,540 feet, and when a storm rolls through, the snow sticks. The city plows the main routes first, and Rendezvous gets cleared after the priority roads. A south-facing driveway clears itself between storms. A north-facing one reminds you why you bought a snowblower.
The name is not an accident. Rendezvous has one of the more distinctive subdivision names in Enoch, and it fits the neighborhood's quiet, tucked-away feel. It is not on the main drag, and the people who live here like it that way.
Buy or sell here
The buyer side and the seller side.
Buying in Rendezvous
Rendezvous sits in a quiet residential pocket of Enoch, with convenient access to both Midvalley Road and the Minersville Highway corridor. It is about five minutes to I-15 at Exit 62 and roughly ten minutes to downtown Cedar City.
Mostly single-family homes on quarter-acre to half-acre lots, with ramblers and two-story builds from the 2000s and 2010s. You will see a mix of brick, stucco, and stone exteriors, and many homes include three-car garages or RV parking. The lots are generous by subdivision standards, with room for gardens and outdoor living.
About ten minutes to Cedar City's Main Street and Southern Utah University. The I-15 on-ramp at Exit 62 is roughly five minutes from the neighborhood, and from there it is one exit south to the Providence Center shopping and the rest of Cedar City.
Recent activity has generally landed between the upper $300,000s and the mid $500,000s, with larger lots and newer builds at the upper end. Prices move with the market, so treat that as a starting point and confirm against the live listings.
Ready to look? See what is on the market or tell me what you are after.
Selling in Rendezvous
Values here shift with lot size, condition, and how well the home has been maintained. Start with the home valuation page and I will run a real comparison against recent Rendezvous sales, no obligation.
List with me and your home is featured across MovingUtah, on this page, on the Enoch city hub, and in the featured listings buyers browse on this site. The get featured page walks through exactly how that works.
It depends on what is listed right now. Enoch inventory tends to run lean, and a well-maintained home on a good lot here gets noticed. Tell me your timeline and I will give you a straight read.
Yes, and it is common here. Timing the two is mostly a sequencing problem, and I cover the playbook in the buy and sell at once guide. Because I am dual-licensed, I can keep the sale, the search, and the financing on one desk.
Thinking about it? Start with your number or see how featuring works.
Keep exploring Enoch
Want a closer look at Rendezvous?
Buying, I can pull the current listings and tell you honestly which streets are the quietest and which lots give you the most for your money. Selling, I will give you a straight number and a plan to get your home in front of the buyers already on this site. Either way, we start with a conversation.