St. Paul's east side, where the sky opens toward Lavon
Lakeview Lanes covers St. Paul's eastern reach, where the streets run out toward Lavon Lake and the horizon opens up accordingly. Mornings come with big east-facing light; weekends develop a gravitational pull toward the water, with boat ramps and shoreline parks an easy drive from the driveway. It's still unmistakably St. Paul — quiet, low-key, zero retail — but with a lake-country lean the rest of town doesn't have.
Day to day, the east side works like the rest of this small North Texas town: kids in Wylie ISD, groceries in Wylie, and a commute that holds up — about 18 minutes to Legacy West in Plano, about 36 to downtown Dallas. The difference is what's waiting after work. When your evening options include a sunset run to the lake instead of a loop around a subdivision pond, the geography starts to feel like an amenity.
Homes in Lakeview Lanes follow St. Paul's house rules: built individually, sized generously, and set on lots with genuine room between neighbors. On the east side you'll find a mix — established houses that have watched the area stay stubbornly rural, and larger properties with space for a boat, a trailer, or both. There's no lakefront high-rise energy here and no builder uniformity; it's small-town housing stock that happens to sit near a big lake. It suits anglers, weekend boaters, and buyers who want their DFW address to come with water on the horizon.