
Cedar Ridge in Pleasant Prairie is closing in on its final chapter as village officials get ready to weigh plans for the second and last phase of the subdivision. The 78-lot development has already drawn brisk early interest and now heads into a review that would clear the remaining 42 lots for roads and home construction. If the plans make it through, those last parcels will open to buyers and round out the neighborhood’s buildout.
According to the Milwaukee Business Journal, the roughly $70 million project is entering its final-phase review this week, with most of the first-phase home sites already spoken for. The Business Journal notes that this step effectively tees up the remaining inventory for the market, pending village sign-off.
Phase Map And Lot Counts
Per the Village of Pleasant Prairie, Cedar Ridge covers about 40 acres and is planned for a total of 78 single-family lots. Phase 1 accounts for 36 of those, while Phase 2 would add the final 42 lots along with a second connection to 47th Avenue at 110th Street. Village materials put lot sizes at roughly 13,600 to 30,350 square feet and project home-and-lot package prices between $600,000 and $900,000.
Who’s Building And What It Will Cost
According to Korndoerfer Homes, the builder is marketing Cedar Ridge with base home prices starting in the $650,000s and lots beginning near $159,990. Korndoerfer’s neighborhood materials highlight a pond, sidewalks on both sides of the streets and a walking path to adjacent Sorensen Woods, amenities pitched to buyers who want larger lots along with convenient suburban trails.
What Approval Would Mean For The Village
If the village signs off on the final plat, the developer can move ahead with infrastructure and roadway work to bring the last 42 sites to market. The Plan Commission previously approved a preliminary plat that set the two-phase layout and allowed initial grading for Phase 1. Those earlier approvals are recorded by the Village of Pleasant Prairie. As the Milwaukee Business Journal notes, the timing of the final-phase review will help determine how quickly those next steps can roll out.
Why The Project Matters Locally
Beyond adding more for-sale homes, Cedar Ridge is laid out to link new residents to existing parks and schools. Village documents call out sidewalks and a shared-use path to Sorensen Woods, and they note that the Kenosha Unified School District can accommodate the subdivision’s additional students. Those design choices helped shape the Phase 1 approvals and the routing planned for Phase 2.
Village agendas will spell out the exact schedule for any final vote, but moving into the last review signals that Cedar Ridge is edging close to its broader market debut. Prospective buyers can keep an eye on Korndoerfer Homes for lot availability and watch the village meeting calendar for updates.









