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Our self-storage in Lawrenceburg is conveniently located on Commerce Way, just off Bypass 127. We offer storage solutions for all your needs, whether you require storage for your home, business, personal needs, relocation, military deployment, or college move. Our customer service team is always available to assist you in finding the perfect storage option. We offer a range of storage units, from mini units measuring 5x5 to larger 10x30 units. Additionally, we have climate-controlled storage options to store items that are sensitive to humidity.

Our storage storage facility in Lawrenceburg prioritizes safety and security. Our premises are clean, well-lit, fully fenced, and monitored by 24-hour video surveillance to ensure the safety of your belongings. Our storage experts are available 7 days a week, and we offer online or over-the-phone move-in options to save you time and money.

Getting ready to move? Stop by our office for moving and packing supplies. We sell boxes, packing tape, mattress covers, and more. We want to be your one-stop shop for all things storage. Stop by our self storage in Lawrenceburg and experience the Storage Rentals of America difference.

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Moving and storage go hand in hand. Whether traveling across town or the country, moving is an exciting and fresh start. While Storage Rentals of America is here to help you with all your storage needs, we also want to help you get familiar with the area. That's why we put together this resource guide for Lawrenceburg.

About Lawrenceburg, Kentucky.

Lawrenceburg is the county seat of Anderson County. It is generally considered a suburb of Frankfort, the capital of Kentucky. It lies slightly to the east and south of that city, approximately twenty-five miles from the major metropolis of Lexington. 11,000 people live in Lawrenceburg, with another 10,000 living in the county around it. Frankfort lies only fifteen miles north of the town, with the city of Versailles and the suburbs of the Lexington metropolitan complex beginning an equivalent distance to the east. Road access is mostly by State Highway 127, which joins Interstate 64 to the north and the city of Danville to the south. The Kentucky River forms the eastern edge of the town, and this area is notable for its historical significance as an agricultural, political, and transportation center. This city is unusually prosperous by Kentucky standards, though it is much smaller than the surrounding communities.

What to do in Lawrenceburg, KY

Lawrenceburg is a major part of Kentucky's new tourist attraction, the Bourbon Trail. Located conveniently midway through this new mecca for thinking tipplers, the many new breweries and distilleries in Anderson County welcome visitors year-round. Of course, distilleries like Wild Turkey and Four Roses have more than a century of operational history in the area. Still, even they are newly refreshed and revitalized by the attention focused on the Bourbon Trail. There are even bicycle trails and marathon foot races that follow the trail, flooding the city with visitors and tourist dollars.

Working in Lawrenceburg, KY

The new and old distilleries also provide several stable and well-paying employment opportunities to the community. The economic effect of recent activity in Lawrenceburg can be seen in the statistics; the city's median income has increased by approximately 30% since the turn of the century to more than $56,121 per family per year. Outside of the distilleries, Lawrenceburg reports only small employment. The West Park shopping center, for example, hosts several small employers. Naturally, an enormous number of the residents in this area commute to Danville, Versailles, Georgetown, Lexington, and Frankfort to seek employment. The easy proximity to these major financial, political, and educational centers contributes greatly to the prosperity of the city.

Lawrenceburg, KY Neighborhoods

The four major neighborhoods of Lawrenceburg are evenly distributed around the city center. They are Ballard, Anderson City, McBrayer, and Nevin. All these areas are characterized by rolling, green hills and light urban density. This area has a large amount of agricultural activity, though there is less than at the historical peak. The county high school, library, community park, and courthouse lie downtown, near Broadway and Main. This is also where much of the town's business activity occurs. The other neighborhoods, especially Fox Creek, are characterized by a mixture of traditional family homes and small subdivisions built on old farms.

Lawrenceburg, KY School District

Lawrenceburg hosts the vast majority of educational facilities in Anderson County. The Anderson County Middle School and Anderson County High School are located near the center of town, as is the Ezra Sparrow Early Childhood Center, two of the four elementary schools in the county, the Christian Academy, and the Full Circle School of Woodworking. There is also a branch campus of the Bluegrass Community and Technical College to the north of town, on the road to Frankfort.

Moving to Lawrenceburg, KY Resource Guide

Lawrenceburg, KY Housing

The median property value in Lawrenceburg is more than $120,000, which reflects the specific pattern of habitation in the county. The combination of large estates with enormous acreage attached to them and ultramodern homes in exclusive subdivisions drives the prices up to an extraordinary level by Kentucky standards. Homeownership is the prevalent condition here, with two properties their dwellers own for every rental home. As high as this number may be, the homeownership percentage in the surrounding county is even higher. The median rent is $750 monthly in Lawrenceburg, which is high for Kentucky. However, when the market for small apartments is examined, this city becomes more competitive.

A studio or one-bedroom apartment costs less in this city than anywhere else and much less than the national average. Lawrenceburg's cost of living index is substantially more than the rest of Kentucky, reflecting the town's slightly inflated price of goods and services. The city's greatest advantage, besides its native charm and tasteful affluence, is the wide variety of housing options available to the consumer. Everything from a tiny apartment to a two-hundred-year-old mansion on a horse farm of historical significance is available and on the market.

The smooth gradient of high-quality construction over the decades gives options for every kind of construction, from ultramodern split-level duplexes to literal log cabins, and the resourceful purchaser will also be able to procure as much farmland or forest as may suit their needs. Lawrenceburg is one of the true hidden treasures of central Kentucky, and the prudent investor may take note of the possibilities of this sort of real estate market.