Northeast-facing exterior at dawn

Section 4 — Light & Orientation

This home
greets every dawn.

Northeast-facing orientation means the first light of day fills your living spaces — while the afternoon sun stays gentle. A rare feature that touches how you live, every single morning.

Not all homes face
the right direction.

Most homes in Cary face south or west — catching the harsh afternoon glare, heating up by noon, and leaving mornings dim. Orientation is rarely discussed, yet it shapes how a home feels every single day.

4007 Strendal Drive faces northeast. That means sunrise comes directly through the front — flooding the living room, kitchen, and dining area in warm, natural light from the moment the day begins. By afternoon, the angle has shifted. Interiors stay comfortable. Curtains stay open.

The owners have never needed to block the sun. They've enjoyed it — every morning for 14 years.

N S E W NE

HOME FACES NORTHEAST

Morning
Sunrise fills front rooms
Evening
Sunset visible from inside
Summer
Less heat buildup, lower A/C bills
Year Round
Consistent, soft natural light
7–8
Months open-air living
NE
True orientation — verified
14
Years of morning light enjoyed
Sunrise & sunset from inside

A home that breathes
on its own terms.

Positioned at the end of a cul-de-sac — open on all sides, buffered from road noise — this home draws fresh air naturally through every level. The signature "spice door" at the back lets cross-ventilation flow through the kitchen, carrying aromas out and cool air in, without the A/C running.

Northeast front face
Northeast front face — light and air from every direction, dawn through dusk
Aerial cul-de-sac view
Aerial view — cul-de-sac position means no blocked sides, air flows freely in all directions
Rear elevation golden hour
Rear elevation at golden hour — screened porch, western sunset, natural cross-breeze from spice door
The Spice Door
A storm door off the kitchen with an adjustable screen — open both doors and fresh air flows in from the back. Aromas out, cool air in. No exhaust fan needed.
No Blocked Sides
The cul-de-sac position means only one direct neighbour. Three sides of the property open freely — a ventilation advantage most suburban homes can't offer.
Never Flooded
Elevated 10 feet above the creek. Not once in 14 years. The lot position means rainwater drains away naturally — no stagnant pooling, no flood anxiety.

The sounds you want.
Not the ones you don't.

Most homes near major roads accept noise as a trade-off for convenience. This one doesn't. The lot's position — tucked behind other properties, backed by the cul-de-sac — creates natural distance from I-540 and Green Level Church Road.

When we moved in, we checked the home's position against RDU's published flight path maps — and the quiet has matched that ever since. What you hear here are birds, the garden, and the stillness of a street that ends at your door.

  • Historically quiet airspace — owners checked RDU maps at time of purchase, no overhead corridors experienced in 14 years
  • Buffered from I-540 noise by lot depth and neighbouring properties
  • Cul-de-sac — no through-traffic, no strangers passing
  • Single direct neighbour on one side
  • Children play in the yard safely — cars don't pass through

Noise Profile — Our Experience

Aircraft overhead Quiet in our experience
Road traffic (I-540) Buffered by lot depth
Neighbourhood activity Cul-de-sac — no through traffic
Nature sounds Year-round
Based on 14 years of living here — and verified against RDU flight path maps at time of purchase in 2011. The dominant sound is nature: birds, wind in the trees, and the occasional creek after rain.
Golden hour at 4007 Strendal Drive
"The morning light arrives like a quiet promise.
The evening light stays like a reward."

14 years of sunrises and sunsets — 4007 Strendal Drive

Come see it in the morning.

Schedule a tour at sunrise — and experience the light for yourself. It's the best time to visit.

Schedule a Tour