Exactly one year after company officials filed civil engineering plans, the city of Jacksonville issued a permit April 16 for Chick-fil-A to build Bartram Park restaurant at a project cost of $2.5 million.
At 15455 Bartram Park Blvd. in Jacksonville, the project straddles the southern Duval County and northern St. Johns County line.
The city of Jacksonville began reviewing civil plans for Atlanta-based Chick-fil-A to build the restaurant on 2.38 acres on April 16, 2025.
The 2.38 acres are part of a master site of 6.98 acres owned by Bartram Corner LLC.

The site is north of the Publix-anchored Bartram Market shopping center. The residential properties bordering the site are part of the gated Montevilla at Bartram Lakes community.
Bowman Consulting Group Ltd. is the civil engineer for the 5,040-square-foot restaurant. Odessa-based Stansell Properties & Development LLC is the project contractor.
Jacksonville utility JEA issued a service availability determination letter in September 2023 for a 5,399-square-foot restaurant building with canopies and associated utilities.
The Bartram Park approval comes as Chick-fil-A accelerates its footprint north of the site with plans for two more locations.
On April 2, St. Johns County began reviewing an application for a Chick-fil-A off County Road 210 at Moon Bay Parkway, east of Interstate 95 and across from The Fountains at St. Johns.
The county Development Review Committee discussed the proposal April 15 for the 4,713-square-foot project, providing guidance on environmental protection, tree planting and visual buffers required between the restaurant and adjacent residential developments.

Atlanta-based Foresite Group, the project engineer, is also linked to an unidentified 4,847-square-foot restaurant project at Nocatee and Crosswater parkways. JEA issued a service availability letter for that site in June, but the project’s identity remains unknown.
Farther north, another Chick-fil-A is proposed off International Golf Parkway at a future Walmart Supercenter outparcel. Bowman Consulting Group is the engineer for that project as well, which is under review by St. Johns County.
The land is owned by Steinemann & Co. through World Commerce Center LLP.