Monday, January 28, 2019

Land Ho! Enjoy Your Own Private Island Off the Florida Keys

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Escaping to the warm sun and pristine sand of island life is the ultimate dream scenario. After all, what’s not to love about swaying palms, a gentle breeze, and miles of turquoise-green waters stretching out in front of you?

Now take the dreamy island getaway in your mind’s eye and multiply it by a factor of 10. East Sister Rock, a private island situated just off the Florida Keys, takes island paradise to a whole new level.

“There’s this great sense of peace you get when you step off the boat and onto the island,” says listing agent Tracy McCandless.

It’s easy to see why. The island home is secluded. In fact, it basically takes up the entire island. No neighbors. No barking dogs (unless you bring your own). No worries.

Island retreat or not, proper Florida living requires a few staples: space to enjoy the outdoors, a retreat from the heat, and views. All the views.

East Sister Rock ticks all the boxes. The main house is fitted with a 2,880-square-foot wraparound deck. What’s more, the deck is covered, offering residents and their visitors a reprieve from direct sunlight.

East Sister Island

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East Sister Island

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Deck

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But if you’d rather spend time basking in the sunshine, there’s a sundeck for that. The home also has a saltwater pool as well as a moat (yep, you read that right), so you can choose your water experience.

The home also features wall upon wall of windows, so if the heat is too much, you can retreat indoors without giving up your view.

Saltwater pool

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Sunning area

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East Sister Rock offers incredible views—of the sunset, the ocean, and even the coral reefs—from just about every angle.

And this is definitely not a “roughing it” island experience. East Sister Rock is off the grid, but it’s fueled by wind and solar energy and it has Wi-Fi.

Living space

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Logistics might be your only concern. To reach the island, you’ll need to come by boat or helicopter. The property has four docks and a helipad. The closest island is Marathon, which is about an hour north of Key West. Although the island is completely secluded, it’s still close enough to the party scene.

The post Land Ho! Enjoy Your Own Private Island Off the Florida Keys appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.



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‘House Party’ Podcast: Taboo Questions Your Agent Won’t Answer, Reviving Tuscan Decor, and More

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“House Party” is realtor.com’s official podcast about the overlapping worlds of real estate, design, and pop culture. Click the player above to hear our takes on this week’s hot topics.

While honesty is always the best policy, there are certain topics that are just off-limits. In real estate, for example, your agent will be an invaluable source of knowledge about many aspects of a home (like what types of cabinets are popular now, or the difference between septic and sewer systems), but there are a few topics they will be hesitant—or even refuse—to address. What are they and why are agents likely to be tight-lipped about them? Natalie, Rachel, and Erik get into it on this week’s episode of “House Party.”

We also talk about Tuscan-style home decor—a trend that peaked in popularity during the late ’90s/early ’00s but feels rather stale today. In the spirit of freshening up your decor (and working with what you have), we offer some surefire design tips for bringing your dated home into this decade.

And this wouldn’t be a podcast about real estate if we didn’t talk about some seriously sweet homes. Specifically, we discuss the 2018 HGTV Dream Home (a beautiful modern manse overlooking the Puget Sound) that has found a buyer, a rustic “hobbit house” for sale in Wisconsin, and the multimillion-dollar pads of this week’s real estate winner and loser. You’ll have to listen to find out who they are!

Subscribe on Apple PodcastsGoogle Play MusicSpotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. And we’d be eternally grateful if you threw us a five-star rating on Apple Podcasts if you like what you hear. The more good ratings and reviews we have, the easier it’ll be for people to find us.

Have a crazy home-related story you’re dying to share? Wish you could finally get your real estate questions answered? We’re all ears. Reach us at podcast@realtor.com, or tweet us @housepartypod on Twitter.

Stories we discussed on ‘House Party’ this week:

Arrivederci! 5 Tricks to Give Your Outdated Tuscan Decor the Boot

HGTV’s 2018 Dream Home Creates Big Buzz, Finds Buyer Briskly

4 Questions Your Agent Might Not Answer—and Why

Calling All Eco-Buyers! Hobbit Home in Wisconsin Is a Rare Retreat

All-Pro Adrian Peterson Rushing to Close Deal on Texas Home for $4.7M

Robert Redford Bids Farewell to Wine Country, Sells St. Helena Home for $7M

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What Slowdown? The 10 Markets Where Home Prices Are Unstoppable 

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The question is no longer if the nation is in the throes of a housing slowdown, but rather how deep and wide it will wind up being—and how much of a blow it’ll deliver to the American real estate market. The signs are becoming ever more troubling. The number of existing home sales has dropped to the lowest level in three years, price growth has slowed precipitously, and some super-pricey, bellwether cities are actually seeing prices fall. (We’re looking at you, San Francisco, Dallas, and Miami!)

The fact that home growth has slowed in 70% of the United States’ 200 largest housing markets has economists debating whether the housing slowdown is the canary in the coal mine, warning of economic woes to come. But let’s all take a deep breath and one giant step back: Not every market is slowing down. In fact, realtor.com® found 10 metros where home prices are actually shooting up.

Welcome to the nation’s strongest housing markets—places that so far have eluded the shifting tides, with double-digit annual price growth.

So why are some cities skyrocketing, while the rest of the country appears to have been clobbered by a double-whammy of rising mortgage rates and home prices that have risen too darn high?

Depends on where you look. Places ravaged by natural disasters are seeing prices climb, as folks compete for a limited number of available properties. Those fleeing more expensive cities are substantially driving up prices in smaller and cheaper cities nearby. Some markets smacked hard by the financial collapse a decade ago are still recovering, meaning that they still have room for prices to move up. And other cities are simply seeing a torrent of new residents flowing in.

“Even with the deceleration in home price increases … we are still seeing strong home buying in smaller metros that have good affordability and solid job growth,” says Frank Nothaft, the chief economist at Corelogic, a real estate data firm.

To find the top housing markets unaffected by the national housing slowdown, we pulled December realtor.com listing data for the 200 largest metropolitan areas.* We eliminated those with year-over-year price growth that was lower than it was a year earlier, then ranked the rest on price and price-per-square-foot increases, as well as changes in inventory, days on market, and percentage of homes seeing price bumps.

So which markets are bucking the big slowdown?  Let’s check out the four trends continuing to push up home prices.

10 skyrocketing metros

Claire Widman

Wildfire leveled their homes—now they’re bidding up Chico prices

Kyle Smith won’t soon forget the orange sky outside the window of his Paradise, CA, home. On Nov. 8, the 31-year-old youth pastor found himself frantically driving his wife and 2-year-old out of the evacuated town while smoke poured into their vehicle and midday skies turned black. Camp Fire would go on to become the deadliest wildfire in California history, claiming at least 85 lives and burning down 18,000 homes and buildings.

“Three days later, it was confirmed that our home was gone,” Smith told realtor.com. “The entire structure was down to ashes: All that was left was the chimney. The car rims were melted down to the pavement. Everything on my block was gone.”

The aftermath of the wildfire has pushed Chico, CA, the metro that includes Paradise, into the No. 1 spot on our ranking. Home prices in the city, about a 90-minute drive north of Sacramento, have climbed 14.7% over the past 12 months, to a median $330,100. In the days that followed the fire, many newly homeless families poured into the city of Chico looking for hotels and apartments, quickly buying up the handful of available homes. Chico, which had a tight real estate market before the fire, soon began experiencing bidding wars and surging home prices.

Four bedrooms, two baths, and over 21 acres in Chico

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“Being the fastest-growing real estate market is not something anyone here is proud of—we’re a hot market in the worst way,” says Dustin Cheatham, a real estate agent at Century 21 Jeffries Lydon in Chico. “People need housing, and there isn’t enough supply. Our community is being pulled apart, [with] families and generations who lived close together now separated because of the Camp Fire.”

In the short term, prices are up, but over time, the devastation might lead some to move out of the area rather than rebuilding.

In the months since the fire, Smith has bounced around, staying in family members’ spare bedrooms in Chico and living in a recreational vehicle (RV) in a relative’s driveway. Just this month, he finally found an apartment, but he’s not sure if he’ll stay.

The one-story home he bought for $160,000 in 2014 would now cost more than $300,000 to rebuild, given that developers’ prices are surging to meet the demand. Smith is now weighing rebuilding against moving out of state so that he can buy something more affordable—and worry less about keeping his family safe.

Fleeing high-cost cities, home buyers push up prices in nearby areas

When home prices soar far out of the reach of locals, residents have a few options: They can start renting, they can bail entirely to another part of the country—or they can move to more affordable, smaller cities that are relatively close. The latter option is becoming more and more popular, as people seek out places where they can still afford to become homeowners.

Just look at Seattle. Homes in the metro cost a median $550,000—a steep climb, considering that median household income there is $82,133. That’s prompted many of the folks who don’t have those high-paying Amazon or Microsoft jobs to look at Spokane, WA, a four-hour drive inland. No, that’s not exactly a commutable distance to the Emerald City. But high demand is still driving up prices there—with the median home price up 15.4% in the last year, to $299,100.

Scenic Spokane

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“Around half of my buyers are from out of town,” says Marianne Bornhoft, a local broker at Windermere Real Estate, and it’s creating a frenzy. Earlier this month, she listed a home on a Wednesday, and by Saturday, it had attracted eight offers at or above listing price.

Most Spokane newcomers are coming either from Seattle or Portland, OR. They’re buying up four-bedroom Craftsman-style homes for under $275,000. They dig the endless opportunities for outdoor activities along the Spokane River: realtor.com named Spokane one of the country’s top affordable outdoorsy cities last year.

A similar phenomenon is happening in Greensboro, NC, where the median list price has climbed 14.6% over the past year, to $220,000. Home values are getting driven up there by an influx of folks moving from the heart of the Research Triangle in Raleigh and Durham, each around an hour away, where median home prices are $340,000 and $351,000, respectively. The triangle is home to several top universities, including Duke, as well as a slew of high-tech companies and startups.

Affordable small cities with resurgent economies see higher prices

The housing slowdown is most pronounced in America’s most expensive cities, like San Francisco, where home prices have raced up for years. On the flip side, many of the places where home prices are still growing now are smaller metropolises where the economy took longer to rebound.

A prime example is South Bend, IN. This Rust Belt city has had some rough patches as plants closed and locals left. Slowly but surely, the city has rebounded in recent years. With the help of Notre Dame University, which is located in the area, the city has built a small but dynamic tech sector and start-up scene. Elkhart, IN, just 30 minutes out of town, has seen its RV manufacturing business boom and is now paying top dollar to find talent.

The rebound in South Bend has been so profound that its current mayor, Pete Buttigieg, announced last week he was pursuing the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. In response to the region’s growth, home prices jumped 15.4% last year to a median $150,000.

“We’re seeing multiple offers if a home is priced right. The shortage of inventory is the driving factor,” says Beau Dunfee, managing broker at Weichert Realtors, Jim Dunfee & Associates in South Bend. He hasn’t seen signs of the housing slump that agents in Seattle and New York are experiencing. “The Midwest is usually a step behind the West and East Coast.” In this case that’s a good thing—for sellers, anyway.

The economy of Milwaukee, WI, has also continued to grow. It boasts a total of 13 Fortune 1000 companies, including Harley-Davidson and Northwestern Mutual. Homes here sell quickly.

In October, realtor.com ranked Milwaukee as one of the markets with the fastest-shrinking inventory. Over a three-year period, inventory there has dropped 37.3%, a loss of 5 million square feet. So it shouldn’t be a surprise that median home prices are up 14%, to $244,640.

Inventory in Milwaukee is shrinking, and not just because of the cold.

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“It looks like 2019 will be just as strong as the previous year,” says local agent Beth Jaworski. 

There’s a similar story unfolding in booming real estate markets in Birmingham, AL (10.8% price growth); state capital Trenton, NJ (16%); and Reading, PA (14.2%). They all got hit hard by the downturn and took some time to recover. But now they’re looking good, with low unemployment rates and relatively affordable (if fast-growing) home prices.

Two-bedroom home in Reading, PA

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Booming population centers = booming real estate

When droves of people move into a new community at the same time, they compete against local buyers and drive real estate prices up. And up.

This is why Killeen, TX, made our list. As the home of Fort Hood, the military post employs around 54,000 civilians and soldiers and attracts contractors like General Dynamics, an aerospace firm with a presence in the region. In 2017, Killeen’s population grew 1.6%, double the national growth rate of 0.8%. It isn’t slowing down. From 2015 to 2030, the metro area’s population is expected to grow 23%, according to the Texas Water Development Board.

In response, median home prices in Killeen have jumped 13.9% to $205,000. But those are still bargain rates compared to larger Texas cities like Austin, TX, just over an hour to the north. Why pay a median $349,100 home price in the Austin metro when you could get a three-bedroom ranch home for under $150,000 in Killeen, which is within commuting distance?

“People are being pushed out of Austin,” says Andrea Curtis, broker/owner of United Country Premier Properties in Killeen.

Columbia, SC, is best-known as the state’s capital and home of the University of South Carolina. But a lot of the commotion these days is about all the moving trucks: Population growth in the Columbia metro in 2017 was 31% higher than the national rate.

Much of this population growth is tied to the surging population of South Carolina and the rest of the South. Around this time of year, those mild winters in the Carolinas really start to sound nice—as do the lower taxes and costs of living, particularly to young families and retirees. This is helping to push home prices higher. The median price in Columbia climbed 16.5% over the past 12 months, to $232,00.

Columbia, SC

Sean Pavone/iStock

“A lot of people from New York and New Jersey are moving in,” says Micah Collins, a realtor at Keller Williams Realty in Columbia. “Instead of going to Miami, they are coming to South Carolina because of the cost of living. You can buy a 3,000 square-foot home here for less than $300,000.”

* A metropolitan statistical area is a designation that includes the urban core of a city and the surrounding smaller towns and cities. We limited our rankings to just one metro per state to ensure some geographic diversity.

The post What Slowdown? The 10 Markets Where Home Prices Are Unstoppable  appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.



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Sunday, January 27, 2019

Commercial real estate summit on tap | Business-farm - Tahlequah Daily Press

Commercial real estate summit on tap | Business-farm  Tahlequah Daily Press

OKLAHOMA CITY - The Central Oklahoma Commercial Association of Realtors is hosting its fourth Commercial Real Estate Summit on Sept. 25 at the Embassy ...



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Saturday, January 26, 2019

Florida Realtor Kristen Weardon Mentors Mrs. Globe 2018 Contestants - PR Web

Florida Realtor Kristen Weardon Mentors Mrs. Globe 2018 Contestants  PR Web

Florida area realtor, philanthropist and former Mrs. USA Kristen Weardon acted as project manager, mentor and event coordinator for the recent Mrs. Globe ...



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Friday, January 25, 2019

Where the Sea Meets the Sky! HGTV Ultimate House Hunt Winner for Sale in Hawaii

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If the line where the sea meets the sky calls you, it may be time to practice your best “Moana” numbers at this amazing Hawaiian waterfront property.

Known as the Tahitian Pavilion, the oceanfront beauty in Maui is on the market for $8.9 million. The four-bedroom, 3.5-bath home won the Waterfront Homes category in HGTV’s Ultimate House Hunt competition in 2018.

“I call it my million-dollar surf shack,” says listing agent Anna Severson. Architect Kendrick Bangs Kellogg—known for his innovations in organic architecture—designed the home to capture the ocean breezes and the sounds of the waves and birds, incorporating the natural surroundings into the home whenever possible.

“People walk in, and nine out of 10 people go, ‘Wow, I’ve never seen a house like this in my life,’” says Severson. The home is built on five staggered layers, with funky Hawaiian and surfer accents and styling throughout.

Outdoor views

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Living room

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Outdoor living space surrounds nearly the entire perimeter of the home, allowing residents to take in the views of the neighboring surf break and sunsets. Even when you’re indoors, the exposed beams, large windows, and skylights keep the home feeling open, and private outdoor showers, natural local wood, and lava rock accents bring the outdoors to you.

“It’s built to be very harmonious to the rocky point,” says Severson.

There’s a small sandy cove accessible from the house, complete with that surf break. The water is less turbulent in the summer, and lends itself to snorkeling. If you prefer to relax in calmer waters, the heated outdoor whirlpool seats six people in its rocky enclave, or you can head to the open-air hot tub in the master suite.

Dining room

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Bedroom

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The current residents are only the second owners to live in the house, after purchasing it from its original builder. They’ve maintained quite a collection of furniture suited for the house and also of art to complement it, including original oil paintings from local artists Jan Kasprzycki, Pegge Hopper, and Phillip Sabado, and are selling the house furnished. Handmade ceramic tiles decorated with island scenes, bold traditional Hawaiian quilts, and other tropical accents all come with the package.

“It’s really an interesting and well-thought-out art collection,” says Severson. “They feel it should all go together, because that is how the home was conceived—it’s an important part of the spirit of the home.”

And of course, the surroundings are not to be overlooked. Whether lying on the patio or balcony, or even in bed, residents can take in views of the rocky point and ocean waves. “You can see literal turtles coming in, whales breaching, and really beautiful sunsets,” says Severson.

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Eerie Underground House in Vegas Emerges as the Week’s Most Popular Home

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You’ll dig this place! The unbelievable Underground House in Las Vegas soared to the top of this week’s most popular homes on realtor.com®. The bunker 26 feet below the earth’s surface is a strange simulacrum of a suburban house with a pool, fake trees, and even a barbecue. If the “Brady Bunch” had built a bunker, this would be it.

This week’s runner-up is a huge mansion in the small state of New Hampshire. The Mill House features Old World details mixed with contemporary luxury, as well as a six-hole putting green.

Other above-par abodes you clicked on this week include the Beverly Hills home of “Real Housewives” star Dorit Kemsley, the former Detroit home of rock star Jack White, and an affordable, cute Chicago bungalow.

For a full look at this week’s most popular homes, simply scroll on down…

10. 6445 E Division Rd, Mill Creek, IN 

Price: $3,450,000
Why it’s here: If you love Victorian style but don’t want to hassle with restoration, we’ve found just the spot. Built in 2000, this enormous 14,000-square foot mansion on 80 acres of rolling countryside includes eight ensuite bedrooms, nine fireplaces, and two grand staircases. Decks and turrets offer views that extend for miles, and the gated grounds feature a stocked pond.

Mill Creek, IN

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9. 1404 Dawnridge Dr, Beverly Hills, CA

Price: $7,995,000
Why it’s here: “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star Dorit Kemsley and her husband, P.K., have relisted their home—at a discount! The couple initially put the Mediterranean contemporary on the market for $12.75 million. With no takers for the mansion, they tried a price chop last year to $8.25 million but didn’t land a buyer. This relisted price may do the trick. The luxury estate offers indoor-outdoor living, formal living and dining rooms, a dining room, wine cellar, and home theater. 

Beverly Hills, CA

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8. 1735 Lanyard Ln, Fort Wayne, IN

Price: $229,000
Why it’s here: Built in 1965, this cute four-bedroom has had a gut renovation. For nature lovers, it backs up to a creek and nature preserves. It also features a finished basement, screened porch, remodeled baths, new kitchen with quartz counters, and new flooring. Along with a garage, there’s a shed for even more storage.

Fort Wayne, IN

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7. 1647 Wagar Ave, Lakewood, OH

Price: $329,900
Why it’s here: This updated Colonial is within walking distance of shops, schools, parks, and entertainment. The open plan features a gourmet kitchen, living room with fireplace, formal dining room, and a family room that opens to a deck. It comes with new windows, fresh paint, refinished wood flooring, and refreshed bathrooms.

Lakewood, OH

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6.1731 Seminole St, Detroit, MI

Price: $1,114,000
Why it’s here: The former home of rocker Jack White is back on the market. The quaint crib with the funky decor was available last August for $1.2 million. Now it’s back with a slight discount. The White Stripes frontman owned the pad from 2003 to 2007, before selling it to the current owners for $590,000.

Detroit, MI

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5. 609 S Bois D Arc Ave, Tyler, TX

Price: $249,900
Why it’s here: This historic gem from 1942 has gone through a renovation that includes new fixtures, paint, and hardwood floors. It has a large dining room, indoor patio, three bedrooms, a balcony, as well as a patio and pool outside.

Tyler, TX

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4. 24100 Hidden Ridge Rd, Hidden Hills, CA 

Price: $12,995,000
Why it’s here: This deluxe home in the guard-gated and celeb-filled enclave is stuffed with upscale amenities including a chef’s kitchen, home theater, bar and game room, two walk-in closets, and an exercise room.

Hidden Hills, CA

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3. 2549 W Fargo Ave, Chicago, IL

Price: $365,000
Why it’s here: This freshly redone three-bedroom bungalow from 1923 is ready for move-in. The main level offers a spacious kitchen with quartz counters, living room, and separate dining room. The lower level features a finished family room, with laundry, storage, and a reading nook with built-ins.

Chicago, IL

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2. 6 Anderson Rd, Windham, NH 

Price: $3,500,000
Why it’s here: Behold the Mill House, a cool combination of Old World details and contemporary updates. The 11,000-square-foot estate on 14 acres caught the attention of the web, which added grist to this Mill, with many, many clicks. Details of the property include the main house, a carriage house for guests, a workshop, and a clubhouse for entertaining. 

Classic features such as exposed brick and tin ceilings in the kitchen give way to large formal spaces. The sprawling grounds include a six-hole putting green. 

The master suite features a balcony overlooking a waterfall, and the home also includes a library, six fireplaces, wide-plank floors, outdoor lounging spaces, and its own turbine to generate electricity. 

Windham, NH

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1. 3970 Spencer St, Las Vegas, NV

Price: $18,000,000
Why it’s here: Who says you can’t have fun on doomsday?

The Underground House is a bunker built to “withstand cataclysmic events in comfort.” Its unique appeal attracted huge amounts of interest, which propelled the secret dwelling into the top spot.

The subterranean structure includes almost 15,000 square feet of space and amenities, two miles away from the Las Vegas Strip and deep below the earth. The underground living includes a 2,300-square-foot house, a yard with pool, hot tubs, a putting green, a dance floor, a bar, fake trees, a guesthouse, and fountain. Murals of city and mountain views surround the bunker, along with lighting that simulates day, dusk, and dawn.

The home was built in the 1970s by entrepreneur Jerry Henderson and his wife, Mary. Henderson was a pioneer of underground living, sponsoring an exhibit at the New York World’s Fair in 1964. He died in 1983, and the decor of this place appears to be unchanged since them.

The house was purchased in 2014 for $1,150,000 by the Society for the Preservation of Near Extinct Species, a secretive group with the goal of helping humans live forever. The mysterious organization used the home to hold meetings, according to listing agent Stephan M-LaForge

The home cost $10 million to build and is encapsulated inside a steel box 26 feet underground. “It’s underground living. Instead of living in a concrete box, they made it look like a house with a landscape,” M-LaForge says. The bunker includes about a mile of steel beams that secure it. 

Above ground is a home that accesses the underground dwelling and comes with an elevator and three sets of stairs. While M-LaForge isn’t sure anyone has actually lived in the bunker, it’s certainly possible, thanks to a generator and 1,000 gallons of water stored down there. And, you could live in style, with an electric barbecue that vents through a hollow faux tree. Above ground, the cement tree in the yard is a chimney. “It’s unique. It’s completely original. It’s supercool,” M-LaForge says. 

Las Vegas, NV

realtor.com

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