Today I bring you a magical house in Oregon. It is way out of everyone’s price range, but it is so lovely, that it must be appreciated by the world.
Oh my goodness. If I had 6 million dollars…
You can see more amazing pics at this Redfin listing.
Blog, Fun POST A COMMENT by Ilona
Today I bring you a magical house in Oregon. It is way out of everyone’s price range, but it is so lovely, that it must be appreciated by the world.
Oh my goodness. If I had 6 million dollars…
You can see more amazing pics at this Redfin listing.
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Ash says
If only I had 6 million dollars to buy my own hobbit home. Finally then I can justify eating 7 meals a day. Mmmmm, elevensies, afternoon tea, dinner, supper…
Siobhan says
Best reason ever to own a hobbit home.
Torin says
Would live in it!
Bernie says
How about if we all pool our money…
Stacey says
this one’s a hit for me. and they definitely paid a lighting professional to do the exterior lighting. I love how this house both fits in with the hill side (surprise! it’s super big from the back!) and stands out by being definitetively man made. the curves blend it into the surrounds, but looking through the photos I don’t get the sense of wrongness I often do from curved houses. I also love the whimsy throughout. no desire to move to the hills of Oregon, but it is gorgeous.
Debs says
708 acres! A gazebo for the pool!! I fell in love with it with the exception of the rug in the bathroom. But if I had 6mil I could easily put in heated tile 😉
ShadowKat says
seriously. why is there carpet in the bathroom? o.O
Whitney says
+1 , I love the house but I’ve never seen carpet in bathrooms, what’s that about
Dienia b says
someone who has never cleaned a bathroom 😆
Maria M. OToole says
Well, that probably describes *most* contractors…
Sarah says
Was looking for this comment! There’s carpet in at least Two bathrooms?!!!
Sara T says
+1
I too noticed that.
Are you sure the elves didn’t have some input into the hobbit house? Loved it.
Tasha says
OMG this place is amazing! Thanks for the link!
Tink says
Well, it doesn’t have a moat… Other than that, dayum. I want.
I would have kept the theme going and had the trees’ roots in the basement. Or better yet, have a root cellar. 😛
Elaine says
Just popping out to buy my lottery ticket! Fingers crossed I’ll be moving to Oregan shortly! 😂
MariaZ says
Why do people put carpet in a bathroom?
Moderator R says
In the UK at least, it seems to be a generational thing. Many a grandparent home I visited had this and it made me so self conscious to have a shower or bath there!
Kristine says
My grandparents in Oklahoma & Kansas had carpet in the bathrooms as well….definitely a generational idea….
Tink says
My parents had carpet in the downstairs bathroom that I used. Problem was that it was an interior bathroom with no windows, so if we didn’t run the fan long enough or keep the doors open when not in use, then the dark and damp conditions occasionally resulted in little mushrooms growing out of the carpet.
Bea says
Mushrooms?!!🫣
My first question is how’d the spores get there?!
I going to reread HA’s Heroes, lol.
Patricia Schlorke says
Hopefully there are no small children being potty trained, or big adults who don’t miss the toilet. 😬
RobtheFiend says
Wet feet on slippery floor. Enough said.
Moderator R says
Any number of anti-slip coatings, silicone mats, adhesive non-slip stickers or wet-room floor design could come before fibre carpet that grows mould!
Sabrina says
Grows mould plus rots the wooden beam beneath. The load bearingbeam. Of a bathroom on the second floor. True story…
Jenn says
I have carpet in bathroom bc I live in Massachusetts in an antique house. It’s nice in winter for warmth… cats like to sprawl in front of the heater after they hang out on the shower lip
Daisy says
Yes yes yes!!! This one! I want this one!!
Our whole family went to the Ren Faire this weekend in costumes that would fit right in here. Well, maybe not the pirate.
Sjik says
ooh ooh ooh
Darlene says
My precious!! If I had 6 mil it would totally be mine – after ripping out the carpet in the bathroom – why would anyone do that?!? Heated tile floors, heated towel rack. People would have to come visit cuz I’d never ever leave the property again!
Lauren says
+1
Diane says
Thank you Ilona for sharing this masterpiece of a house. I have a friend who works for a custom home builder and I sent the link to her and her boss. They would truly appreciate all the work that went into bringing this house into reality.
What a blessing to be able to afford such a living piece of fantasy!
Sherri says
I have been to Ashland, Oregon many times and would expect to find this house there. Ashland is the permanent home of the Oregon Shakespear Festival. It is a community filled with so many cool and unique galleries, shops, restaurants and open-air performances. It’s amazing.
Clarissa Carson says
Yes, except now those of us who grew up in Ashland have been priced out of living in our home town. It’s not as cool anymore since the people who created that environment can no longer afford to be there! No, not bitter.at.all
Rosie says
If they don’t throw in the bedroom peacock statue for free, the deal is off….
Erika G says
Wow, its really beautiful. All the wood work is so cool!
But why 11,000 square feet and only 2 bedrooms? Who’s using all that living space?
Plus “Centrally located” in the middle of nowhere.
Then again, it is a fantasy house, literally. They put so much work into every aspect I wonder why they’re selling?
ShadowKat says
I literally only saw 1 bedroom. the other is the ‘guest house’ I assume. literally in the last 2 pictures. o.O
Megan says
The middle of nowhere is by definition the central location in nowhere. They ain’t lying. 🙂
Maria M. OToole says
The one bedroom in the blog’s pics looks like it accounts for 1500 sq. ft. right there.
Gastongirl says
Wow. Just wow.
Merano says
Ooo, Ashland! Oregon Shakespeare Festival! 708 acres I imagine guarantees no neighbors 🙂 but… Centrally located means equidistant between SF and Portland so plan no day trips if your private plane is in the shop. Also a lovely view of the wild fires in the summer 😉
Merano says
Okay sorry to be a Debbie Downer today. I’m jealous of anyone who can afford this fantastic place, and also my hip hurts (poor, poor me 😆)
Robin says
I grew up in the mountains, and generally think mountains are overrated, but the views from this house and lovely. And the woodwork is awesome.
Other Barbara says
Showed daughter, who said she joined Reddit group r/zillowgonewild
Lots of fun.
Bookworm says
Ok, it’s gorgeous, but it only has TWO bedrooms and 3.5 baths in 11,000 sq ft.
Sarah T. says
Once I win the lottery, I’ll buy it and rent it out to vacationing BDHers. 😁
Bill G says
I’d have called these photos AI images if I wasn’t told first that they’re photos.
Wow!
Jane says
It’s lovely, but I couldn’t live there without curtains.
Siobhan says
But you clearly have no neighbors!
Alice says
As long as you don’t have cows looking in when you’re in the bathroom sitting on the toilet with the door open, it’s not a big deal, when that happens you ask yourself, “how good is the vision on cows?”
Priscilla says
not enough bedrooms. pass.
Siobhan says
I imagine you can do something with the 3000sqft basement.
eww says
Drool!
Claudia says
Wow, that is absolutely gorgeous! I love everything about it.
Tierney says
WOW! Yes please!!
Siobhan says
My gosh, those views. My sister would kill for that house (if I had $6M to spend on a house, I would make sure there were ocean views*). I figure if the right half** of my siblings got together, and cut their spending to the bone, they’d be able to finance it for her.
__
*although my real estate pr0n always starts in Sedona, AZ, so maybe I would be ok with no ocean, as long as there were seas of red rock
**I’m definitely the left half
SueS says
It is beautiful, but I wonder if I could live with all of those windows in a part of the world where it’s cloudy 300 days a year. Might get depressing. Can’t shut it out….
mad_troll says
How I know that I’m…my age : my thought process went “very pretty…sooo pretty…how TF much energy do you need to heat/cool those spaces? Also those window frames *don’t* look like triple glass”
Eh. I have become one of those age-memes.
Tink says
I had the same thought about those custom windows in the bedroom, the ones shaped like the tree trunk/limbs. If anything happened to that window, the cost to replace it would be really expensive.
Marsha says
If only I had 6 million dollars. Gorgeous home.
Kate says
Honestly, this is a place I would love to stay but not somewhere I’d want to live long term. Mostly because it is too specifically itself. There is no space for my changeable personality.
For years I have changed the inside of my house every solstice and equinox. I move furniture around and change the covers/throws. I put up different pictures, curtains, rugs, tchotchkes. That would be impossible in this house.
(Also, it would take forever in a house this size. It already takes about 3 days in the small house I have now.)
CourtneyMincy says
I wants the precious!!!
Knowing my luck after I won the lottery and bought it wildfire would come through and burn it. But sooo pretty.
jewelwing says
The views alone are worth a couple million. And the woodwork! Especially that floor. I wants it, my precioussss, and I don’t say that about most of the houses I see online.
Granted, if it’s in the middle of 700+ acres, it’s probably a good half mile to the nearest road. You would need to stock up for winter, and have a nice garage for your clearing equipment because if EMS needs to get to you, you want that to happen.
Donna A says
I think I might be in the minority but I’m not a fan of the streaky wood flooring. Either put it everywhere (especially the kitchen, the kitchen feels like someone lost inspiration), and maybe better yet, make it less shiny and less multicoloured streaky.
Breann says
I too felt like the kitchen was lacking in the whimsy that I loved from the entrance. Made me wonder if it was a compromise between owners. Like the main cook didn’t really want an that in a house, but the other did, so they said the kitchen could be plain? 🤷♀️
jewelwing says
It’s definitely a matter of personal taste. I’m a huge fan of wood inlays in furniture, and I love the sensation of flow that floor gives. The craftsmanship is also impressive, at least as far as the pics can show. Someone who prefers a more streamlined look is not going to like it though. The industrial-chic houses that lots of people love, with metal staircases and bare floors, usually look too cold and unwelcoming for me. I can appreciate the aesthetic, but wouldn’t want to live with it.
Mary says
I love, love, love it! It’s incredibly!
My one and only issue, why Americans do not fence their properties? I get the size of the land but a portion could be fenced, no? Where do you guys let your dogs out? – I do go on two walks a day, on and off leash, but my dogs love my garden anyway and I feel safe with the fact that they won’t get into any serious trouble in it. What if you are out and about, in your own garden and someone out on a walk passes through? Are the distances really vast enough for it to be irrelevant?
Sabrina says
Also not an American. And my immediate follow up would be: sure, how you keep your dogs in matters, but how you keep the actual wildlife out matters more 🙈 I mean, yonder side of the pond still has actual predators and stuff, unlike the glorified parkland my fellow countryfolks call nature 😂
Mary says
I’m from Poland and live in the countryside. No big predators but we do have a lot of wildlife: foxes, wild boars, does (a lot), hares (also a lot), weasels, birds big and small (cranes, storks) etc.. They generally avoid humans and close proximity to human homes, especially where there are cats and dogs. Mine are mostly at home so despite two biggish dogs and three cats I still get mice in the garage :-/. There are places where boars are a problem but thankfully not here. In wilder areas I wouldn’t mind wolves but bears do sometimes go close to homes. I would not want a bear anywhere near my dogs! A fence is a must, I mean with a land this big I would want at least 10’000 m2 fenced.
Clarissa Carson says
This is in the woods, so you get more wildlife stuck in your fence than you would believe. Most of our dogs are trained to go off leash around here 🙂
Tiger Lily says
I grew up on a farm in the USA and we had fenced land for cattle, horses, and pigs but that didn’t keep wild critters out of the front yard, garden, and house sometimes. The dogs lived outside and were not leashed. If you have enough acres then they are still on your land even if they wander a bit and ours usually stayed close to where they were fed. There were no neighbors within sight and, as a kid, it was an awesome place to grow up as there were acres to explore.
jewelwing says
American here. Many Americans do fence their properties, if they have a reason to. If the house is in the middle of 700+ acres, it’s half a mile from the road (640 acres being a square mile). Even if it’s not, Private Property and No Trespassing signs around the perimeter of the property are very American in rural areas. They will have additional wording to clarify what activities are allowed if it’s just a Private Property notice. The hunt club timber tract behind me only reminds people about preventing forest fires. In any case, no one is likely to stumble on that house by accident.
That far from a road, if the dogs are big enough, they may just let them run. If not that big, they may only allow the dogs out when humans are supervising. Or it’s possible there’s a fenced area for the dogs under tree cover that the camera avoided; looking at the aerial shots, there are many items on the property that aren’t documented in the photographs. Or they may not have outdoor pets, or they may believe nothing bad can happen to someone as special as they are until it happens. They do have a small fenced area with those impressive gates, which would do for a dog to hang out. Presumably it would bark at approaching wildlife.
If their primary purpose for the property is to act as an environmental area or wildlife refuge, they will fence very little of it. Yes, my backyard is fenced to keep dogs in. Fencing to keep wildlife out in any effective manner is monstrously expensive. Deer can jump a 6′ fence and coyotes can climb higher than that. Bunnies, foxes, groundhogs, and skunks can tunnel under. In Oregon there are cougars and bears as well, which can go over or through most things. As for raptors, good luck with your small pets. Here in the MidAtlantic region, keeping wildlife out is not in my budget. And most of my 5+ acres is managed for wildlife anyway, so no fence.
Donna A says
There’s a lot of it I like, but also some bits I really don’t. For coming up on £4.62 million I’d want some work done. And being on a bench plateau in the middle of nowhere feels a tad risky. But I’ll take the entryway and the fireplace, no questions asked.
Cricket says
I’m so glad they put carpet in the bathroom…now I won’t be pining for this place. 😀
Oracle22 says
Perhaps we could all pool our money and make it a BDH retreat center. And list it on AirBnB in the luxury section to recoup our money!
Jean says
Air BnBDH? 🤣
Scott says
hope you guys are feeling better
Clarissa Carson says
Yes! This home is in my neck of Oregon, Southern Oregon. Crazy creative around here 🙂 If only we also won the recent powerball….
Goldie says
Gorgeous but, OMG, the dusting…
Megan W says
That was my second thought after, “Oooooh, pretty!” Too much dusting!
Kathleen says
LOL! I was thinking similar! I would need MORE than 6 million for this, you have to pay for upkeep, maintenance/cleaning, and the people to do all of the said upkeep/maintenance/cleaning. I would also need either a chauffeur to drive me, or a pilot to fly my helicopter (not to mention the purchase of, maintenance of & payment to the people to do said things) 🙃
Patricia Schlorke says
The property taxes! Of course if you have that much money, the property taxes isn’t a big deal. 🤷♀️
Megan says
Umm, isn’t this outside any town’s jurisdiction? It’s on top of a mountain, which town has a right to property taxes there?
Catbird says
The entry way alone would be worth it. But if the BDH is coming to visit, the place will need more bedrooms and bathrooms. We’re a Horde after all …
Joylyn says
Wow! Reminds me of S.M. Stirling’s Emberverse series. They had a community that was based on LOTR, mostly the Elves, but still!
This could totally have been their homebase:)
Michelle says
that’s just down the road from me. I’m in Medford.
Nean says
Who ever made this gorgeous home didn’t want to encourage long term visitors. 2 bedrooms?
Danithra says
$6 million is a discount from what they really wanted!!! I googled “Shining Hand Ranch” and it looks like it has been on the market off and on since it was completed in 2016. Originally listed at $8,235,000
https://www.oregonlive.com/front-porch/2018/03/hobbit_house_ashland_sulara_va.html
Maybe if I wait a bit longer it will drop into my price range? (Like another couple of decades…) 🙂
jewelwing says
So it took a decade to build – not surprising! – and then they decided not to live in it. And their even bigger property next door (that’s where all the bedrooms were, folks) sold at auction for $1.5M. Yikes.
On the plus side, the LOTR house has geothermal heated floors on all three levels, which is a huge energy savings. And that pool is solar heated, but you could see that from the aerial shots.
SJ says
Wow!
& continuing to wish health and rest for House Andrews et al!
Megan says
The main problem isn’t the $6M, it’s the helicopter you need to do grocery runs. Plus the lobbying to get your “neighboring” towns to install helipads.
njb says
Wow, that’s all I can say
Catlover says
Definitely dedicated to their vision. That stairway alone, if it’s real wood, would have taken months. I can admire the artistry of the construction but “no thanks” to owning it!