It's a very interesting choice but some part of me was incredibly envious when I saw the first picture of a fucking brook running under the house in the middle of a forest. But then I got to the next pictures and of course they completely ruined it.
How the fuck are you supposed to heat that thing? It's designed like a heat sync, is all open plan and windows, and looks to be insulated with corrugated iron.
Built in 1959, no surprise. Probably thought they'd be able to start phase 3 and go nuclear powered within the decade.
But hey, on the plus side there's a brook running through the foundations.
I'd love to live in it, but I'd probably hate to own it. There's a few pictures from below and you can see some of the metal on the bottom is rusting out. I'm sure this thing needs some serious maintenance, not including the indoor pool thing.
I love like 90% of this house and other than the pool, everything I don’t like could be easily changed. Now to find $600,000 and a desire to live in Duluth. I think the money would be easier.
This has nothing to do with the house, other than the address, but I think it's rude when two cities that are so close to each other and one city has a street of prominence named for the other and the other city doesn't.
There is superior st, Duluth. But no Duluth st, superior. They are so close! It's like Kansas city and overland park!
One town over's main thoroughfare is named after my town, and my town is just lulz fuck you inbreds. And I think it's rude.
Well, it's an indoor pool in the basement and takes up like the entire room, and isn't very big, and for a beautiful old house with indoor pool, for some reason is has that fake green grass around it.
Iirc, the linguistics professor lives in a similar middle-of-forest house that looks cool for 2 seconds but then you realize how awful it must be to maintain.