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My latest real estate obsession – treehouses

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

My very good friend Mike Randall share many common interests including a general mis-trust of the government, an entrepreneurial streak and last but not least a strong wanderlust.

Mike Randall in Taos, NM near the Rio Grange Gorge Bridge

We’ve had scores of conversations over the years about expatriation and how to pull it off. Of late, I’m more inclined to stay in America and explore some of the very rural, off the beaten path areas of our country like Taos, NM, parts of Oregon, Montana, etc. However, Mike just sent me a link to a community in Costa Rica that is insane. One of the founders came up with the hair-brained idea to build a treehouses with zip lines connecting them. It reminded me instantly of something in Disneyland or the like. The pragmatist in me would have said, “you’re out of your mind ” if someone had suggested it to me. I would have been wrong. The good folks at Finca Bellavista have followed their dream and are now the envy of us all. My kid would explode in rapture at the idea of riding a zip line over to her friends house. Or school. Or wherever.  The original plan only had 65 acres but later blossomed into a 350 acre village. They have a community bath house, pedestrian skyways, and more creature comforts than I expected.

Finca Bellavista owner at the office.

Residents are now able to stay connected with the outside world at Finca Bellavista! On January 5, 2008 we had our high-speed direct link satellite dish installed, which is powered 100% by solar-generated electricity. The signal is great and the service is the fastest we’ve experienced in all of Costa Rica! The entire base area at Finca Bellavista can access the Wi-Fi signal. That means residents can work remotely or chat with far-away friends and family from a riverside hammock or anywhere else at the base area of the community. What a great way to stay in touch while getting away from it all!”

Okay, I’m listening…but I’m still skeptical, right? The crazy thing is that the development is selling out. They offer 2-4 acre parcels and they seem to have some good planning and the foresight to put some parkland and community spaces in there so it doesn’t feel like a tropical trailer park. The amount of spaces that have been purchased and the number of units built seems hard to believe. I haven’t gotten to read enough of the website to see if they have construction costs yet, but they can’t be cheap. The workers must certainly be highly skilled. I anticipated very rudimentary dwellings that looked as if they would fall in a good wind – but these things look pretty good and they look to be getting some good engineering ideas up their sleeves from some of the drawings they have on the site. Have a look around their website for yourself.

Concept drawings for treehouse at Finca Bellavista

Concept drawings for treehouse at Finca Bellavista

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