After four and a half years of living in a tiny apartment, I’m ready to get out of here and into a house of some kind. My wife and I have started searching for a home with lots of land and a huge structure to store the 19 or 21 vehicles I have. After some searching, I think I found some budget gearhead heaven, and one property is basically a personal airport complete with a home, two-car garage, hangar, and a landing strip!
As some of you have already noticed, I’m officially married! Sheryl and I tied the knot on October 1 inside of the Experimental Aircraft Association Museum in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. In planning our wedding, we found that EAA was far cheaper than more traditional venues. For the price of $5,000, we rented an entire museum filled with aviation history.
Our guests got to walk around and learn about planes while having some cold snacks. You’ll definitely hear about this venue when the real pictures come in, but if you’re looking for an inexpensive, vehicle-themed wedding venue, consider a museum.
Now that we got that huge event in the books, Sheryl and I are now looking to move out and spread our wings. There’s nothing wrong with my apartment; my rent has gone up just $100 over all of this time, which is rare in my area. It even has semi-modern appliances and enough space to store car and motorcycle parts.
Heck, there’s a whole Honda Spree in my living room!
But things started feeling cramped when Sheryl moved in during 2020. Somehow, it seems like our space got smaller, even though it realistically didn’t. And when I moved in, I had just three cars and two motorcycles. Now I rent out a bunch of spaces in Illinois and one in Wisconsin. So, we’ve definitely grown out of this place. Thankfully, Sheryl and I will soon be in the market for a house, and we’ve started looking at what’s out there.
Amusingly, Sheryl and I have two vastly different desires. I want a place that could conceivably store most of my vehicles, and I’d love for that place to be somewhat secluded, away from a homeowners association. My vision for this is essentially a country home with a massive pole barn. Meanwhile, Sheryl would like a place with a better kitchen than the one we currently have. And she’d like to have a home office, as well as a room just for our little conures.
Thus far, searching for this type of property has been quite fun. As it turns out, there are tons of properties for sale offering outbuildings and extra garages, perfect for storing cars. Some of these properties are quite incredible. Check out this one in East Peoria, Illinois.
It comes with a pond and an artsy home, plus a pole barn that would fit my RTS bus with room to spare. I’d love to sit on the park benches next to the pond and watch the sunset. And for a gearhead, this place is just a lift, a heater, and some shop air away from being perfect. And it’s $324,900, which could be worse! But we can do better.
At some point, my house search gained “airport” as a search term. Now, this was done mainly as a joke, but to my surprise, you can buy entire airports. Most of these things cost in the millions, but there are a few private properties out there with their own landing strips. Here is where we’re finding car nirvana, a carvana, if you will.
Located in Jackson, Michigan about an hour outside of Detroit, sits one awesome property. The listing on Trade-A-Plane starts off by saying that you get a whopping 28 acres. And on that property, you get a four bedroom house with three bathrooms. The house is over 50 years old, and it definitely shows its age. The kitchen could use some updates, as could the exterior.
But this hits the spot for Sheryl. There’s a bedroom for the birds, a bedroom for us, a bedroom for her office, and a bigger kitchen than what we have now.
That’s nice enough, but this property is absolutely perfect for vehicles. First, as aerial views show, the house has a very long drive and tons of land obscured by trees. Not only do you have loads of space for cars, but you can wrench without neighbors staring you down.
Attached to the home is a two-door “oversized” garage. It’s unclear how large that garage is, but it’s at least two cars, probably more. Located behind the house is something special. Built at some point in this house’s past is a 40-foot by 40-foot hangar. That was built to store a plane, which would take off from the property’s own private air strip.
Oh yes, this property comes with a 2,100-foot grass runway. So not only do you have plenty of space for cars, but you have your own personal airport! The seller says that high performance aircraft have used this strip before. I bet it would be perfect for a cool little plane like a Cessna 172. And that’s not all. Since we’re talking about 28 acres here, there’s a wooded area that apparently can be used for hunting and it comes with some frontage on a nearby river.
If you’re not into flying, I see another opportunity for this place. You could probably set up your own personal dirt track or backyard mud pit. Vehicle tracks in satellite photos seem to suggest that may be what this place has been used for in recent times.
Perhaps the biggest surprise to me is that you get all of this for $489,900. Sure, you have to live in cold, rusty Michigan, but there’s so much room for activities! And you’re right by Detroit, where you’ll see all kinds of awesome cars in the summer. If it weren’t for the fact that we’re still waiting a little bit on the money, I’d be telling Sheryl to light up the seller’s phone.
Alternatively, maybe aviation isn’t your thing? There’s another property that’s been pulling on my heart strings. Located in Annawan, Illinois is a property with an unexpected feature. The house is fine, with three bedrooms and a single bath. It would definitely need updates as it doesn’t even have a dishwasher, but the home would definitely work for our needs.
This one is gearhead nirvana, but for different reasons. Walk outside and you’ll spot three outbuildings. The sizes of these buildings isn’t noted. Sadly, we don’t get a peek inside of anything but the home, too. But the outbuildings are all pretty big with large doors. And this property is perhaps even better than the last because it’s even further from civilization.
One of those outbuildings is noted to be a former car body shop and other a garage. Alright, so there’s your workshop right there, plus additional car storage.
But here’s the kicker, apparently you get a 20-unit storage complex with the purchase. Each unit measures in at 10 feet by 20 feet. The seller is renting the units out for income, which is pretty neat. But what I see here is 20 extra covered parking spaces on top of the three other outbuildings. Or you could modify the complex and have yourself a huge warehouse.
Unless you become Ron Dauzet, you’ll never run out of car space! And you get all of it for $355,000.
Sheryl says that she wants to start collecting forgotten front-wheel-drive cars from General Motors. So we definitely want a lot of space. This is another place that I wish we could get right now before someone else does.
I’m really excited for the coming future. Hopefully, I’ll soon be out of this apartment and away from people who like to accuse me of stealing my own cars or of running an illegal car dealership. No, I just have a lot of crapboxes and nowhere to put them! But with an airport or a whole storage complex in our hands, we can have everything under one roof.
Do you know of any cool gearhead properties that won’t require millions of dollars and a kidney? I want to know!
Argh! Missed this! Hopefully we’ll have notifications soon. 🙂
So, my current living situation is sort of crap, really. When I first moved into my apartment back in 2018, I had reasonably zippy AT&T (well, for the price that I paid). Then I upgraded to faster Xfinity.
Then one day in 2020, a note posted to the building’s message board said that there was utility work happening for a week. Since then, internet has been shoddy in the building, with many people in my building frequently getting outages literally every day. Building management says that there’s no problem. The ISPs say it’s the building. Nobody wants to even troubleshoot.
Eventually, my wife and I got fed up and just tossed a 5G home internet trash can onto our T-Mobile plan. And honestly? It blows my old Xfinity plan out of the water for the same price. Plus, we can take it with us on camping trips for internet on the go.
Interestingly, I’ve been to both Jackson and Annawan and had no problems with my cellular connection. I don’t need the fastest stuff, just enough to upload pictures and stream video. I don’t really game anymore, so meh. And since I’ve spent most of my life at least 2 hours from Chicago, septic is the norm for me. Sheryl’s a farm girl, so this is basically the dream for her.
Healthcare? I already drive over 2 hours to get to my doctor (trans health kinda sucks in Illinois unless you live in Chicago), and the Annawan house would only change that by minutes. The Michigan one would of course require me to get a new doctor.
One thing’s for sure, neither of us want to be in Chicago. What we want to do with our lives comes at odds with that!
Inspirational. Your wedding venue is brilliant, as is the opportunity to do something truly interesting with your homelife.
Mercedes, If you can claim it as a partial business expense (or heck, incorporate your own business), look at https://www.trade-a-plane.com/search?category_level1=Hangars&state=Michigan&listing_id=2411041&s-type=real_estate. OK, $900K, but as a car person you know what the potential is here. Lease some of the buildings and land to people who want to work on cars and you have a revenue stream. Testing on site would be a big selling feature.
This is my goal eventually too, probably in semi-retirement, but not for the same reasons.
I’m looking for storage space because my current side hustles are selling online and at swap meets and I’d love a place to keep my inventory instead of renting a bunch of storage lockers like I do now.
Unfortunately, right now I have a day job that can’t be done remotely and live in an area where anything I would want is way out of my price range. Maybe in another 10 years.
Aww Conures! My wife has had a few Sun Conures, one, Apollo who had a gimpy leg, would have breakfast with me. I would make some toast, open his cage and sit in a chair in my wife’s “office”. Apollo would make his way down out of the cage and stand, limp like a pirate across the floor, climb up my leg and all the way to my shoulder, where I would share bit’s of toast crust with him. I often say “all birds are assholes, and the ones who aren’t just haven’t gotten around to it” however there are two exceptions: Conures and Cockatoos. I think at some point in the last ten years our house has been home to every variety of exotic bird, most of them fosters. I thought things were turning the right direction when we got down to an African Grey and a Blue and Gold Macaw, but then the reptiles arrived, and well.. Now she has a zoo again. I get the garage, she gets the spare bedroom, we each maintain plausible deniability of what takes place in other.
I too have been looking for homes on 4-5 acre lots just outside of town, not so much to store cars as just to get away from neighbors, HOAs, and ducks (long story).
Starlink?
I have one relative that uses starlink, they raved about how it was a vast improvement over whatever satellite service they had.
Starling?
well, kids, I don’t think they’re beating down the doors to buy 300k+ properties in Annawan. Not to mention East Peoria or Jackson, MI. Relax, get your money together, and proceed cautiously.
i’d like a big place too, sadly i didn’t win the lottery last night.
With lots of acres, you can indeed get an old tractor to work, and it’s fun. I have a pole barn, a dedicated garage for 3 cars with an additional one for my daily driver and 2 hectares of land, which I manage in an ecological way (tiny forests, hay meadows) by hand (scythe) and by tractor (Ford Dexta 2000). But indeed, it’s only fun if you really love working outside (in my case: even more than wrenching). Otherwise, maintenance can wear you down too. The house, keep it as simple as possible, tiled floors (no carpets, no wood), windows that aren’t gigantesque, simple heating and plumbing systems, so you don’t need to spend too much time into the householding activities.
I live in Jackson, Michigan (when I am back in the states, I work overseas and haven’t been back in years) and it’s not a bad place. They close down all the streets downtown a couple times of year for huge car shows with bands, there is a hot air balloon festival every year, it hosts a decent fair, it’s not far from Michigan International Speedway and it’s nicely placed between Ann Arbor and Lansing. There’s quite a bit of history, awesome parks and its relatively quiet place to live. Don’t let the rust and cold drive you away, its nice most of the year.
An image of one of those driveways brought back bad memories of one place we lived. Gravel driveways are where small hardware bits go to die and never be found. Drop just about anything smaller than a wrench and it will vanish without a trace.