With full A/C, heat, electricity, and water, guests aren’t exactly roughing it, especially considering the 270-degree views from the tall windows of the gardens and koi pond below, although the inhabitants of the chicken coop (and their fresh eggs) do add a bit of rurality. A night in the treehouse begins around $165. The lofty design features muted cream and earth-toned drapes, bedspread and other decor, plus three walls of windows that allow sunlight to pour in on the single bed and bathroom. Each of those (separated by a privacy fence) can also be booked for a night or longer.Īlong with a two-person crew of homebuilding experts, Maxam, who has a master’s degree in construction management, built the 700-square-foot, 25-foot-high treehouse in 50 days, with an investment of around $100,000. ![]() Now open for reservations after recently finishing construction, the treehouse belongs to College Park resident Darrel Maxam, who owns the 2.5-acre plot above which the house hovers, as well as the five other tiny houses on the property next door. ![]() ![]() East Point may not be the first place most folks consider when looking for unique lodging inside Atlanta’s perimeter, but that could change now that the Tri-Cities town has a bona fide Airbnb treehouse.
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