Luxury Outlook 2022
An ambitious exploration into high-end residential markets across the globe.
$USD
Property details
Property type
Land
Status
Available
property taxes
$6,941/Year
Killington Cherry Knoll is 256 acres of privately held land characterized by diverse terrain with dramatic front and center views sweeping over the face of Bear Mountain. An extraordinary opportunity for "ski on and off" homesites is afforded by Killington's Sunrise Triple Chair ski lift terminal and trails covered by snowmaking located on KCK land. Killington Ski Resort has been a site for World Class events from the days of the legendary Mahre brothers and Ingemar Stenmark to the Audi FIS Women's World Cup. In addition to recreational options at Killington, KCK adjoins thousands of acres of protected land with miles of trails for year-round outdoor activity; hiking, mountain biking, XC skiing, horseback riding, snowmobiling and ATV rambling. The parcel surrounds Sunrise Village complex & Falls Brook Commons with its family-friendly Cafe at the base of Bear Mountain. Tremendous energy and optimism has been generated by $29 million dollars of improvements underway at Killington and S&) Land's "ski village" has received permits for construction. A complete revitalization of the Bear Mountain Lodge is moving forward. The Town Plan & Zoning allows for a variety of uses ranging from a Ski Village complex with hotel and restaurants to very private homesites or a generational family compound. Engineering enabling some of the options has been done. Killington Cherry Knoll is an unequaled opportunity to invest in Vermont with possibilities limited only by imagination.
In many ways, Vermont is the getaway state. As one of the country’s least populated, it’s the place to get away from traffic, congestion, noise and even visual assaults. You won’t find a billboard on its highways. They’ve been banned since 1968. In getting away from it all, however, folks find much that draws them in. Covered bridges, crisp air, 300,0000 acres of state-own forestland, towns with a Saturday Evening Post kind of patina and, of course, maple syrup.