54 Three Oaks Drive. Two and a half acres of quiet.
Bristol's most secluded ridge addresses are rarely listed. This is one of them. The drive in, the wooded buffer, the orientation of the house against the slope. All of it intentional.
“The stone climbs two stories. The ridge holds the rest.”
The house began in 1999 as a custom commission, and almost three decades later it still feels like one. Brick laid by hand. Beams that hold up a two-story great room. A stacked-stone fireplace that anchors the living wing and rises through both floors.
The kitchen is the working heart of the house. A granite island long enough to seat the family, a gas range cooktop, a butler's pantry behind. Custom oak cabinetry throughout. Windows that frame the woods, not the road.
Upstairs, five bedrooms and seven baths give the family room to expand. Downstairs, the great room flows to the kitchen flows to the terrace flows to the lawn. The slope of the ridge becomes the back garden. Three chimneys vent three separate hearths.
New roof. New stair railings. New wine racks. A peaceful, mountain-like setting on 2.53 secluded acres. The kind of address Bristol locals know without being told.
The room rises through both floors. The stone column carries the eye up to a coffered beam ceiling. It is the moment that explains the house in a glance.
Granite island, gas range, custom oak cabinetry on the main run. A second galley pantry behind, with its own sink, fridge, and storage. For when you cook for forty.
New roof. New stair railings. New vertical wine racks. Recent improvements that quietly extend the life of a 1999 custom build.
One of Bristol's most desirable neighborhoods, with a lot deep enough to feel like its own holding. Mature hardwoods on three sides. Beautifully crafted stone stairs on the terrace.
Room for a family that grew up here, and room for the children who come back. Three chimneys for three separate hearths. The plan reads as generous, not large.
Numbers, not commitments. Adjust the down payment, rate, and term, and watch the monthly figure settle.
Bristol straddles the Tennessee and Virginia state line, a small city with a long memory. State Street runs the seam. The Three Oaks neighborhood sits east of downtown on a series of wooded ridges, with quiet roads that climb above the city lights.
The Bristol Motor Speedway is fifteen minutes away when it matters. So is the Birthplace of Country Music. Johnson City and the Tri-Cities Airport are a half hour west. Asheville is two hours south. The Blue Ridge Mountains, on every side.
Showings are by appointment. Send the form and Janie will confirm a time within twenty-four hours.