If you miss the water in land-locked Kansas City, look no further than this one-of-a-kind historic house.
Located near the Kansas City Museum, in the Scarritt Point area of northeast Kansas City, the home is 4,759 square feet. The house has three bedrooms and 1.5 bathrooms, in addition to three garage spaces.
Originally the home of doctor and amateur magician Theodore Blakesley, the house at 3232 Windsor Ave. first appeared on the city directory in 1910, according to a June 7, 1983, Kansas City Star article . The property is listed for $500,000 by real estate agent Dylan Van Gerpen of Keller Williams KC North on the Kansas City Regional Association of Realtor’s website.
The archived story described the home’s exterior: “Facing the sun from a high terrace and all painted white, this house looks slightly Spanish, but more convincingly cubist.”
“The home is really interesting. Maybe a little too weird for a lot of people,” Van Gerpen said in an interview with The Star on Friday.