A one-of-a-kind house made from thousands of glass bottles is up for grabs in Arizona

If these walls could talk, they’d keep it bottled up.

A one-of-a-kind Arizona property built from glass bottles — doubling as a work of art — has hit the market for $432,500.

The Tucson home dates back to the 1960s, when a couple named Theodore and Meletis Bryson, inspired by the ruins of ancient human societies, decided to construct a carport built of refuse that would blend with its desert surrounds.

That was just the beginning — the Brysons went on to build an entire custom house out of bottles and rock, collected over the course of years, Coldwell Banker Realty agent Holly Greenhalgh, who holds the listing, told The Post.

“Ted Bryson feels a kinship with the engineer who designed and built the massive stone pyramids of Egypt,” a news outlet stated back at the time the couple first built the house.

Dog gets stuck inside classic muscle car’s engine while chasing cat

“The ancient builders had no fancy tools and neither did Ted Bryson, who longed to visit the pyramids and the ruins of the Mayan and Incan civilizations in Central and South America,” a reporter said.

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS