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One lucky buyer will have the opportunity to own an entire Texas ghost town for the bargain price of $100,000.
A man named Alexander Bardorff purchased the 10-acre town of Lobo along with a few buddies in 2001 for $20,000.
Bardorff said more than 70 people have already descended there in hopes of making the purchase. He’s sat under the canopy of the deserted gas station in town and heard from each person who made the trek to this corner of West Texas — each pitching a vision for its future.
Bardorff, who was born in Germany, said the sale was not about money, but rather about finding someone who “understands how special the land they fell in love with is.”
“It’s difficult for me to let go,” Bardorff told the Wall Street Journal. “To some of the potential buyers, I say, ‘It’s like Lobo is my baby or our baby and we want to find new good parents.’”
“Do you respect what I call the soul of Lobo?” he added. “You can have a campground anywhere.”
The town features an empty swimming pool, a motel, a grocery store, a restaurant and a post office — all of which are defunct — as well as vacant houses, according to the listing.
One of the vacant homes has a living room, three bedrooms, a kitchen, a bathroom, a screened-in porch and an 800-square-foot storage room.
But it does have a functioning water pump that runs hot and cold water
Over time, the town expanded, but after its last resident departed in 1991, Lobo remained empty until Bardorff and his friends transformed it into an artistic hub, hosting art installations, film festivals and musical performances.
“Just being out here it kind of slows down time,” prospective buyer Andrea Alvarez told the Journal.
Lobo’s history dates back to the mid-19th century, when it served as a stopover on the mail route from San Antonio to San Diego.
Prospective buyers presented a wide range of ideas for Lobo’s future, including a kangaroo farm, a nudist colony and an escape room-style attraction where people escape from the town, not just a room.
Lobo has a peaceful desert landscape and is located between Van Horn, home to Jeff Bezos’s space company, and Marfa, its own art hub known for its empty Prada store installation.
One musician envisions desert-inspired art and music as the town’s focus.
Others contemplate building a super-powerful radio tower, or establishing sustainable agriculture and rental properties.
Bardorff and two other buyers will make the decision of who the winning bidder will be.
The deadline to bid on the town is June 24.
“It’s the dream, you know,” Jennifer Ficke, Alvarez’s aunt, said. “The opportunity to say, ‘Oh, I bought a town.’ Not too many people can say that.”
While this isn’t the first ghost town to hit the market, it certainly is the cheapest.
A ghost town in Arizona complete with a refurbished general store is currently on sale for $1.1 million.
Recently, a mystery buyer forked over $22.5 million for a California ghost town.
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