This Extra-Long Amish Home Has Solar Power, 2 Kitchens & A 3-Door Garage (24 Photos)

Long Amish-built ranch home with attached 3-door garage in Winterset, Iowa

The first thing you’ll notice about this Amish home is that it just keeps going.

It’s one of the longest homes we’ve featured in this series. A low, stretched-out ranch style that’s half-home, and half-three-door garage. More on that garage in a minute – it’s doing more than just buggy storage.

This one is in Madison County, Iowa, just outside Winterset. It’s a small Amish settlement, only a single church district, but maybe not as small as that makes it sound.

Aerial of Amish homestead in Winterset Iowa showing home, outbuildings, and garden plots

The Young Center numbers put it at around 165 people, which is actually on the large side for one congregation (in fact it may be due to divide into two soon – space constraints in structures on Amish properties, where church is held, are one reason for that practice).

On the way in, a nice touch greets you: a hand-lettered “Welcome” sign hung between a pair of birch logs.

Hand-lettered wooden Welcome sign hung between two birch posts at an Amish home

Here’s how the Zillow listing describes the property:

Rare opportunity to own a beautifully improved 24+/- acre pasture and timber farm less than 9 miles from Winterset on pavement. Built in 2023, the ranch home offers 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, an additional non-conforming bedroom, 2,800 finished square feet, and an unfinished 2,800-square-foot basement ready for your finishing touches.

The attached 2,685-square-foot, 3-door insulated garage features in-floor heat, floor drains, and overhead storage, with a heated mudroom/laundry room connecting it to the home. Solar panels power the boiler system and electricity on the property.

Equestrians and hobby farmers will appreciate the 120′ x 36′ insulated steel building with office and tack room, a 32′ x 16′ insulated chicken coop, and fully fenced pasture ready for horses or livestock. Two large established gardens, quality ICF home construction, a new septic system, and excellent hunting with abundant wildlife make this an exceptional country property.

“Non-conforming” bedroom is an interesting way to describe it; looking at the property layout, there are 4 bedrooms on the main floor and two in the basement area.

The Exterior

This is technically tagged a “barndominium,” and on the one hand I can see why, with the roof and basic materials used. The design is longer and lower than others we’ve seen with that label, though.

You can also see the solar array on the lower wing’s roof, the big steel shop off to the right, and wind turbines scattered about on the horizon.

Aerial view of long Amish ranch home with solar panels and large steel shop building, wind turbines on horizon

There’s a truck and trailers visible in the above shot as well; this look like the home of an entrepreneurial Amish person who does something in the building industry (more on that below). In such cases the Amish business owner either owns or leases his vehicle, and has a non-Amish employee who also drives.

Around back, you get a closer look at the solar panels, and “spider’s web”-style clotheslines behind the gardens.

Rear view of Amish home with solar panels, clotheslines, and large vegetable gardens

And another closer view of the gardens. Are those potatoes?

Rows of potato plants growing behind an Amish home in Winterset, Iowa

More rows. Like many Amish families, they grow a lot of their own food, and, as we’ll see in the basement, can a lot of it too.

Long garden rows of beans and vegetables under shade trees at an Amish homestead

Inside: The “Big Room”

Step inside and we see the main living area is one big open great room – kitchen, dining, and sitting area all flowing together in one space. Dewalt battery lights hang from hooks in this room and in others. The reference in the description to solar powering the electricity in this home likely means providing charging for these lights’ batteries.

Open-plan Amish kitchen and dining great room with hardwood floors and oak cabinetry

A closer look at the kitchen. That’s a solid-sized island, no doubt useful for prepping and cooking large batches of food. This home has a gas range, and some simple but beautiful cabinetry. This is a comfortable, functional kitchen.

Large custom oak kitchen island and matching cabinetry in an Amish home

The living room bit of this big room also tells you something about where this church lands on the conservative-to-progressive line. You’ve got the overstuffed leather recliners and sofa you’d see in a more progressive Amish home. But also a hickory rocker, wall clock and other classic Amish notes.

Amish living room with overstuffed leather recliners, hickory rocker, and treadle sewing machine

Bedrooms & Bath

The bedrooms we see in the listing are simple and cheery, with plenty of natural light. This one’s got two beds, and a set of antlers up on the wall. The listing does mention “excellent hunting with abundant wildlife.” Likely a boys’ room.

Amish bedroom with two beds, wooden furniture, and a set of antlers on the wall

Another bedroom, with a dresser and mirror with the name “Linda”, and a bright bedspread leave little doubt that this is a girl’s room. We only have the two bedroom shots in the listing unfortunately; I’d have liked to have seen the “non-conforming” one as well.

Amish bedroom with antique dresser, hanging propane lamp, and patterned bedspread

And a very pleasant bathroom, one of the three in this home. Amish bathrooms in middle-of-the-road to more-progressive communities often don’t look all that different from non-Amish ones.

Amish bathroom with wood vanity, marble-look countertop, and horse-print shower curtain

The Garage and the Second Kitchen

Now to the garage, one of the more interesting spaces in this home. It’s a big, clean, space which serves a particular set of functions, beyond storing the buggy you see at right.

Spacious white interior of a 3-door Amish garage with in-floor heat and concrete floor

Along one wall, you’ll notice it’s set up with cabinets, a refrigerator, a sink, and prep tables. This in all likelihood is where this family holds church service, when their turn comes around (likely about once a year). It also has in-floor heating, which would serve to keep this place warm during frigid Iowa winters for the typically 3-hour service and then fellowship meal.

Amish church rotates from home to home, and it’s typically held in a basement, a shop, or a space just like this one. Benches get hauled in by the church wagon and set up across the open floor.

That’s also where the second kitchen comes in handy – food prep and management during the fellowship meal.  A handy staging area to put out the bread, peanut-butter spread, pickles, pie, coffee, and so on.

Amish buggy parked inside a 3-door garage that also holds a second kitchen with prep tables

It should be noted that a second kitchen out in a garage or outbuilding is a common thing in Amish homes – known as a summer kitchen or a canning kitchen. The idea is to keep the heat, the mess, and the big canning and butchering jobs out of the main house. This family just has theirs in a very covenient spot for church Sundays, which I’m sure was no accident when they were building this place.

The Basement

The spacious basement is an unfinished 2,800 square feet, “ready for your finishing touches.” At the far wall we do see some shelves lined with jars of home-canned goods and boxes of some sort.

Unfinished basement of an Amish home lined with shelves of home-canned goods

Horse Barn & More

Inside the horse barn we see multiple stalls – looks like at least a half-dozen. One resident horse visible inside.

Interior aisle of an Amish horse barn with a row of wooden box stalls

The tack space with bridles and other necessities.

Amish tack room with driving harnesses and bridles hung on a scorched plywood wall

And out under the trees, the rest of the barn’s occupants.

Herd of horses with a foal resting under shade trees at an Amish homestead

The chicken coop with two wire-fenced runs.

White metal Amish chicken coop with two wire-fenced outdoor runs

Hens in a fenced run beside an Amish chicken coop

And the coop has its own solar array up on the roof. I can’t say for sure but it may well be that the right-hand door is “power room” where light and other batteries are charged.

Amish chicken coop with its own small solar panel array on the roof

Finally, the large 120-foot shop. Parked on the side we see a trailer marked “Spray Foam.” I can’t say for certain, but that’s a decent clue that the owner runs a spray-foam insulation business. He or other members of the family may run an additional business or businesses to supplement that, typically called “sidelines”.

Large steel Amish shop building with an enclosed Spray Foam trailer and skid steer parked outside

So, What’s It Going For?

So this place sits on a big chunk of land as well – 24 acres of pasture and timber. That of course factors into the price tag. It’s unconventional in some ways compared to your typical non-Amish home, but could make a highly functional property with its sheer space and buildings, and from what I can tell, a peaceful and pleasant place to live. So what’s it selling for?

Aerial view of Amish homestead in Winterset Iowa with home, small outbuilding, and garden plots

It’s currently on the market at $699,000, and is represented by Aaron Creger of Midwest Land Group LLC. Quite a place!

And for another Amish home that taps into what Donald Kraybill has called “God’s grid“, check out the solar-powered barndominium in Millersburg, Indiana.

 

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