
Indoors vs. outdoors.
It’s a split decision.
Goathaus accommodates up to ten people with four bedrooms and four bathrooms, and its newly opened-up living space offers clear sight lines from front to back. The wooded property feels like a quiet forest preserve, with water views from the living room, bedrooms, decks, balcony, fire pit, cliffside picnic area, and “Hammock Hill.”
It's on the Niagara Escarpment. Also known as the bluff, but we like saying "escarpment."
Its best side faces the sunset.
One of many angles on the waters of Green Bay.
Here's another.
And another.
We opened up the living space to recapture the geometric character of this 1966 A-frame.
If there's nothing on TV, look to the left.
Puzzles are recommended but not required.
Plenty of books, games, and other diversions.
New open kitchen. The table extends to seat ten people.
A sampling of what we provide to prep, cook, steam, and drip your daily sustenance.
The cupboards runneth over.
Master bedroom on the first floor, with king bed, en suite bathroom, and multiple viewports to the glorious outdoors.
This bedroom has its own deck. Up to the occupants if they want to share it.
This upstairs bedroom has a queen bed, balcony access, and summer camp-like vibe.
Balcony off the bedroom, where you'll be the first to see the sun rise above the trees.
The most "A" room of all.
Four bathrooms, one with a new Kohler bath.
New vanity and shower in the master bathroom.
Not a bad place to sit for a while.
Our tastes run from midcentury modernism, to pop culture, to the decidedly juvenile.
Get in the A-frame of mind.
Bonus room is above the garage and has its own exterior entrance.
New balcony. Because the bluff just wasn't high enough.
Kids love this room, which has bunk beds, a sofa bed, and its own bathroom.
For those cherry wine stains.
Large garage with table tennis, cornhole, and sleds. And sometimes, cars.
Five hammocks for competitive napping.
It's a sight at night.
There's something about a fire pit that makes people reveal embarrassing secrets. Be careful.
Not too shabby in the winter either.
The winter sunsets warm the cockles.
The birds have aesthetic standards, too.
A sign you've arrived.
So many trees. So much roof.
