The Greatest 3 Story Home In Eugene
This beautiful three-story home is tucked away from the traditional Eugene neighborhoods. Your closest neighbor is only a few hundred yards away, but with the plethora of over-grown trees, you wouldn't notice. This house is ideal for any college student wanting to come home to a quiet and serene neighborhood where campus is only a bike ride away. Seven students can occupy this home and share vast closet and room space. For the more communal type, the bedrooms are large enough for multiple roommates to occupy one room. Creativity is clearly the driving force in this house as its landscape only makes you eager to see more. The front yard contains a large wooden deck, bark that separates the parking area from the house, and wooden steps that lead you to the back yard. Regardless of rain or shine, tenants of the Sylvan home can spend their time on the roof-covered, two-tiered porch and admire the large backyard and greenery that surround you. What makes this place unique and irresistible is that each of the seven rooms is catered to a different personality and living preference. Each room has a different ambiance due to its construction and location in the house. All rooms are of different size, but contain large windows that allow a vast amount of sunlight to pour in. With two fireplaces constructed in opposite sides of the house, tenants can enjoy any area with comfort and warmth. A bonus to the Sylvan home that perhaps contributes to its charm is the sunroom located on the top floor. Tenants may make this a communal area and enjoy being completely surrounded by windows and nature. As spacious as this house may be, many rooms and areas of the house are accessible from the outside, without ever having to use the front door. After a long day of classes and a night of homework that awaits you, this home will provide the serenity and peacefulness that you always desired. You’ll be even more content the next morning as you venture off to campus, arriving by bike only a few minutes later.
By Jessica Lomelin