Aussie town is auctioning off cave homes, land and more – starting from $3k
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You can now live in this outback town from $3k
Located 526 miles north of Adelaide, in the Australian Outback, one of the most hostile places on Earth, is the town of Coober Pedy. With over 4,000 hours of sunshine a year and barely any rain, this otherworldly landscape is known for opal mining. Now, 16 properties are up for auction from as little as AU$5,000, which is around $3,368 – so if you like the heat and want to escape the rat race, click or scroll through and join us as we look at some of the remarkable homes to choose from...
Underground living
At the height of Australian summer, the temperature in Coober Pedy swings between 77.5°F and 98.1°F. With record highs of 117°F, it's not surprising that half of the town's 1,942 inhabitants choose to live underground. If subterranean living appeals to you, this unusual Monument Road property is about to go under the hammer. Described on the listing as an '"unfurnished dugout" needing "significant excavations", the plot spans 2.7 acres so there's plenty of room to make your mark.
Auction homes
The properties are being auctioned off by the town itself, due to previous tenants not paying council rates. Warren Andrews, director of Andrews Property, told The Sun that some of the bills dated back three years. He added that some of the properties up for auction are still in good condition, while others need a lot of work. This home going under the hammer on Jelly Crescent is typical of the area, with corrugated metal structures above ground and the main house below.
Cave life
Although the listing doesn't contain any recent interior photos, this image of the kitchen at Jelly Crescent from 2017 gives a good idea of what to expect from cave living. The tiled floors, uneven, distinctive walls and low ceilings are typical of homes in Coober Pedy. No matter how harsh the climate, the underground homes maintain a comfortable temperature all year round, with an estimated 50% of the locals living below the surface.
Bargain buys
Due to their circumstances, the properties are going for a song. According to reports, one 8,600-square-foot residential plot is going for a starting bid of just $3,368 (AU$5,000), which may very well be this Jones Street lot. Meanwhile, a number of three-bedroom family homes are available for $20k–$368k (or AU$30k – AU$550k).
New life
The most expensive property on the menu is a high-quality commercial office on a desirable street. Bidding on that one will kick off at $535k (AU$800k). Although the circumstances of the auction are unfortunate, Andrews told realestate.com.au that “the flipside is we’re going to have 16 properties with brand new owners that will come and breathe new life into the town." The auction will take place on 3 May online or in person at Desert Cave Hotel, Coober Pedy.
Cheap real estate
Despite the fact many of the homes need work, such as this residential dugout, the agent is expecting a lot of interest from out-of-state buyers. "I'm expecting a lot of buyers to be external," he said. "Coober Pedy attracts a lot of interest from New South Wales and Victoria. It's very cheap real estate." Whoever they are, they'd better pack their SPF 50.
Tourist attraction
One way to beat the heat is simply to bring your pool right into your home, as this local home and tourist attraction has. While not one of the auction lots, it IS open to expressions of interest. A tour around the three-bedroom house known as 'Faye's Underground Home' is currently rated number two on Tripadvisor's list of things to do in Coober Pedy.
Hidden gem
Considering its position in the Opal capital of the world, with a swimming pool in the above ground portion of the home and a built-in bar below, this home is – almost literally – a hidden gem. The listing for this home on Old Water Tank Road is also held by Andrews Property.
Modern-day amenities
So what else do we know about this remote town? The majority of the population spends their days in the Opal mines, and in the evenings retreat into their underground homes to escape the searing heat. The town has a drive-in movie theater and a golf course with no grass, so you'd better bring your sand wedge if you fancy a round. Signs around the town warn visitors not to fall in many of the unmarked holes. It certainly is an unusual place to live.
Subterranean town
The subterranean town may be small and remote but it's full of modern-day amenities. Despite the recent decline in the opal trade, there are restaurants, hotels, a school, shops and even a small hospital.
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Sacred spaces
Facilities also include The Church of Saint Elijah the Prophet, a Serbian Orthodox Church that was carved out of the sandstone in 1993. The church is still active, although these days more tourists than worshippers step foot inside the sacred space. We can only imagine how cool and quiet it must be, surely the perfect place for peaceful reflection. Believe it or not, there are two further underground churches in Coober Pedy – a Catholic church and the Anglican 'Catacomb Church'.
Read on to discover more weird and wonderful places to live in some of the world's most inhospitable places...
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READ MORE: The most isolated places on Earth
Have you ever thought about escaping the rat race and riding it out in one of the most remote places in the world? From the highest settlement on Earth to the coldest, some people spend their entire lives detached from the mainland. Let's take a look at the measures they take to survive in the most remote of locations.
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Supai, Arizona, USA
Often referred to as the most remote community in the United States, the secluded community of Supai is located within the Grand Canyon in an area known as Havasu Canyon. Only accessible by helicopter, mule or on foot, it sits eight miles from the nearest road and feels like extreme living at the end of the Earth.
- Adam Reeder - / Flickr [CC-BY-2.0]
Supai, Arizona, USA
Inhabited by the Havasupai Tribe, who have lived in the village for the last 800 years, they survive in the arid, solitary landscape by irrigation farming in the summer and hunting animals. The blue waterfalls and springs are able to provide them with a constant water source.
Supai, Arizona, USA
Spread over 188,000 acres of land, the canyon is prone to flash floods but still attracts more than 20,000 visitors a year. With a school, store and a small church, the village offers some amenities for the locals.
Supai, Arizona, USA
To this day, the village is the only place in the US that receives their mail and parcels by mule. A series of linked donkeys carry the packages along the eight-mile trail to the village on a regular basis to the small population.
Tristan da Cunha, Saint Helena
The world's most remote populated island, Tristan da Cunha sits in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. 1,750 miles from Cape Town, Edinburgh of the Seven Seas, the only settlement on the island, is home to around 250 permanent residents.
Tristan da Cunha, Saint Helena
Even though the island has a harbor, any large yachts or vessels have to anchor a distance from the coast. Local ferries operate as frequently as they can to and from the island, but with the weather only good enough 70 days a year, reaching the extreme location where people live is difficult.
Tristan da Cunha, Saint Helena
All the residents have access to modern-day amenities including a hospital that offers dental treatment and minor operations, as well as a grocery shop and post office, where the island produces its very own stamps.
Brian Gratwicke / Flickr [CC-BY-2.0]
Tristan da Cunha, Saint Helena
Open Monday to Friday, the local supermarket provides essential produce for the villagers. However, goods need to be ordered months in advance of the arrival of the incoming ships so many islanders grow their own crops and rear their own stock so as not to rely on the supermarket.
By Unknown author / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 2.5]
Utqiagvik, Alaska, USA
The northernmost community in the United States, Utqiagvik feels completely cut off from the world. With no roads connecting it to other settlements, the dirt roads that do exist lead just a few miles outside the main town.
Andrei / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY 2.0]
Utqiagvik, Alaska, USA
The city is built upon a layer of permafrost that's up to 1,300 feet deep in some places, making life hard for the permanent population of around 4,000 residents. The warm season has an average high of just 35.6°F, and the winter lasts for 160 days a year, with more than two months spent in complete darkness.
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Utqiagvik, Alaska, USA
Even though Utqiagvik is seen as a modern community, the locals still practice hunting, fishing and whaling to support the economy as well as for their own food. Only accessible by plane, the town has an airport which is the lifeline for any imports of vital supplies.
Utqiagvik, Alaska, USA
Not completely cut off, the residents have a great quality of life. The homes are heated by natural gas from local oil fields and they also have modern water and sewer systems. The town has seven churches, various schools and a college as well as phone, internet, mail, radio and cable communications.
Oscar Espinosa / Sopa Images / Zuma Press / PA Images
La Rinconada, Peru
At a height of over 16,000 feet, La Rinconada in Peru is the highest human habitation in the world. Perched atop Mount Ananea in the Peruvian Andes, the high-altitude homes are only accessible by a mountainside road and can take several days to reach.
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La Rinconada, Peru
Around 30,000 people call the town home, but with no basic modern amenities and little infrastructure as well as no sanitation system and no plumbing, it's not an easy life.
Hildegard Willer / Wikimedia commons [CC BY-SA 4.0]
La Rinconada, Peru
The city itself is iced over for most days of the year and at such a height the air is so thin that the residents have had to adapt. They've also had to find ways of entertaining themselves which include meeting in cafés and setting up a local football team.
Marcin Osman / Shutterstock
La Rinconada, Peru
Even though the town is extremely poor, the economy relies on the unregulated gold mines that are carved into the mountainside. Miners work through the month without any pay but can take home as much ore as they can carry after their last shift.
CARL DE SOUZA / Stringer / Getty
Migingo Island, Lake Victoria, Africa
Lake Victoria is the largest lake in Africa and is home to one of the most isolated communities on Earth, Migingo Island. With a reported population of over 500 people, made up mostly of fisherman crammed into less than 22,000 square feet, the island is far from paradise.
YASUYOSHI CHIBA / Contributor / Getty
Migingo Island, Lake Victoria, Africa
Inaccessible to those without boats, the crowded island is jam-packed with houses made from recovered tin and scavenged materials.
YASUYOSHI CHIBA / Contributor / Getty
Migingo Island, Lake Victoria, Africa
However, islanders have made the best of life on the island and have built bars, hair salons and even a tiny port to make getting in and out of the island easier. A few of the residents have mobile phones with contact to the outside world, but the signal is patchy at best.
YASUYOSHI CHIBA / AFP via Getty Images
Migingo Island, Lake Victoria, Africa
The residents made their way to the island because the surrounding deep water is home to large numbers of Nile perch, which provide income for the fishermen. Living directly on the island saves them fuel and also gives them easy access to wholesale buyers.
SnowSwan / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Villa Las Estrellas, Antarctica
Many think of Antarctica as barren, empty land, however, there's a small Chilean community that call the icy expanse home. Villa Las Estrellas is as isolated as towns come with just 14 homes, one bank, a post office, a small school, church, gym and a souvenir shop.
VANDERLEI ALMEIDA / Staff / Getty
Villa Las Estrellas, Antarctica
Located on the Presidente Eduardo Frei Montalva Base with a population of around 100, which gets smaller in the harsh winter months, the residents tend to be a rotation of scientists or personnel from Chile's navy and air force. Those on long-term stints often bring their families.
Jorge Benavente / Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]
Villa Las Estrellas, Antarctica
The hospital on the island is equipped for basic lifesaving procedures and a small pharmacy is also available. However, with limited facilities and only one doctor and one nurse, all emergency cases have to be flown to health centers in South America a mere 625 miles away.
Carlos78chile / Wikimedia commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Villa Las Estrellas, Antarctica
Not only is the town remote, but it also comes with an ultimatum. If you want to live on the island you must have your appendix removed. A pretty extreme precaution to have to take!
Spiridon Sleptsov / Shutterstock
Oymyakon, Russia
An almost inhospitable location, the town of Oymyakon in Russia is closer to the Arctic Circle than it is to the nearest city. Frostbite blights the lives of the local residents in the isolated village, which has been labelled the coldest permanently inhabited place on Earth.
Ilya Varlamov / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 4.0]
Oymyakon, Russia
With winter temperatures averaging -72.4°F, pretty much everything is frozen in the village. Engines freeze, meaning many cars are left running all the time and face coverings are a must as eyelashes and even saliva freeze in an instant.
Oymyakon, Russia
The nearest city is Yakutsk which is 576 miles away. The constant layer of permafrost makes life hard for the locals and prevents farming as nothing can penetrate the hard ground. The frozen ground also stops the town from having running water, so toilets are outhouses.
Tatiana Gasich / Shutterstock
Oymyakon, Russia
Most residents live off high-protein foods including raw frozen fish, reindeer meat and ice cubes of horse blood to get their nutrients. There are no conveniences in town due to the remote location and in the freezing weather, even pen ink freezes.
agatha kadar / Shutterstock
Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland
The small town of Ittoqqortoormiit in Greenland is the most remote inhabited community in the Western Hemisphere. Its closest neighbor is the Northeast Greenland National Park, the world's largest national park. Overrun by polar bears, reindeer and walruses, the only human presence in the park is the Sirius Sled Patrol, a Danish naval unit, so residents really are all on their own here.
agatha kadar / Shutterstock
Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland
The tiny outpost is made up of a scattering of small wooden buildings, painted in bright shades of blue, red, yellow and green. These homes are perched on a coastal bluff made from gneiss, which is some of the oldest rock on Earth.
Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland
For around nine months of the year, sea ice blocks the town's access to civilization, meaning hunting and fishing are the only ways the local residents can survive. With a small population of just 345 as of 2020, residents in this isolated spot derive an income from hunting and summer tourism. The population briefly swells in August and September when cruise ships arrive with about 3,000 tourists in total.
Steve Allen / Shutterstock
Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland
Ittoqqortoormiit's inhabitants have access to a local pub that opens just once a week, a supermarket filled with freeze-dried food, plus a small souvenir shop and post office, all located in the center. To reach the nearest airport, residents have to fly by helicopter or in warmer months, they can take a boat.
Palmerston Island, Cook Islands
Around 2,000 miles northeast of New Zealand sits the self-sufficient island of Palmerston. One of the 15 Cook Islands, the atoll has a population of around 35 people, all of whom permanently reside in one of the most isolated communities on the planet.
Palmerston Island, Cook Islands
Even though it may look idyllic, the tiny island has no link to the outside world apart from a telephone station for emergencies. Cargo ships only visit a few times a year as without a harbor, access to the island is treacherous.
Danita Delmont / Shutterstock
Palmerston Island, Cook Islands
There are just two main dirt tracks on the island, while access to electricity and the internet is available for just a few hours a day. Palmerston Island is so remote, it wasn't featured on standardized maps until 1969.
Danita Delmont / Shutterstock
Palmerston Island, Cook Islands
Life on the island is one of isolation and simplicity, with the locals collecting rainwater for drinking and relying on fish and coconuts to get by. The community is self-reliant due to its fishing, a rainwater-catchment system and a solar generator.
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