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luxury properties with pool for sale Berkshire County, United States

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Property with pool and garden New Marlborough (United States)

High on a hilltop in the Southern Berkshires stands East Hill Farm. 227 cultivated acres encompassing pristine forest, a spring-fed pond, a striking barn, verdant pastures, formal and vegetable gardens, a pool, and a tennis court. The centerpiece: a 1798 Georgian home, 5,000 SF with 5 bedrooms. Ready for private living, entertaining, horses, farming, a bespoke destination, or simply: tranquility. Includes a reimagined 6,000+ SF guest house, once an Arabian horse barn. 2½ hours to both NYC & Boston, yet a world apart. East Hill Farm offers what money rarely can buy: authenticity at scale. A 227 year-old house expanded, refined for 21st century life. Land, privacy, history, and a place of peace, which has endured through every chapter of American history. The next chapter begins with you. Reach out! Where The World Falls Away--227 acres. 227 years. One extraordinary hilltop farm. Drive up East Hill Road through Southfield village, past the store, climbing toward the top of Woodruff Mountain. The dirt road is well-maintained and lightly traveled. Sugar maples line your approach--massive, ancient trees that have watched over this land since before the house was built. Behind them, set back from the road, stands the kind of barn that makes photographers stop their cars. Three and a half stories of hand-hewn timber, painted proper New England red, moved here piece by piece from Amherst, Massachusetts, because the sellers understood that a farm needs a real barn. Not a replica. The real thing. The House Stops Your Heart--Federal period, 1798, when John Adams was president. This wasn't just another farmhouse. When Thomas Shepard commissioned John Collar to build this, he was making a statement. 8 rooms. 5 fireplaces. Ceilings higher than any farmer needed. Those distinctive 12-over-12 windows with hand-blown glass that turns the morning light liquid. A facade with sidelight windows and dentil cornice that announced to every traveler: here lives a person of substance. Walk through that front door and the wide center hall opens before you. Original wide-plank floors--King's boards, they called them, because timber this wide was supposed to be reserved for the Royal Navy's masts. Twin parlors flank the entrance, flooded with southern light. To your left, the original keeping room, now the dining room, where that massive cooking fireplace with its beehive oven still works perfectly after 227 years. The draft in these fireplaces is extraordinary. The woodwork throughout is original or crafted by hand precisely to match. Chair rails, wainscoting, built-in china cabinets with their original hardware. Those small cupboards tucked around the chimneys--John Collar's signature touch. Five Families in 227 Years--Jesse Hartwell married Thomas Shepard's niece and turned the house into a meeting place for progressive thinkers, and through the 19th century, the Hartwell family made this their home. Then came the Arabian horse breeders in the 1930s who added the newer rear ell and built what's now the guest house. The current sellers bought the house and five acres in 1969, then spent the next five decades not just restoring but thoughtfully expanding it. You'll be only the fifth resident to call East Hill Farm home--and despite its National Register status, free to shape its future as you see fit. That newer section? Radiant heat underfoot, a proper mudroom with laundry, a family room or perfect home office with its own kitchen, and an elevator up to a sun-filled library with built-in shelves and an ensuite bedroom and bath. A luminous sunroom framing year-round sunsets, with sweeping views across the formal gardens, horse pastures, and the shimmering pond below. Upstairs in the original part of the house, an additional four bedrooms, each with its own character. The canopy bedroom with its blue and white toile--that's not staging, that's how the family lives. Wide hallways, deep closets, and in that large upstairs hall above the front door, a perfect spot to sit and read while gazing out the neoclassical window over your barn, fields and forest, mountains in the distance. 5 full and 1 half baths in all--some original 1930s with their good bones, others from the 1980s restoration. The kitchen? Also 1980s, completely functional with good counter space, and a working wood-fired stove alongside modern appliances. Morning light streams in from the east, and sunset views are to the west, opening onto fieldstone patios on either side. Everything works: oil heat from a Viessman German boiler, cedar shake roof (much replaced in 2021), private well water so good they've bottled it up for guests, backup generator, fiber internet. The bones are so good and the mechanicals so solid that you can move in tomorrow or update to your taste--the house won't fight you either way. 227 Acres: A Complete World--East Hill Farm is more than the sum of its parts. From the original five-acre homestead, the current owners lovingly reunited land to create the breathtaking 227-acre estate it is today. 154 acres stretching across the north side of East Hill Road, and 73 tranquil acres to the south. To the north, a substantial portion of the property borders Sandisfield State Forest and thousands of acres of protected land. To the south, you have a section along Hotchkiss Road that is part of the New Marlborough Land Trust. Each acre is part of a dream fulfilled, a landscape that invites endless exploration and inspiration. Walk west from the kitchen patio between the formal gardens. Brick paths wind through perennial beds: heritage roses, peonies, iris. A long row of prolific blueberry bushes. In the vegetable garden, established asparagus and rhubarb come back stronger every year. Passing that perfect garden shed with its slate roof, as mist rises off the pond, becomes part of your morning coffee stroll. The pond--almost four acres, brook-fed, crystal clear. The family created it, and for decades it's been their private swimming hole, sailing spot, fishing paradise. Circle the pond and you'll find the big fishing rock on the west side, the perfect swimming spot on the east. Or head into the forest. Miles of trails, including a loop road that connects to Sandisfield State Forest. In spring, Lee Brook, the largest of several on the farm, roars with snowmelt. Up where the brook crosses the trail, it forms a waterfall after a hard rain. These are the headwaters of the Whiting River, and you own it. This isn't just acreage - it's a complete ecosystem. Meadows, forests, water, gardens, pastures, each flowing naturally into the next. Built for Whatever You Dream--That magnificent barn across the country road--3,550 SF on a full stone foundation, electricity, running water, lower level for equipment, main floor with stalls and work rooms, massive hay loft. Four pastures with water sources, run-in barns with power and water, and additional smaller outbuildings. The infrastructure is thoughtfully designed, whether your dreams include horses, alpacas, heritage sheep, a flourishing market garden, an orchard, festive celebrations, a tranquil retreat center, or simply savoring the seasons as they change across your land. The guest house tells its own story. Built as stables for those 1930s Arabians, it's now 6,668 SF divided into four independent residences, with cathedral ceilings and fireplaces. Some would use this for multi-generational living. Others might see a writers' or artists' retreat, a wedding venue, or wellness center. The bones are spectacular--soaring spaces and abundant light. Morning swims in the sparkling gunite pool with its serene fieldstone waterfall. Afternoons spent on the newly resurfaced tennis court. Evenings wandering down to the pond, soaking in the tranquility. Or embrace the rhythm of nature: January mornings breaking ice on water troughs, February afternoons tapping maples for syrup, and March evenings tending seedlings in the greenhouse, dreaming of summer tomatoes. The possibilities are manifold; life on East Hill Farm is generous and abundant. History You Can Touch--Walk these 227 acres and feel it: the weight of continuity. Five families in 227 years. Thomas Shepard, who helped found New Marlborough. The Hartwells, who held it for a century. Arabian horse breeders who landed their plane in the pasture. The current family, who pieced the scattered acres back together, whose daughters gathered eggs, boiled sap into syrup, grew the gardens that still bloom today. Some things do endure. That which matters can be preserved. In a disposable world, permanence is possible. The next chapter begins with you. The Berkshire Life, Perfected--Twenty minutes to Great Barrington's restaurants and shops. Less than ten to the Southfield Store. Tanglewood for summer concerts, Jacob's Pillow for dance, Butternut for winter skiing. Bradley Airport an hour away, Manhattan and Boston each two and a half hours. But honestly? Once you're here, leaving becomes the hard part. Mornings at East Hill Farm start with the mourning doves' lullaby that sounds like memory itself. The Sandhill Cranes return each spring to the lower pastures, their distinctive call announcing another season. Summer evenings, you'll sit on the west porch watching the sunset over your pond while fireflies rise from the meadows, and emerge from the woods. Winter nights, you'll build fires in those perfect fireplaces and be grateful they built that beehive oven so large. Everything here has been cared for with a deep knowledge of history and respect for nature and tradition. The heritage roses still bloom. The stone walls still stand true. The forest trails lead to hidden waterfalls and forgotten cellar holes. The gardens produce abundance. The pastures are ready to graze horses. Or you could simply walk your 227 acres knowing that in a world of constant change, you've found something real, something lasting, something irreplaceable. At $5.8 million, East Hill Farm offers what money rarely can buy: authenticity at scale. A genuine 18th-century house that works for 21st-century life. Land enough that you own your own hilltop. Buildings that tell the story of America. Privacy without isolation. History without the museum ropes. And beyond price, a place of profound peace that has endured through every chapter of American history, a hilltop sanctuary. Wake each morning in that otherworldly, untouchable tranquility that settles over the hilltop, where the rest of the world falls away, to watch the sun set where generations have watched it set, to be part of something larger than yourself, while making it entirely your own. 227 acres. 227 years. Some things are meant to be. Come see.

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$4,995,000
5bedrooms
6bathrooms
land 91.9ha

By William Pitt Sotheby's International Realty

39
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Property with pool Stockbridge (United States)

Located in Stockbridge, this historic General Williams House (circa 1795) has been restored and updated. Featuring 6 bedrooms, 5.5 bathrooms, 6 beautiful wood burning fireplaces, large dining and living spaces and 2 kitchens. The ''Ice House'' features its own kitchen and bath, for family gatherings or as Artist Studio. A sparkling in-ground pool for your summer pleasure. All this and more exists close to Main Street Stockbridge, Norman Rockwell Museum, Tanglewood, and all the most important cultural amenities. Who could ask for anything more?

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$1,695,000
6bedrooms
6bathrooms
land 1.6ha

By William Pitt Sotheby's International Realty

Contract pending
49
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Property with pool Lenox (United States)

Pine Needles--Built circa 1900 as a Berkshire ''cottage'' in the era of grand summer estates, this historic property blends the dignity of Colonial Revival architecture with the relaxed elegance of an Italian villa and the artisanal detail of the Arts & Crafts movement. Sited on 80 private acres just minutes from the heart of Lenox, the estate offers breathtaking southern views, rolling forest, and a rare level of privacy and provenance. Arrival. Approached via a long private drive, the property unfolds gradually—passing a sun-kissed meadow, through a grove of majestic pines, past a stunning carriage house, before arriving at an inviting courtyard. The house itself is beautifully sited to capture natural light and frame the sweeping mountain and pastoral views. Entry--A double-door entry opens to a gracious reception hall with original tile flooring and sightlines through French doors to the central living room and terrace beyond. Just off the entry is a coat room with period hooks and hardware, as well as a cozy sitting room with fireplace and built-in shelves. The central living room, paneled in rich wood, is anchored by a fireplace and opens to the view through a wide picture window and two sets of French doors leading to a stone terrace. West Wing--Formal and informal rooms radiate from the center of the home. The western wing includes a spacious living room, a library tucked beneath a vaulted studio, and a striking Persian-themed room adorned with carved woodwork, decorative tile, and intricate architectural details, providing an atmospheric space for reading, conversation, or quiet escape. Above, the vaulted studio with exposed beams and skylights offers an inspiring space for art, music, or quiet retreat. East Wing--The east wing centers around a chef's dream kitchen, thoughtfully tucked to one side for privacy, with direct access to a classic butler's pantry. The pantry connects to the kitchen, the formal dining room, and an airy summer dining space that opens to a loggia, offering an elegant progression for entertaining that bridges indoors and out. Sleeping Quarters--The second and third floors are devoted primarily to bedrooms, retaining the character of the original layout. Two sleeping porches, both located on the upper levels of the west wing, provide a nostalgic and tranquil way to enjoy the Berkshire air. Some of the bedrooms were originally designed for staff, while others, particularly those with the best views, served as guest or family quarters. Grounds and Outbuildings--Outdoor spaces are equally compelling, with lawns and mature plantings surrounding the home. A wide open meadow along the drive amplifies the sense of arrival and serenity. A pool built into the natural bedrock and fed by a spring provides a private and picturesque place to swim, echoing the home's seamless blend with the surrounding landscape. Additional structures include a striking two-story carriage house, distinguished by its dramatic arched entry and distinctive proportions. The lower level retains original horse stalls, a nod to the estate's equestrian past, while the upper level features a character-rich apartment offering opportunity for personalization. A detached garage with another apartment offers further accommodations for extended family, guests, or staff. The estate is well suited for a private compound or multi-generational retreat. Legacy--This is a rare opportunity to own one of Lenox's great legacy properties--where natural beauty, architectural significance, and enduring charm come together just minutes from the cultural heart of the Berkshires.

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$4,995,000
7bedrooms
8bathrooms
land 32.4ha

By William Pitt Sotheby's International Realty

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