Some Properties Are Houses.
This One Is a Life.
Imagine waking up on a Sunday morning. The coffee is already brewing. You walk out the back door in your slippers, cross the deck, and collect a handful of warm, fresh eggs straight from your own chickens. You crack them into a cast-iron skillet on your Viking range while the stone fireplace crackles in the background. This isn't a vacation. This is Tuesday.
That's the life waiting for you at 1307 Oakridge Farm Hwy — a lovingly restored 1870s estate tucked just off I-77 in Mooresville, NC, minutes from NASCAR country, Lake Norman, and the energy of Charlotte, yet completely removed from the noise of the world.
The moment you turn down the gravel drive, something shifts. The pressure of the day lifts. The cedar-wrapped porch stretches out to greet you, string lights swaying, wicker chairs waiting. You sit down and realize — this is what you've been working toward.
Inside, the great room is the kind of space that makes people stop mid-sentence. Vaulted knotty pine ceilings rise above you. A floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace anchors the room. The farm table seats ten, and on a Friday night with the right people around it, there's nowhere else on earth you'd rather be. The kitchen behind it is a chef's dream — Viking range, double-door refrigerator, warming drawer, built-in steamer, convection oven. It wasn't designed for heating up leftovers. It was designed for feeding people you love.
The master suite is your sanctuary. Stone fireplace. Knotty pine walls. An en-suite spa bath with a sculptural soaking tub that practically demands you slow down. The guest rooms upstairs carry that same warmth — styled, intentional, and ready for company whenever you want it.
Out back, 1,500 square feet of composite deck overlooks 13 acres of permanently protected land. Your hot tub. Your pergola. Your grill. Your fire pit. No neighbors looking in. No HOA telling you what to do. Just you, the trees, the dogwoods in bloom, and all the space in the world to breathe.
"Once you're inside, you'll understand exactly why this family stayed for 11 years — and exactly why it breaks their hearts to leave."