Friday 19 April 2024

Man Builds Elaborate Subterranean Home in Costa Rica

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A collection of old things and a bedroom are pictured in the house built by Manuel Barrantes underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters
A collection of old things and a bedroom are pictured in the house built by Manuel Barrantes underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters

(Q24N) Manuel Barrantes started his hobbity quest for an underground home 12 years ago.

Like any good hobbit, the Costa Rican man doggedly pursued his dream and now lives in an underground mansion he’s dubbed Topolandia.

Barrantes says the subterranean quarters offer peace and comfort, free from the noise pollution and climate change that plagues the rest of the world. His wife and family live underground with him.

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Family members of Manuel Barrantes sit together in one of the rooms of the house he built underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters
Family members of Manuel Barrantes sit together in one of the rooms of the house he built underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters

After years of work, the dedicated digger has burrowed through volcanic rock and red soil to carve out a 2,000-square-foot humble abode. The home lies between 15 and 63 feet underground in the city of San Isidro, a Pérez Zeledón district about a three-hour drive south of the nation’s capital.

His man-cave includes a nook filled with sundry old stuff — everything from paper money to mugs to old vinyl records. But, if the contents are cool, the walls are amazing.

Cristal Barrantes makes a bed in her bedroom at the house that her husband Manuel Barrantes built underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters
Cristal Barrantes makes a bed in her bedroom at the house that her husband Manuel Barrantes built underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters

The masterpiece of modern-world escape features plumbing, stone beds and colorful, carved wall decorations. Some rooms are plain rock walls, but others are adorned with brightly painted symbols and art. There’s a shocking blue map of the Earth, stars and moons, an Egyptian pyramid and walls playfully painted like bricks.

Lidieth Barrantes reads a book in one of the rooms of the house that her father built underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. The dwelling, which Barrantes says provides a peaceful and comfortable home for him and his family away from noise pollution and the effects of climate change, now covers about 2,000 square feet.  Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters
Lidieth Barrantes reads a book in one of the rooms of the house that her father built underground in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. The dwelling, which Barrantes says provides a peaceful and comfortable home for him and his family away from noise pollution and the effects of climate change, now covers about 2,000 square feet. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters

Brightly painted life-size renditions of “The Flintstones” characters are carved into one hallway but, lest the mood seem too light, there’s a skeleton carved into another wall.

As awesome an abode as it is, Barrantes isn’t done. He’s continuing to expand his hobbit hole by hand, using a pickaxe.

Lidieth Barrantes and her daughter walk in a hallway of a house built underground by Manuel Barrantes in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters
Lidieth Barrantes and her daughter walk in a hallway of a house built underground by Manuel Barrantes in San Isidro de Perez Zeledon, Costa Rica, March 14, 2016. Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters

Perhaps predictably — given how bizarre the below-ground lodging is — Barrantes offers guided tours to interested visitors, as advertised on his website.

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Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters
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Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters
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Photo Juan Carlos Ulate/Reuters

Read more and view gallery at http://www.nydailynews.com/news/man-builds-elaborate-subterranean-home-costa-rica-gallery-1.2569705

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Q24N is an aggregator of news for Latin America. Reports from Mexico to the tip of Chile and Caribbean are sourced for our readers to find all their Latin America news in one place.

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