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'Fixer Upper' stars Chip and Joanna Gaines bought a 129-year-old castle worth almost half a million dollars in Texas, and photos show why it may be their most challenging renovation yet
'Fixer Upper' stars Chip and Joanna Gaines bought a 129-year-old castle worth almost half a million dollars in Texas, and photos show why it may be their most challenging renovation yet
Katie CanalesApr 6, 2019, 03:14 IST
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Chip and Joanna Gaines, the power couple behind the popular home renovation show "Fixer Upper," have bought a historic, 129-year-old German-style castle in their town of Waco, Texas, as first reported by the Waco Tribune-Herald.
Dubbed Cottonland Castle, the aging structure requires extensive renovations throughout.
Tom Lupfer, a contractor who worked on the castle for the previous owner, also estimated that an extensive renovation could cost between $600,000 and $1 million, according to the Waco Tribune-Herald.
According to the listing, the castle is able to hold three bedrooms and two full bathrooms.
The purchase adds to the couple's existing catalogue of Waco real estate and businesses, which includes Magnolia Market and Magnolia Table.
It's unclear yet what the Gaineses will use the castle for, but they have promised in a statement that they plan to undertake the extensive renovations that the castle necessitates.
"The Gaineses have the means, they have the interest - we knew for a long time that they were interested in the house," Lupfer told Business Insider.
The historic 129-year-old German-style castle, known as Cottonland Castle, in Waco, Texas, could be Chip and Joanna Gaineses' most challenging renovation yet.
Their renovation finesse is showcased in the couple's Magnolia Market at the Silos in Waco. In 2015, they transformed the once-abandoned site into a shopping center that sells, among many things, baked goods and home decor items in line with Joanna's signature modern style.
But the historic Cottonland Castle provides a unique challenge for the couple. Sitting in the heart of the Texas town of Waco, where the Gaineses live ...
... the property is such a notable landmark in town that the nearby neighborhood of Castle Heights was named after it. All eyes are on the Gaineses to see what they'll do with the property.
Lupfer, a contractor that previously worked on the castle, told Business Insider that the home was unoccupied for 12 years before he started working on it for the previous owner in 2014.
And so it fell into disrepair in the interim, he said.
"Unoccupied houses do not do well," Lupfer told Business Insider.
Water damage, rotten woodwork, outdated electrical and plumbing systems, and a worn stone facade are just some of the issues plaguing the castle.
Other things that need addressing include extensive cleaning, stone restoring, and dealing with issues with the pool and pool house in the backyard, he said.
But he said he never got around to starting on it.
Another challenge, the Gaineses' renovations have to be approved by the Texas Historical Commission, since Cottonland Castle, named after Waco's rich history in the cotton industry, became a historical landmark in 1977.
Lupfer told Business Insider that homes outfitted with eight fireplaces aren't typical nowadays, but they're "not out of the ordinary," considering that's how homes built in 1890 were heated.
Other materials added to the interior in the early 1900s include Italian Carrara marble ...
"We chose to take the originals and, piece by piece, we rebuilt 75 to 85% of all the windows in the house," Lupfer said.
Lupfer and his team also took care to preserve the castle's quarter-sawn oak detailing, which is also a characteristic of the Arts & Crafts design era.
According to public records, the property was listed for sale for $425,000 in February and was scooped up by the Gaineses after just days on the market.
A Magnolia spokesman confirmed the sale to the Waco Tribune-Herald, stating that the couple has not only held a long-time admiration for the property but have even tried to buy it in the past.
The idea of the pair turning it into a bed and breakfast has reportedly been floated, but past owners have toyed with the same idea before, which prompted pushback from neighbors.
In 1913, a businessman named Alfred Abeel purchased the home and hired a local investor to pick up where Tennant left off. The German-style castle began to take shape during this time.
The Pipkin family, who owned a southwest chain of drugstores of the same name, purchased the castle in 1941 before it eventually passed to a local church. The church then sold it to the Schwan family in 1969 for $50,000.
The family then tried to sell the castle for $1.25 million in 1982, a lofty price that spooked buyers at the time. It finally sold in 1991 after a price cut.