Drive to the end of the cul-de-sac, head into the tall trees and leave everything behind. Stand on the hillside at dusk and look south through the firs and arbutus. The water catches the last of the light. There are no houses in eyeshot around you — not one — and the shape of the land and the neighbouring parcels mean there never will be.
This is a rare thing: half an acre of forested, south-facing privacy on the Sunshine Coast, with a water view that is genuinely yours. Ten minutes to Sechelt. Three minutes to the beach at Sandy Hook. Three minutes to the trails.
The lot spans 0.49 acres on a south-facing hillside. Mid-density dry coast forest — Douglas fir, arbutus, and native understory — covers the slope. The terrain is rocky with natural granite outcroppings, giving the site a raw, elemental quality.
The slope itself is the defining feature. It means the land has remained undeveloped while everything around it has been established. For the right builder, it means a home that sits in the landscape rather than being placed on it — cantilevered, post-and-beam, terraced into the rock.
There are no visible neighbouring structures from the lot, and given the configuration of surrounding parcels and topography, this will not change. The road itself ends here — a quiet cul-de-sac, no through traffic, a sense of arriving somewhere. Other lots nearby are already built on. This one stays the way it is.
For information, site visits, or introductions to architects and builders with experience on this kind of site, leave your details below and you'll receive a personal reply.