Clagstone Country Estates
“You don’t truly own land in North Idaho. You just look after it for a while.”
Not a subdivision.
A standard.
Fifty-eight homesites in the quiet middle of the Golden Triangle — six acres minimum, paved roads, gas in the ground, and the National Forest at your back fence. Not a subdivision. A standard.
Clagstone Country Estates is the kind of place you set out to build when you’re thinking in generations, not quarters. Fifty-eight homesites, six acres minimum, infrastructure already in the ground — and the architectural review to keep the ridgelines honest a hundred years from now.
It’s the kind of land Joe’s family has been looking after for four generations, now opened up — carefully — to a small number of new neighbors.
Four things you’ll notice
standing on the property.
- 01 The land
Six acres, not five.
That one extra acre is the difference between a neighborhood and a homestead. Room for your horses, your shop, your timber exemption — and the silence between you and your neighbor.
- 02 The day-to-day
You don’t trade convenience for quiet.
Your house stays warm in February because the gas line is already in the ground. The water out of your tap comes straight from the Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer. And when the snow comes, you drive out on pavement.
- 03 The setting
The National Forest is your back fence.
You’re in the middle of the Golden Triangle — Sandpoint, Coeur d’Alene, Pend Oreille, Spirit Lake, Farragut, all around you. And thousands of acres that belong to no one are yours to walk into whenever the day gets too small.
- 04 The build
Your architect, or one of ours.
A short list of vetted North Idaho builders, or bring your own. A Design Review Board protects the ridgelines and the architectural character — so the place still feels like the place a generation from now.
Still quiet.
— from the Clagstone brand