If you're a millionaire looking for somewhere suitable to sit out the apocalypse - this abandoned village in New Zealand could be just the job.
It is made up of eight houses, a main lodge and a restaurant and is on the market for £1.4million (NZ$2.7million/$1.8million).
Lake Waitaki Village, located on the South Island, sprung up in the 1930s to accommodate workers at a nearby dam. Over 40 families moved to the village but by 1989 they had all moved out because the dam system became automated and the workers were no longer needed.
Now, after lying abandoned for almost 30 years, the 14 hectare hamlet looks set to be snapped up - the estate agent marketing it said it has had 'heaps of interest'.
It could be that the heaps of interest are coming from millionaires and billionaires looking for a safe haven in the event of the collapse of civilisation.
After all, it was reported earlier this year that billionaire venture capitalist and PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel bought a 477-acre former sheep station in the South Island and that Silicon Valley businessman Sam Altman would fly to it with him in the event of the world economic system collapsing.
Of course, the caveat attached to buying Lake Waitaki Village is that you'd need to be a native Kiwis. Foreign buyers have been banned from buying existing residential homes that New Zealanders could otherwise purchase and live in.
The ban came into force earlier this year to encourage more home ownership in the country. Mr Thiel, it turns out, had bought New Zealand citizenship.
Those with their paperwork in order may be interested to learn that the main lodge property at Lake Waitaki Village has bedrooms, a reception area, billiards room and a formal lounge, while the houses all have three bedrooms.
There is also a nine-bay car parking garage.
The restaurant, meanwhile, is decorated in mahogany detailing and boasts a full commercial kitchen.
Lake Waitaki Village is in close proximity to a number of ski fields and the listing says that the lakeside village is in a 'pristine New Zealand holiday location.'
Kelli Milmine from the One Agency, who is listing the property, says that potential buyers have been interested in turning the village into a commune for extended family, a holiday resort and even a winery.
She said Travel: 'We have had many enquiries, and there are multiple parties looking into all of the detail.'
This article has been adapted from its original source.
