This historic eastside home built in 1921 by B.J.O. Nordfeldt, a member of the Taos Society of Artists, sits on a lush .64 ace lot, just off the Old Santa Fe Trail. Boasting large rooms with high ceilings and good light the home is prepped and ready for renovation (including partial demolition of the interior). Period details include numerous original wood carvings by Nordfeldt, coved ceilings, and large divided light windows. The house has a basement with crawl spaces providing easy access to plumbing, which has been partially updated. Only minutes from downtown in a quiet pastoral setting, the address is on Camino de las Animas, but the entrance is actually off Camino Atalaya.
Santa Fe’s Historic Eastside
With some homes dating back centuries, these neighborhoods boast some of Santa Fe’s most photographed adobe homes and gardens. Hosting a mix of multi-generational families and newcomers, the homes, often hidden behind high walls and accessed by narrow, dirt lanes, recall the city’s early history and lend Santa Fe a unique heritage.