The fact that they can call it a historical site and keep it in the family whilst being a tourist location and getting state funds is crazy. I want one.
A relatively similar one is the breakers at Newport. It was technically sold to the preservation society for $1 on the agreement that the family still live there. They lived on the upper floors that people can't access. The reality is these places are extremely expensive and were built at a time when there wasn't much to do. So the entire social circle would move to places in the mountains or to Newport for the summer.
It’s bc after the latest cataclysm these buildings started getting hijacked by the white folks. America used to be filled with these and if you really take the time to research the old world and what others have dug up and posted you’d realize this world used to be a loving and comfortable place where we all Knew we were One. Kings served what they ruled, didn’t take advantage of the peasants and so on. They harnessed electricity to power the cities. I got some vids on my shorts but that’s also why Freemasonry is a big thing. Your body is the temple of God, we are God given the gift of life as this person. They’d build everything after our bodies electrical paths. Our glands and nerves, organs are much more than just pumps for our blood. They store our emotional energy and are the reason we even have emotions and such. It’s deep but also you can see they use the biological terms for our body in the different parts of the buildings
I’m happy to visit Mansions in Tucson that have been remodeled to allow for 130 small apartments for seniors! The living spaces look like they’re directly from Europe 😜👀🥰
My husband and I made a wonderful trip just before Christmas a few years ago and left Christmas Eve Day to return home for family celebrations. I have nothing but the fondest memories of our visit!
Biltmore Estate is located in the mountains of Asheville North Carolina. The best time to travel here is when the leaves are changing in the fall. The Blue Ridge Parkway threads through the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. I'm proud to be born and raised in North Carolina where in the course of a day you can travel from some of the most beautiful mountains in the world to some of the most scenic beaches and harbors.
Don't forget we have the city life in Charlotte, Triad (Greensboro, Winston-Salem, & High Point), & the Triangle (Raleigh, Durham, & Chapel Hill). And we got that country farm 🚜 life too 😀
Just got back from a trip up to Virginia, and we stopped in Asheville on the way. We hadn't planned to stay for too long but ended up arriving just in time for the trolley tour. The Biltmore was not in the time frame, but seeing the rest of the beautiful architecture in Asheville was great.
@@theCajonwarriorYeah and Winston-Salem, Greensboro and High point are crime filled. Don't forget 5 law enforcement officers gunned down in Charlotte
You mean income taxes helped reduce the obscene amount of the fruits of workers' labor that was held in the hands of the elite such as the trust fund baby who owned this estate?
Sometimes I wonder if it’s better without tax. The idea of tax is that the money goes into funding public projects such as road maintenance or schools or social projects yet it went into the lining pockets of some sob
@@AlexS-oj8qf exactly. I hate when people complain, saying the rich need to pay more tax, when we all already know the taxes currently collected aren't being used correctly.
@@AlexS-oj8qf It's better for the rich without tax. The workers who built this place did it for a pittance, without weekends off and with no recourse if they were injured. They were just fired, and if they died from the negligence, well too bad for the widow and family.
Other details not covered here: It was one of the first homes to have hardwired electricity for lighting It’s nearly 180,000 square feet The 8,000 remaining acres pale in comparison to the ~125,000 originally purchased for the estate, which were sold to help cover its running costs They actually modified the landscape of the property to add hills and make the view more interesting
6 หลายเดือนก่อน +61
First private bowling alley too I believe. It was used in the movie "There will be blood"
Yes been there almost every Christmas when we lived in cherokee nc its beautiful did you know anderson cooper spent summers there with his mother wish i could of seen there
I used to work there years ago. It is amazing to see. The library is my favorite room. Floor to ceiling books. I would have loved to be able to read the titles.
@@krazzysuSeriously? That's what you came here for? You do have a life right? (I am waiting, purposefully, for the spelling check errors!) I hope this is driving you nuts. Get a life and leave a person making a simple comment alone!
The blocks used to build this place are massive. Going there in person taking a tour it’s like the rooms literally never end. Amazing place if you get the chance to go.
I was going to say the same thing. It's the size of the stones that absolutely blew my mind. Also the kitchen and the copper piping absolutely mind-blowing
Nobody asked ! You took a trip to a house you could never afford!! If you’re going to brag , brag about something cool !! Sounds boring visiting a house that is nothing like your reality!!
My grandmother grew up on the grounds because her father was one of the estate supervisors. Grandma said they were very kind and generous. I took my mother to see Biltmore so she could admire her family's history that she heard about from the time she was a child. It's an amazing piece of architecture and an icon of the Gilded Age.
They still getting checks from the subway system they funded and all the art work in the Weiss Museum belongs to them and the land grand central station sits on they own that too. They funded the East Indian Trading Company as a founding member
You can't even imagine how grand and incredible Biltmore is until you see it. I've seen pictures my whole life and when I took my family to see it and it came into sight as we were taken to it, it was awe inspiring and breathtaking. It's absolutely HUGE and has engineering that I didn't even know existed in that time period. It had electricity in every room that was generated by it's own power station on the property. It had central heating, hit and cold running water (bathing, cooking, etc) and had mechanical refrigeration (food, etc). It's just an incredible example of what an unlimited budget could buy even back then.
So you went to visit but it makes you wonder so many people living in the streets I wonder how big your actual house is and how much rent you pay or property taxes do you realize nowadays for somebody to live in a house like that they would have to be young healthy and selling some kind of drugs they would have to be drug kingpins to afford it either that'll sell petroleum to Rich Nations
Imagine an elderly person in his 80s with dementia walking around that property??? It's obvious that that place is meant for the entire family of whoever owns that and they would have to be quite young like toddlers or kids will be raised there until they old enough to become prince and princess or Kings or Queens or whatever the ultra privileged do
@@damianlopez7630 yes, that's exactly how it went. They left it to their children, etc. and I believe about 10 years ago there was some deal made with the state of North Carolina to turn it into a tourist attraction to pay taxes, etc. This is straight from Wikipedia: The estate today covers approximately 8,000 acres (13 sq mi; 32 km2) and is split in half by the French Broad River. The estate is overseen by The Biltmore Company, a trust set up by the family. The company is a large enterprise that is one of the largest employers in the Asheville area. Restaurants were opened in 1979 and 1987, and four gift shops in 1993. The former dairy barn was converted into the Biltmore Winery in 1985. The 210-room luxury hotel, named The Inn on Biltmore Estate, opened in 2001. In 2010, the estate opened Antler Hill Village, consisting of gift shops and restaurants, as well as a remodeled winery, and connected farmyard. In 2015, the Village Hotel on Biltmore Estate, a more casual option to The Inn with 209 rooms, was opened in Antler Hill Village.
@@damianlopez7630 yes, but I agree. I couldn't imagine the upkeep. You would absolutely need a huge staff to take care of that place. You also would need a DEEP, DEEP financial budget to pay taxes, etc. The original builder was a railroad tycoon. He had more money than he knew what to do with. Only a person that had about 40 billion in US dollars would be able to sustain that and it would have to have income too.
I visited the Biltmore estate in 1978. The library was impressive and the gardens were beautiful. Had the best chicken salad stuffed into the best tasting tomato i ever had for lunch. It was an amazing tour. I would do it again.
@@jasonlacroix6083 No, lunch not included... don't know about the cheese steak... the menu might be online? But it was in a restaurant in a former stable, I think, beautiful. 🥰 Yes, fabulous gardens. The experience was amazing. The Chihuly Glass sculptures were on exhibit in 2018 when I visited. 💕
One of the most fascinating places you could ever visit. There’s so much history to be appreciated. Layers upon layers of detailed tours within the property and grounds. So much to see in and out of the house.
My wife and I went here in the spring of 1989, the cost for both of us was $38. However, the third floor hadn't been opened up yet. We bought the book.
In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also. John 14:2-3
Vanderbilt family is a perfect example while living trust, (usable life insurance), and strict terms to keep access to that trust are paramount for a families generational success.
Didn’t the Vanderbilt family piss through all of their money by living like financial idiots? Pretty sure it was about thirty years after Cornelius Vanderbilt died the family held a reunion at Vanderbilt college and there was not a single millionaire left among them
There is an article that Forbes wrote about trusts and the Kennedy family and trusts were stated as the main reason for maintaining wealth. The Vanderbilts not only built the Biltmore but another mansion. I think it’s called Breakers if I’m not mistaken. I often wonder if these mansions were not built so large if there would be money left over. They would have had to leave it alone and let it compound over time though. Family money should be kept in a trust so one family member can’t get a hold of all the money and spend it on stupid stuff like mansions, supercars, watches, or gambling addiction.
It's BEYOND beautiful . I've toured it twice. Worth the drive and all the walking . Bought a plant the 2nd time there in their greenhouse and love seeing it every day in the yard as a reminder .
Rich people need to do this more. I read how George Vanderbilt employs so many people a whole village is built only to house them nearby. He also encourage forest reservation in his lands and repair the depleted Appalachian forest, saving it for the future generations. People like him, Andrew Carnegie, Peggy Guggenheim, and all the other rich people who are selfless in their actions and do things that not only benefit themselves but others have my highest regards.
All of those people only built things so as to have their names attached to them forever as a form of purchased immortality, billionaires today still build and donate things to the public but they don't demand that they be named after them.
Went with my family during Christmas time and goodness gracious it is amazing! The way they decorated the estate was incredible! They also have a 100 foot tall Christmas tree IN the house! And the ceiling was painted in some rooms as if Michelangelo had been there! Definitely recommend, great tourist destination!
I hate some of the changes they had to make to turn it into a safer place to open up the public. I remember going to see it and one of the most beautiful places to me was the outdoor pool. A giant beautiful angel was on each corner of the outdoor pool. Then I came to see it and the pool was filled in as if it never existed. It didn’t mention it or show a plaque of what it originally looked like. History erased!
Between the on-site historians AND the younger generation of George’s descendants who were starting to work for “the family business” they decided to get rid of it because it was not original to the house. His daughter Cornelia added it some years after the house was completed (in the 20’s I believe ) so since it supposedly wasn’t part of George’s “original plan” for the Estate they filled it in. Throughout the early-mid 90’s through the late 90’s they had evening concerts there. I volunteered to work just to see the shows!! LOL Carly Simon, Carol King, James Taylor - just to name a few. What kills me is that they did away with the pool because it wasn’t original but then they added on a giant, three story structure onto the back of the old stables (The Stable Cafe) to add an actual commercial kitchen for the restaurant. The lower level was storage, a pastry kitchen and management offices and kitchen on the main and a smaller one on the upper level where they turned the old hay loft into a private dining room.
Yes, Western NC is the place to be. Or the coast. The middle part of NC used to be nice rural areas with good people, but now it's mostly urban decay/crime/gangs/drugs and uppity New Joisey types who bring their own kind of urban decay. NC hasn't been nice for several decades.
$120 a person. I can find much better things to spend $120 on. It would have actually cost me $240. Lol. If i'm not interested in $120 i'm definitely not interested in $240. And, if I remember correctly, it was more than that when we checked a year and a half ago. Turned away at the gate and never looked back. Still Don't regret that decision. I know for certain if I would have paid I'd said " it was cool but not worth the $240."😅
I love Colin North Carolina home, and Biltmore is an incredible working estate. They farm they do everything. That's how they keep it going. But the genius of it is the man who designed the entry and driveway into the place. You never get to see it for 2 and 1/2 mi and then there it is and all it's glory. That was genius.
The original home Vanderbilt had planned was 6000 sq ft. It was only after a 2 month tour to Europe that he and his architect upgraded the house to 170k square feet.
They don't take care of it!!! The estate was trusted to a conservation. The conservation cares for and pays for EVERYTHING!!! Yet they continue to live there .. FOR FREE! This is how the rich stay rich, living off every one else!
@@Caterina...3 You CLEARLY have no idea whatsoever what you’re talking about. The people who own and run Biltmore Estate are direct descendants of George Vanderbilt himself - the man who built it!! It’s not now nor has it ever been in any kind of conservatorship. Furthermore, nobody lives in the house anymore. There hasn’t been anyone living in it since 1953. And the family that runs the Estate now very well may be financially well off, they aren’t anywhere even remotely close to being as wealthy as their family once was nor anywhere close to as wealthy as you’re trying to make them out to be.
The Biltmore is located near Asheville, North Carolina and that entire area is absolutely beautiful. From the front lawn of the Biltmore you get a clear view of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the distance, not to mention that entire estate has become somewhat of a resort, with lodging and other opportunities available
@@Euro2005mcthe problem arises when you do crooked illegal stuff to get that money then build something like this to shove it in their faces. That’s the only reason to build a house that you couldn’t possibly need the majority of it. I’m a little biased against the robber barons. If you really look into it you’d probably be as well. On a side note do you like taxes coming out of your check ? Of course not after all the founding fathers made it clear that taxes should not be lobbied against someone’s wages. It was unconstitutional to collect a federal income tax. You can thank all the robber barons but mostly JP Morgan for that. They decided that they wanted more money so they came up with true federal reserve a tax act in a secret meeting in 1912. It’s not a conspiracy theory. It actually happened and that’s why you now get less than what you actually earned at work.
I go there every Spring. The scenery in Asheville is breathtaking. I live in NC, 4 hrs from Biltmore. The landscape is beautiful and the greenhouses are impressive.❤❤❤
This manor is so beautiful. The most interesting rooms in it to me were in the basement. The kitchens and the laundry. They washed the clothes and used giant racks that spun at a slow rate of speed to dry the clothes. They had separate rooms for the preparation of dishes. Vegetables in one room, baked goods in another and meats in another. The swimming pool is also in the basement with private changing rooms( I think there were 22 rooms). There was also a gym/ play room that was a full basketball court. The efficiency of the design was impressive.
@lulumoon6942 it's true! Do a deep dive - research on it when you have time. It is mind opening to the suppressed truth. The hidden truth is all around.
If I had Jeff Bezo kind of money, I’d buy this, instead of a $500 million dollar yacht. I’d love this house and never move. I’d hire staff that I would treat like my own family, and hopefully they’d love my family lol their own, and basically have generational worker. I’d hire the best French/Italian Pastry chef’s, and try to hire the best chefs around the world…Fantasy I know…
Jeff doesn't have the money to buy this house! They said in the tour that the 2 biggest companies could get together and still not have the money the house is worth.
@@StringofPearls55 That's why they have tours. It is still owned by the Vanderbilt family which Anderson Cooper is part of. They still have private areas of the house.
@@davehaggerty3405 Hearst Castle was built about 25 years after Biltmore. The interiors are a lot alike, same period faucets, tapestries on the walls and lots of art work. Hearst Castle indoor pool is much better its deck has gold inlay and is actually used. Biltmore pool can’t hold water it leaks out.
I’ve been to Hearst Castle about three times. Hearst castle sits on a mountain overlooking the ocean. Stay in one of the beach towns along the coast below Hearst castle. There is Pismo, San Luis Obispo, Morro Bay, Cayucos or Cambria.
I visted once. I love old historic buildings! Vanderbilt was a train or railway tycoon. It's donated to the state to preserve otherwise no one could or would pay the expense to upkeep preservation. It's fasinating and beautiful inside!
In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also. John 14:2-3
I toured this house 2 times when i was a kid and one time my granny was with me 🩵 its Gorgeous. A castle of beautiful architecture and furniture that you can literally get lost in.This house has a horse stable and a bowling alley. They also have an entire corridor for the house servants who worked there to live in. I remember i liked their kitchen area better than the kitchen in the main house where the wealthy people lived. I wish someday i can get to live in North Carolina again.
Easy just don't get into debt............sacrifice, save and invest in yourself. If you got to get in debt for in or get it on credit YOU DON'T NEED IT
That's right my state is beautiful. We have all kinds of variety of living. If you want to live on the beach ⛱️, we got that. If you want to live on a farm 🚜 or out in the country, we have that. If you want to live in the Mountains ⛰️, we have that. And if you want to live in the city, we have all that. But the people are dummer then a bag of rocks 🪨
How the workers who lived in dirt shacks didn’t revolt in the middle of building this is insane . If this is still the biggest house to this day , imagine what it must of felt like back then.
We have been there a few times especially during Christmas when all of the decorations are out. It’s insanely large but beautiful especially during Christmas!
No but they enjoyed the spoils while they lived. You think the wealthy would stop accumulating wealth bc "they can't take it with them?" Its always the worst argument. They do so to enjoy it while they're here. And still, moot point, considering even generations after the patriarch of the family, Cornelius, passed away, the rest of the scores of Vanderbilts still had enormous wealth that they enjoyed for generations after.
I've been there, its beautiful. The grounds are amazing with flowers and blooming trees. Oh as well as the delicious wine they harvest and make right there!
How many tens of thousands of dollars are property taxes? Sometimes a home isn't worth w taxes and upkeep - maintenance That's clearly what happened here You'd need a stream of income of millions just proper upkeep for this place
This is absolutely stunning! This is absolutely going on my bucket list. I didn't even know this existed in the US.. i love old, historical homes and buildings..❤
This kind of wealth, is absolutely something I cannot comprehend. To have an entire small towns worth of peoples, land and infrastructure within a single property is just amazing to me
And my husband and I had the pleasure of seeing it personally when I lived in North Carolina. It is incredibly beautiful and offers visitors an opportunity to temporarily share residential opulence with the opulent owners.
That’s why they ultimately went bankrupt they over built but they did build some of the most beautiful places you’ve ever been to This place also has its own nursery just to replant the properties gardens every year and season
@@dialatedxpupilzxselfish ppl in my opinion (ik folks will disagree, which is fine. To me it's just ridiculous to splash all THAT money and forget yk....the ppl after in ur family, and making sure everything else is good.)
Yep. What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses his soul. We should live for Jesus and be focused on eternity rather than our short life here on Earth
Just checked. $93 per person. HOWEVER, you can save $50 on an annual pass during their summer sale this month, from $299 down to $249!!! Wow!!! What a bargain!!!!! 🙄😑 Almost everyone in the comment section is saying that it's worth the price... but is it really?
I have been to Biltmore House/Estate dozens upon dozens of times, starting at just a few days old in 1977 and was always fascinated with it. There is a jar (for lack of better words) that allegedly held Napoleon Bonaparte’s heart after his death and other mysterious and fascinating artifacts and aspects all over the house. George Vanderbilt was extremely paranoid and his bedroom is the highest point on the second floor, making it impossible for anyone to scale the side of the house and break in. The locks on his bedroom door are out of this world. The house itself, is beautiful, but now that I know what I know about the pedo world, having gone down that rabbit hole in regards to 13 bloodlines, I can’t go in the house without getting the heebie-jeebies. I can’t unsee or unread what’s been done. It really does make one wonder.
There is also 35 bedrooms. People like the Firestone’s, Rockefeller’s, Astor’s and even a couple of presidents visited, staying at the house or up on Mount Pisgah at the hunting cabin (which was roughly 3500 sq ft!!)
@@AK-ix6xgWell you’d actually need far more than that. You know, they DO have to be refilled/replaced every now and then -it’s not like you can re-use the stuff!!!!! 😂😂😂
Think about it, there's a lot of people being served. Too much going on in a secluded area. Lots of wine, food and parties. Add adrenochrome to the mix... Bingo
@@Joseph-g3p9d Obviously you confused me with the person who started this thread because I did not talk about anything at all here. I asked the person who started the thread if they could go into more detail about their experience when they said that is a disabled person they were treated poorly ... I am not disabled ... but I do believe that person was treated poorly and just wanted her to explain more about what happened to her
@nraffen I believe you but it would be better for us to understand your experience if you could explain more about what happened , my dear ... but I certainly do believe you . What happened ? Hopefully you did complain to a supervisor ?
@@Joseph-g3p9d Also , you represent Biltmore Estate ? ... how would anyone know what people's experiences are in a place that gets a huge amount of visitors a year ? One can't be there constantly during every moment the place is open to the public ; rather strange to discount or try to invalidate that person's experience ... no disabled person should be treated that way . Mercy . If you can explain something differently that was your experience then please do let us know ... ?
You do realize that WTF means WHAT the f^^k, right? So your question makes no sense in the context you’re asking. What the f^^k needs that much space?? Why bitch and moan about a house that was built over 100 years ago?? In fact, nobody forced you to sit there and watch this video (which you probably did several times) nor did they make you hang around to leave a comment. Don’t like it? Does it bother you THAT MUCH?? Keep on scrolling. *BOOOOM!!!* Problem solved!!!
This is completely impractical and frankly, a way to gloat your wealth. Not only would your utilities be absurdly high, the staff you'd need to cook and clean is also preposterous
I think much of such construction feats where driven at the very least partly by inspiration from the grand-ness of creation. This in particular partly as a way of proving equal success relative to Europe (and others) castles, cathedrals, pyramids and ancient structures and the likes.
You do realize it was built between 1889 and 1895, right? You know, smack dab in the middle of the Victorian Era - which was overflowing with people flaunting and gloating their wealth. Guess history wasn’t one of your strong points.
My sister and I were treated by my daughter to a vacation there a few years back. It was incredible. So much to see and do. The rooms were quite nice, and we felt so pampered. I'd go back in a heartbeat!
Please name them as this is the only thing i know of and i grew up here for 21 years. I know of things like this Biltmore and theme parks like Dollywood in Tennessee and Carowinds in NC/SC border! Please tell me more history as i am interested and intrigued!
What's that law that claims the government needs the land for a new highway or better yet , for a RAILROAD??? But then, the more wealth you acquire the more freedoms you have.❤😂🎉
EMINENT DOMAIN but in different states it might be called something else BUT THIS GENTLEMAN WILLIAM VANDERBILT HE DIDN'T FORCE THE PEOPLE TO LEAVE HE PAID THEM MORE MONEY THAN THEIR THAN THEIR PROPERTY WAS VALUED TO GET THEM TO SELL
Been there done that just long ago and I had a Vanderbilt friend who let me stay there in a guest house but smaller and she was a sophisticated beautiful person inside and out that's what she made me feel like motion wise but she was like an awesome listener and teacher but significant other mother unfortunately she passed away and feeling like I felt being around her was the most beautiful and intelligent conversation I had in awhile she kept me up to date and going
That’s pretty funny considering that nobody affiliated with the house is a Vanderbilt nor has anyone since George himself and his wife even had the Vanderbilt name. He had one daughter, Cornelia, who married a man named Cecil (pronounced sess-ell) and there hasn’t been a Vanderbilt associated with the house since his wife died. George never built any guest houses on the property because his home had 255 rooms - 35 bedrooms and 43 bathrooms. He had plenty of places for guests to stay in his home AND had a large enough staff to tend to them.
Lionheart here I know what I know I've been where I've been I done what I've done, I have lived where I have lived, can't know body tell me different numb nuts and also I was also living in a castle right after the crusades in Portugal thee templar's head knight gave me a crown and set me up high on a really tall chair above all 40 of them and a couple years passed, they got tired of not fighting and left me in the castle told me to stay out, so I did, they never returned after many many years, I ran out of food,drink so I left,loaded up a trunk full of gold coins went to try and sell them to get food and drink nobody, I mean nobody would buy those gold coins for anything so I gave them to everyone in Portugal and end up receiving food and drink went back to the castle the templar's left me,3 days down the road a weird wagon showed up at the castle so I thought it was a wagon turned out to be called something the Portuguese police called a car, and they ran me out of my castle said that I couldn't live there anymore alone I never bothered anyone, still gotten robbed for everything I owned including the castle the templar's left me, so I found a ride to the US and been here since
The estate used to be over ten times larger, and much of the land comprised what's now Asheville itself, but the Vanderbilts had to sell bits and pieces of it over the years because George Vanderbilt spent all his money building it.
The fact that they can call it a historical site and keep it in the family whilst being a tourist location and getting state funds is crazy. I want one.
A relatively similar one is the breakers at Newport. It was technically sold to the preservation society for $1 on the agreement that the family still live there. They lived on the upper floors that people can't access.
The reality is these places are extremely expensive and were built at a time when there wasn't much to do. So the entire social circle would move to places in the mountains or to Newport for the summer.
I believe Anderson Cooper is one of those relatives who are aloud to live at the mansion.
It's amazing
It’s bc after the latest cataclysm these buildings started getting hijacked by the white folks. America used to be filled with these and if you really take the time to research the old world and what others have dug up and posted you’d realize this world used to be a loving and comfortable place where we all Knew we were One. Kings served what they ruled, didn’t take advantage of the peasants and so on.
They harnessed electricity to power the cities. I got some vids on my shorts but that’s also why Freemasonry is a big thing. Your body is the temple of God, we are God given the gift of life as this person. They’d build everything after our bodies electrical paths. Our glands and nerves, organs are much more than just pumps for our blood. They store our emotional energy and are the reason we even have emotions and such. It’s deep but also you can see they use the biological terms for our body in the different parts of the buildings
@@letsburn00 no, it was a way of hoarding wealth
If you ever wondered if it’s worth the time, it’s definitely worth it. It’s amazing that a property so large is so cozy, beautiful and intimate.
I’m happy to visit Mansions in Tucson that have been remodeled to allow for 130 small apartments for seniors! The living spaces look like they’re directly from Europe 😜👀🥰
My husband and I made a wonderful trip just before Christmas a few years ago and left Christmas Eve Day to return home for family celebrations. I have nothing but the fondest memories of our visit!
That's a shack, have you seen Windsor Castle?
@@BoominGame That's not a shack.
@@Tony-yd1vx Owwww, my gardener's summer house is bigger.
Biltmore Estate is located in the mountains of Asheville North Carolina. The best time to travel here is when the leaves are changing in the fall. The Blue Ridge Parkway threads through the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. I'm proud to be born and raised in North Carolina where in the course of a day you can travel from some of the most beautiful mountains in the world to some of the most scenic beaches and harbors.
Don't forget we have the city life in Charlotte, Triad (Greensboro, Winston-Salem, & High Point), & the Triangle (Raleigh, Durham, & Chapel Hill). And we got that country farm 🚜 life too 😀
Just got back from a trip up to Virginia, and we stopped in Asheville on the way. We hadn't planned to stay for too long but ended up arriving just in time for the trolley tour. The Biltmore was not in the time frame, but seeing the rest of the beautiful architecture in Asheville was great.
@@theCajonwarriorYeah and Winston-Salem, Greensboro and High point are crime filled. Don't forget 5 law enforcement officers gunned down in Charlotte
Don't forget the 5 law enforcement officers unalived in Charlotte
It's also very beautiful in Spring.
They really built some impressive structures before income tax.
You mean income taxes helped reduce the obscene amount of the fruits of workers' labor that was held in the hands of the elite such as the trust fund baby who owned this estate?
Sometimes I wonder if it’s better without tax. The idea of tax is that the money goes into funding public projects such as road maintenance or schools or social projects yet it went into the lining pockets of some sob
@@AlexS-oj8qf exactly. I hate when people complain, saying the rich need to pay more tax, when we all already know the taxes currently collected aren't being used correctly.
@@allahbolethat kind of thinking is why we will have us all eating soilent green and repeating double speak.
@@AlexS-oj8qf It's better for the rich without tax. The workers who built this place did it for a pittance, without weekends off and with no recourse if they were injured. They were just fired, and if they died from the negligence, well too bad for the widow and family.
Other details not covered here:
It was one of the first homes to have hardwired electricity for lighting
It’s nearly 180,000 square feet
The 8,000 remaining acres pale in comparison to the ~125,000 originally purchased for the estate, which were sold to help cover its running costs
They actually modified the landscape of the property to add hills and make the view more interesting
First private bowling alley too I believe. It was used in the movie "There will be blood"
F’n cool
Why would they go to the trouble of filming it here, weird
Biltmores also didn't build it . They found it
@@shentertainer6009who built it? And when?
It is extremely beautiful during christmas time. The staff does a fantastic job of decorating.
😮😮😮😮❤❤❤❤
Yes been there almost every Christmas when we lived in cherokee nc its beautiful did you know anderson cooper spent summers there with his mother wish i could of seen there
Every room is memorable years later. Beautiful beyond words at Christmas.
I used to work there years ago. It is amazing to see. The library is my favorite room. Floor to ceiling books. I would have loved to be able to read the titles.
Anderson Cooper is a looser - no one cares. @@carolynrossiter8141
I grew up going there atleast 2 times a year. My grandfather worked there and we got to do behind the scenes tours. Some of my favorite memories!!!
*at least
I grew up in Greensboro and we'd go 2-3 times a year. A real NC gem!
@@krazzysuSeriously? That's what you came here for? You do have a life right? (I am waiting, purposefully, for the spelling check errors!) I hope this is driving you nuts. Get a life and leave a person making a simple comment alone!
@@krazzysuYeah, it's called a typo, Captain Überdouche. It's not like he misspelled the word there/their/they're, jackhole. 🙄😒
its open to who? who lives in there?
The late 19th century still had the style and reminiscence of the old European castles and mansions. Beautiful !
The blocks used to build this place are massive. Going there in person taking a tour it’s like the rooms literally never end. Amazing place if you get the chance to go.
I was going to say the same thing. It's the size of the stones that absolutely blew my mind. Also the kitchen and the copper piping absolutely mind-blowing
Seeing as you literally don't actually see all the rooms either. Some are still unrestored and not open to the public.
Nobody asked ! You took a trip to a house you could never afford!! If you’re going to brag , brag about something cool !! Sounds boring visiting a house that is nothing like your reality!!
Same with Hearst Castle
Would love to see it❤
My grandmother grew up on the grounds because her father was one of the estate supervisors. Grandma said they were very kind and generous. I took my mother to see Biltmore so she could admire her family's history that she heard about from the time she was a child. It's an amazing piece of architecture and an icon of the Gilded Age.
Where is it?
@@hawkeye9382 Asheville NC.
Can guests enter the library? I'm a huge bookworm lol
@@ArcheryCat7I’m sorry, there are no invertebrates allowed.
Was your grandmother part cat
The maintenance costs on that property must be astronomical.
Probably why everything is so expensive there.
Small price to pay to not have HOA!
Considering Mike Tyson’s old place costed about 15k (that’s on the low end) a month this place must be 3-4x that much.
at least a million in year
They still getting checks from the subway system they funded and all the art work in the Weiss Museum belongs to them and the land grand central station sits on they own that too. They funded the East Indian Trading Company as a founding member
"If only those walls could talk"... One can only imagine what was said, done, and mastermind in that estate.
You can't even imagine how grand and incredible Biltmore is until you see it. I've seen pictures my whole life and when I took my family to see it and it came into sight as we were taken to it, it was awe inspiring and breathtaking.
It's absolutely HUGE and has engineering that I didn't even know existed in that time period. It had electricity in every room that was generated by it's own power station on the property. It had central heating, hit and cold running water (bathing, cooking, etc) and had mechanical refrigeration (food, etc). It's just an incredible example of what an unlimited budget could buy even back then.
So you went to visit but it makes you wonder so many people living in the streets I wonder how big your actual house is and how much rent you pay or property taxes do you realize nowadays for somebody to live in a house like that they would have to be young healthy and selling some kind of drugs they would have to be drug kingpins to afford it either that'll sell petroleum to Rich Nations
Imagine an elderly person in his 80s with dementia walking around that property??? It's obvious that that place is meant for the entire family of whoever owns that and they would have to be quite young like toddlers or kids will be raised there until they old enough to become prince and princess or Kings or Queens or whatever the ultra privileged do
@@damianlopez7630 yes, that's exactly how it went. They left it to their children, etc. and I believe about 10 years ago there was some deal made with the state of North Carolina to turn it into a tourist attraction to pay taxes, etc. This is straight from Wikipedia:
The estate today covers approximately 8,000 acres (13 sq mi; 32 km2) and is split in half by the French Broad River. The estate is overseen by The Biltmore Company, a trust set up by the family. The company is a large enterprise that is one of the largest employers in the Asheville area. Restaurants were opened in 1979 and 1987, and four gift shops in 1993. The former dairy barn was converted into the Biltmore Winery in 1985. The 210-room luxury hotel, named The Inn on Biltmore Estate, opened in 2001. In 2010, the estate opened Antler Hill Village, consisting of gift shops and restaurants, as well as a remodeled winery, and connected farmyard. In 2015, the Village Hotel on Biltmore Estate, a more casual option to The Inn with 209 rooms, was opened in Antler Hill Village.
@@hurricaneaquatics thank you for the information I appreciate it...at least it's a tourist site so people could go see it
@@damianlopez7630 yes, but I agree. I couldn't imagine the upkeep. You would absolutely need a huge staff to take care of that place. You also would need a DEEP, DEEP financial budget to pay taxes, etc. The original builder was a railroad tycoon. He had more money than he knew what to do with. Only a person that had about 40 billion in US dollars would be able to sustain that and it would have to have income too.
I visited the Biltmore estate in 1978. The library was impressive and the gardens were beautiful. Had the best chicken salad stuffed into the best tasting tomato i ever had for lunch. It was an amazing tour. I would do it again.
The chicken salad was still wonderful in 2018 when I visited ...and the artwork, Sargent's, I recall in particular, were lovely.
@@roxannedyerartis lunch part of admission? Do they offer a CheeseSteak sandwich? The grounds and gardens are what amaze me. ❤
@@jasonlacroix6083 No, lunch not included... don't know about the cheese steak... the menu might be online? But it was in a restaurant in a former stable, I think, beautiful. 🥰 Yes, fabulous gardens. The experience was amazing. The Chihuly Glass sculptures were on exhibit in 2018 when I visited. 💕
Yeah there's a cheeseteak there if you want.
@@roxannedyerart thanks! I live in St. Petersburg Florida where Chihuly has his studio, his work is outstanding.
I live 5 minutes away from the Biltmore and walk the garden grounds frequently. It really is something else
Cool 😎
You are blessed
Is it free for you to walk the grounds or do you need to buy a seasonal pass?
Where is this located
Asheville NC@@jessicaengel3151
One of the most fascinating places you could ever visit. There’s so much history to be appreciated. Layers upon layers of detailed tours within the property and grounds. So much to see in and out of the house.
I live an hour from this gorgeous estate. It’s one of my favorite places to visit in NC.
Why? It's a symbol of ruin for everyone else. I would never go there and support that family.
I love it there years ahead of its time
I thought it was in Tennessee???
About an hour from Johnson City tn
It's in Asheville NC
My wife and I went here in the spring of 1989, the cost for both of us was $38. However, the third floor hadn't been opened up yet. We bought the book.
My wife and I went last year in early Fall and the tickets were $80 each.
@@ryanpalmer9896inflation
@@ryanpalmer9896There’s inflation and then there’s just price gouging!
We just went and it was $120. Inflation at its finest. It’s awesome to see, but not worth $120
@@69mwagnerit’s the Vanderbilt’s why do they need that kinda $$$ to see the place? Just asking I don’t understand. No disrespect 😊
What intrigued me the most was it was wired for AC and DC,they didn't know at the time which electricity type was going to be the prime supply
Yet there is no AC.
So you're saying it's bisexual, then? 🤔
Well, that's okay; so was Gloria Vanderbilt. 🤭
@@bobthebear1246ah, so that is a family trait?
@@bobthebear1246You pulled that outta nowhere, huh?
@@VA-gu1jq that pfp of his is a pedobear. makes sense he commented out of nowhere about bisexual or whatever. hes a degen pedo
OUT STANDING, BEAUTIFUL
Who else remembers this house from Richie Rich?
I love the old comedy Private Eyes with Tim Conway and Don knots filmed there as well
In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also. John 14:2-3
And Hannibal
@ayoolukoga9829 keep it up 😂😂😂
That wasn’t this house, similar style and look though
Vanderbilt family is a perfect example while living trust, (usable life insurance), and strict terms to keep access to that trust are paramount for a families generational success.
Yet some ultra rich give their extra to charity.
Indeed. It's a fascinating thing reading into how people lose generational wealth.
Didn’t the Vanderbilt family piss through all of their money by living like financial idiots? Pretty sure it was about thirty years after Cornelius Vanderbilt died the family held a reunion at Vanderbilt college and there was not a single millionaire left among them
Because grandson doesn't give a ...
There is an article that Forbes wrote about trusts and the Kennedy family and trusts were stated as the main reason for maintaining wealth. The Vanderbilts not only built the Biltmore but another mansion. I think it’s called Breakers if I’m not mistaken. I often wonder if these mansions were not built so large if there would be money left over. They would have had to leave it alone and let it compound over time though. Family money should be kept in a trust so one family member can’t get a hold of all the money and spend it on stupid stuff like mansions, supercars, watches, or gambling addiction.
It's BEYOND beautiful . I've toured it twice. Worth the drive and all the walking . Bought a plant the 2nd time there in their greenhouse and love seeing it every day in the yard as a reminder .
The tours are so informative
Rich people need to do this more. I read how George Vanderbilt employs so many people a whole village is built only to house them nearby. He also encourage forest reservation in his lands and repair the depleted Appalachian forest, saving it for the future generations. People like him, Andrew Carnegie, Peggy Guggenheim, and all the other rich people who are selfless in their actions and do things that not only benefit themselves but others have my highest regards.
All of those people only built things so as to have their names attached to them forever as a form of purchased immortality, billionaires today still build and donate things to the public but they don't demand that they be named after them.
@@krashd Clearly those donations did not reach the intended target because people are poor af
Went with my family during Christmas time and goodness gracious it is amazing! The way they decorated the estate was incredible! They also have a 100 foot tall Christmas tree IN the house! And the ceiling was painted in some rooms as if Michelangelo had been there! Definitely recommend, great tourist destination!
How are the roads for driving at that time of year? I'd love to see it at Christmas, but dislike driving int he snow.
Where I proposed in 1990 to my wife in front of the "Lady on the Hill'. Yes, i got down on one knee.
Way to go, especially if you're still married
Hope she was not mistaken that you were owner of the house.... 😂😂
Thanks, now I can sleep
The world needs more men like you for doing that ❤
No one asked if you was on your knee or not tho...
As beautiful as the mansion yes, the grounds are even more beautiful. I spend trips just exploring their vast woods, and I’m never disappointed.
The first and only true American Castle. Very beautiful. 👍🏼
I hate some of the changes they had to make to turn it into a safer place to open up the public. I remember going to see it and one of the most beautiful places to me was the outdoor pool. A giant beautiful angel was on each corner of the outdoor pool. Then I came to see it and the pool was filled in as if it never existed. It didn’t mention it or show a plaque of what it originally looked like. History erased!
😢
Did you learn why they filled the pool in?
That's terrible I hate how so much of our history has been erased with a second thought given.
@@cal4111Between upkeep and costs and the ever looming drowning/lawsuit, they probably couldn't wait to fill that pool in!
Between the on-site historians AND the younger generation of George’s descendants who were starting to work for “the family business” they decided to get rid of it because it was not original to the house. His daughter Cornelia added it some years after the house was completed (in the 20’s I believe ) so since it supposedly wasn’t part of George’s “original plan” for the Estate they filled it in. Throughout the early-mid 90’s through the late 90’s they had evening concerts there. I volunteered to work just to see the shows!! LOL Carly Simon, Carol King, James Taylor - just to name a few.
What kills me is that they did away with the pool because it wasn’t original but then they added on a giant, three story structure onto the back of the old stables (The Stable Cafe) to add an actual commercial kitchen for the restaurant. The lower level was storage, a pastry kitchen and management offices and kitchen on the main and a smaller one on the upper level where they turned the old hay loft into a private dining room.
The area in and around Asheville, NC is a mountainous beauty. That "house" (immaculate castle) is not to be missed!!
Get this on your bucket list!
Yes, Western NC is the place to be. Or the coast. The middle part of NC used to be nice rural areas with good people, but now it's mostly urban decay/crime/gangs/drugs and uppity New Joisey types who bring their own kind of urban decay. NC hasn't been nice for several decades.
$120 a person. I can find much better things to spend $120 on. It would have actually cost me $240. Lol. If i'm not interested in $120 i'm definitely not interested in $240. And, if I remember correctly, it was more than that when we checked a year and a half ago. Turned away at the gate and never looked back. Still Don't regret that decision. I know for certain if I would have paid I'd said " it was cool but not worth the $240."😅
@@SC68170 That is alot.
I love Colin North Carolina home, and Biltmore is an incredible working estate. They farm they do everything. That's how they keep it going. But the genius of it is the man who designed the entry and driveway into the place. You never get to see it for 2 and 1/2 mi and then there it is and all it's glory. That was genius.
*its glory
Gloria Vanderbilt is Anderson coopers mom..
Did he mention that it is 170,000 square feet?! For a house to be considered a mansion it’s usually just got to be 7,000 square feet
no way. My small apartment is about 800 ft.² so that would probably be like 15 luxury size rooms OK I guess that would be a mansion
The original home Vanderbilt had planned was 6000 sq ft. It was only after a 2 month tour to Europe that he and his architect upgraded the house to 170k square feet.
@@erinrife He probably saw some of the Rothschild castles and shat himself.
Traditional mansions are at least 8,000 sq ft
Please people, most of us are not US citizens and we just understand metric system. All of this seems really interesting I wish I could understand.
I toured it - fabulous look into an era in history. Gardens and landscaping are great, the greenhouses full of orchids are a must see!
It's beautiful! 😍It's good to see that the owners take care of this stunning estate.🤩
At 30$ a head and 1.7 million visitors No surprise there
@@labla8940$30 a head?? Yeah - 20 years ago or more maybe.
Without visitors it would be likely be abandoned. It would cost millions yearly to maintain this property.
They don't take care of it!!!
The estate was trusted to a conservation. The conservation cares for and pays for EVERYTHING!!!
Yet they continue to live there .. FOR FREE!
This is how the rich stay rich, living off every one else!
@@Caterina...3 You CLEARLY have no idea whatsoever what you’re talking about. The people who own and run Biltmore Estate are direct descendants of George Vanderbilt himself - the man who built it!! It’s not now nor has it ever been in any kind of conservatorship.
Furthermore, nobody lives in the house anymore. There hasn’t been anyone living in it since 1953.
And the family that runs the Estate now very well may be financially well off, they aren’t anywhere even remotely close to being as wealthy as their family once was nor anywhere close to as wealthy as you’re trying to make them out to be.
Can you imagine what it cost to maintain that property?
It's 4 acres of indoor living space. Just let that size sink in.
Another fun fact. He had monogramed roof shingles
SHINGLES.? Are they slate.? Thats an awful huge expense if their only 30yr shingles for a roof that size. Monogrammed too.? Wow.!
The servants lived in tiny sparce rooms on the 3rd floor. The tour shows you.
@@janethompson2305 I believe they were copper.
Your ate up U know it 🤣🤣 😘
UR fucked up U know it 😂😂😂😘😘💋💋
The Biltmore is located near Asheville, North Carolina and that entire area is absolutely beautiful. From the front lawn of the Biltmore you get a clear view of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the distance, not to mention that entire estate has become somewhat of a resort, with lodging and other opportunities available
Ultimate human indulgence. No end here
No different than the many mansions in Europe. If you have the money for it, which they did, then why judge how people spend their money?
Pretty spot on description.
@@Euro2005mcthe problem arises when you do crooked illegal stuff to get that money then build something like this to shove it in their faces. That’s the only reason to build a house that you couldn’t possibly need the majority of it. I’m a little biased against the robber barons. If you really look into it you’d probably be as well.
On a side note do you like taxes coming out of your check ? Of course not after all the founding fathers made it clear that taxes should not be lobbied against someone’s wages. It was unconstitutional to collect a federal income tax. You can thank all the robber barons but mostly JP Morgan for that. They decided that they wanted more money so they came up with true federal reserve a tax act in a secret meeting in 1912. It’s not a conspiracy theory. It actually happened and that’s why you now get less than what you actually earned at work.
@@jmpayne333 💯💯💯
It's their money to spend how they see fit.
I go there every Spring. The scenery in Asheville is breathtaking. I live in NC, 4 hrs from Biltmore. The landscape is beautiful and the greenhouses are impressive.❤❤❤
I don't think you can call a building a "home" or a "residence" if no one lives there. Instead, it is a "privately-owned" museum.
This manor is so beautiful. The most interesting rooms in it to me were in the basement. The kitchens and the laundry. They washed the clothes and used giant racks that spun at a slow rate of speed to dry the clothes. They had separate rooms for the preparation of dishes. Vegetables in one room, baked goods in another and meats in another. The swimming pool is also in the basement with private changing rooms( I think there were 22 rooms). There was also a gym/ play room that was a full basketball court. The efficiency of the design was impressive.
I must say I didn't care for the servant's quarters. I felt like I couldn't breathe in that area.
It also connects to an ancient underground cave tunnel system.
Go on
Natural cooling system besides the environment?
Also was found not built
@lulumoon6942 it's true! Do a deep dive - research on it when you have time. It is mind opening to the suppressed truth. The hidden truth is all around.
@CurioNox8 yup. Exactly 💯! Just like the starforts that the Statue of Liberty is built on.
You will know them by their fruits.
If I had Jeff Bezo kind of money, I’d buy this, instead of a $500 million dollar yacht. I’d love this house and never move. I’d hire staff that I would treat like my own family, and hopefully they’d love my family lol their own, and basically have generational worker. I’d hire the best French/Italian Pastry chef’s, and try to hire the best chefs around the world…Fantasy I know…
Jeff doesn't have the money to buy this house! They said in the tour that the 2 biggest companies could get together and still not have the money the house is worth.
@@MyArizmendi of course, because it’s priceless. It’s still fun to imagine living in this home.🙂
Imagine the real estate taxes on this thing?
Who are you kidding ? If we invited you to be the stable boy you know you'd jump on it in a minute ! And that would even be an upgrade for you. 😅
@@StringofPearls55 That's why they have tours. It is still owned by the Vanderbilt family which Anderson Cooper is part of. They still have private areas of the house.
I’ve been there, it can get humid. In many ways it reminded me of Hearst Castle in California.
How do they compare? I’ve seen the Hearst Castle video. But you have to be there.
@@davehaggerty3405 Hearst Castle was built about 25 years after Biltmore. The interiors are a lot alike, same period faucets, tapestries on the walls and lots of art work. Hearst Castle indoor pool is much better its deck has gold inlay and is actually used. Biltmore pool can’t hold water it leaks out.
@@billj9838 thanks. Hearst Castle is a “bucket list” item that I don’t think I’ll ever see.
First hand impressions are helpful.
I’ve been to Hearst Castle about three times. Hearst castle sits on a mountain overlooking the ocean. Stay in one of the beach towns along the coast below Hearst castle. There is Pismo, San Luis Obispo, Morro Bay, Cayucos or Cambria.
Biltmore eats the Hearst Castle
I visted once. I love old historic buildings! Vanderbilt was a train or railway tycoon. It's donated to the state to preserve otherwise no one could or would pay the expense to upkeep preservation. It's fasinating and beautiful inside!
Didn’t you hear the video say that the house still remains in the Vanderbilt family??
150 years old is historic vor americans😂😂😂😂
The state have little money to afford to keep this maintained
In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also. John 14:2-3
Not donated to the state Vanderbilt family still owns it
I toured this house 2 times when i was a kid and one time my granny was with me 🩵 its
Gorgeous. A castle of beautiful architecture and furniture that you can literally get lost in.This house has a horse stable and a bowling alley. They also have an entire corridor for the house servants who worked there to live in. I remember i liked their kitchen area better than the kitchen in the main house where the wealthy people lived. I wish someday i can get to live in North Carolina again.
I just want a 2 bedroom house. Jeebus
American Dream has been reduced into just dreaming of being debt free 💀
“You will own nothing and be happy”
Yep, financial security is enough. Being rich enough to afford that comes with a whole other set of problems.
Easy just don't get into debt............sacrifice, save and invest in yourself.
If you got to get in debt for in or get it on credit YOU DON'T NEED IT
BIDENOMICS IS WORKING!
Says Joe.
Bygone oppulence? Today's inequality can support equally lavish houses.
can't say that out loud, or another loud mout will accuse you for being a commie
I agree if anything the super rich are even wealthier now.
Came to the comments for this.
North Carolina is one of the most beautiful states I have ever visited
oh wow
That's right my state is beautiful. We have all kinds of variety of living. If you want to live on the beach ⛱️, we got that. If you want to live on a farm 🚜 or out in the country, we have that. If you want to live in the Mountains ⛰️, we have that. And if you want to live in the city, we have all that. But the people are dummer then a bag of rocks 🪨
From a NC native, Thank you.
@@theCajonwarriorstate full of dummies
@@theCajonwarriorAnd many are racist!! 🤮👏
"LUMINARIES" There's something you'll never hear a influencer or content creator called.
I was lead security at this home in 1993 i had my own room the dreams that i use to have were some like no other 🙊🙉🙈
Can you explain what you mean about those dreams
Yeah.....I dont have to imagine!!!
Bad dreams?? Can't leave us hanging like that bro
Tom? Man ole man. Didn’t think I’d ever find you again. I had my own room there also in 93.
user mx1 please explain to us what you meant about those dreams and we really will listen ... don't be shy or self-conscious please tell us the story
It's a great place. The craftsmanship by the masons and the carpenters is amazing !
Yes, its a historical gem in a beautiful setting.
How the workers who lived in dirt shacks didn’t revolt in the middle of building this is insane . If this is still the biggest house to this day , imagine what it must of felt like back then.
We have been there a few times especially during Christmas when all of the decorations are out. It’s insanely large but beautiful especially during Christmas!
The Biltmore estate home is indeed the most beautiful house on the planet. An architectural marvel.
you should travel the planet more
And none of the Vanderbilt’s were able to take any of this to the grave with them.
No but they enjoyed the spoils while they lived. You think the wealthy would stop accumulating wealth bc "they can't take it with them?" Its always the worst argument. They do so to enjoy it while they're here. And still, moot point, considering even generations after the patriarch of the family, Cornelius, passed away, the rest of the scores of Vanderbilts still had enormous wealth that they enjoyed for generations after.
How much does the tour cost, wonder? Do any of family member live there?
People talk like they ur able to take poverty to the gave too..
It is rare that generational wealth lasts beyond the third generation ( the grand kids)
There spoiled kids would take over and waste it on drugs and prostitution.
I wish America had more homes that had this style!
I've been there, its beautiful. The grounds are amazing with flowers and blooming trees. Oh as well as the delicious wine they harvest and make right there!
I've been there numerous times. Gorgeous Palace ❤. I live like 33 miles from where it's located.
Where??????
@@liberty8424 Asheville North Carolina
@@sonyaholmes1652 thx! It sounds amazing, I could have googled it, but people were raving & raving without saying where it was....
How many tens of thousands of dollars are property taxes? Sometimes a home isn't worth w taxes and upkeep - maintenance
That's clearly what happened here
You'd need a stream of income of millions just proper upkeep for this place
This is absolutely stunning! This is absolutely going on my bucket list. I didn't even know this existed in the US.. i love old, historical homes and buildings..❤
We also have castle in the US.
This kind of wealth, is absolutely something I cannot comprehend. To have an entire small towns worth of peoples, land and infrastructure within a single property is just amazing to me
When i get wealthy I'm gonna buy it and name it after my late grandma.
The grand linda estate... 💛
When you're flush with billions consider building an estate to reflect everything that is your 🥰Grand Grandma Linda🤗
Wealth does not exist in the material. Learn this quickly or youll be chasing after things that can never love you back the rest of your life
And my husband and I had the pleasure of seeing it personally when I lived in North Carolina. It is incredibly beautiful and offers visitors an opportunity to temporarily share residential opulence with the opulent owners.
Visited many time's. A remarkable sight to see.
If the US sorts themselves out I’d love to do a road trip across the country in the future.
@@lamsmiley1944why can't you do it now?
@@FonicsSuckgas prices i’m assuming
I've been there! Definitely a must go.
Try the tour that has the wine tasting at the end. You wont be disappointed! ❤😂🎉
Do you know what it costs to see it all! Thank you. ❤😊
@@lindaj3837 yes Im well aware of the price. I was lucky enough someone bought my ticket. It was my birthday and this was on my bucket list.
By far, the most beautiful man-made place ive ever been.❤❤❤❤❤
try to travel outside of the US dude, this is barely a copy of European castles
That’s why they ultimately went bankrupt they over built but they did build some of the most beautiful places you’ve ever been to
This place also has its own nursery just to replant the properties gardens every year and season
I believe the same guy who designed NYC Central Park designed the grounds.
@@dialatedxpupilzxselfish ppl in my opinion (ik folks will disagree, which is fine. To me it's just ridiculous to splash all THAT money and forget yk....the ppl after in ur family, and making sure everything else is good.)
Vander certainly Built More!
...And more...and more!!
This home sits where I'm from been there many many times absolutely beautiful!
It really is beautiful & spacious. I've lived there over a year now and they still don't know it.
😂😂😂 you're funny!
Shut up. You're not funny. Stop fishing for likes.
🤣 Well, they're about to go looking for you now that you've broadcast it!
@@rattlecat5968 Doh !!!
ITS BEEN REPORTED THAT THE ORIGINAL OWNERS WERE STOPPED AT THE PEARLY GATES AND DENIED ENTRY.
That's believable!
Thank you for this truth
Yep. What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses his soul. We should live for Jesus and be focused on eternity rather than our short life here on Earth
Their heaven was here on earth ...
Amazing 👏 😊!!! They don't make them the way they used to 😊!!!!
Be prepared to pay at the very least $70 per person to get in.
That's penny's 😂
Just checked. $93 per person. HOWEVER, you can save $50 on an annual pass during their summer sale this month, from $299 down to $249!!! Wow!!! What a bargain!!!!!
🙄😑
Almost everyone in the comment section is saying that it's worth the price... but is it really?
How much to spend the night ?
I have been to Biltmore House/Estate dozens upon dozens of times, starting at just a few days old in 1977 and was always fascinated with it. There is a jar (for lack of better words) that allegedly held Napoleon Bonaparte’s heart after his death and other mysterious and fascinating artifacts and aspects all over the house. George Vanderbilt was extremely paranoid and his bedroom is the highest point on the second floor, making it impossible for anyone to scale the side of the house and break in. The locks on his bedroom door are out of this world. The house itself, is beautiful, but now that I know what I know about the pedo world, having gone down that rabbit hole in regards to 13 bloodlines, I can’t go in the house without getting the heebie-jeebies. I can’t unsee or unread what’s been done. It really does make one wonder.
What is the story on that?
Pedo parties being held in general at places like this.
Its absolutely beautiful! I have been, want to go back during spring and see the garden in bloom. One day!
I visited the estate in the summer of 1982. I will never forget all the beauty in that home.
A lot of pooping going on! 43 toilets! I couldn’t afford to stock them with toilet paper
😂😂😂😂😂😂
There is also 35 bedrooms. People like the Firestone’s, Rockefeller’s, Astor’s and even a couple of presidents visited, staying at the house or up on Mount Pisgah at the hunting cabin (which was roughly 3500 sq ft!!)
@@AK-ix6xgWell you’d actually need far more than that. You know, they DO have to be refilled/replaced every now and then -it’s not like you can re-use the stuff!!!!! 😂😂😂
Think about it, there's a lot of people being served. Too much going on in a secluded area. Lots of wine, food and parties. Add adrenochrome to the mix... Bingo
We went there Christmas 5 yrs ago. Gorgeous
They do not like to accommodate people with disability issues- especially mobility. Staff was rude and hostile.
You should make sure you go into more detail about that so people understand
@@gardensofthegods
Your tale differs from many !
Your experience,not everyone's !
@@Joseph-g3p9d
Obviously you confused me with the person who started this thread because I did not talk about anything at all here. I asked the person who started the thread if they could go into more detail about their experience when they said that is a disabled person they were treated poorly ... I am not disabled ... but I do believe that person was treated poorly and just wanted her to explain more about what happened to her
@nraffen I believe you but it would be better for us to understand your experience if you could explain more about what happened , my dear ... but I certainly do believe you . What happened ? Hopefully you did complain to a supervisor ?
@@Joseph-g3p9d Also , you represent Biltmore Estate ? ... how would anyone know what people's experiences are in a place that gets a huge amount of visitors a year ?
One can't be there constantly during every moment the place is open to the public ; rather strange to discount or try to invalidate that person's experience ... no disabled person should be treated that way . Mercy .
If you can explain something differently that was your experience then please do let us know ... ?
Im honored to say i saw it. Im sure it survived Helene just fine
Their life was a fantasy.
And for what purpose was it built this GINORMOUS
WTF needs that much space
RIDICULOUS
bc they can. how many cloths you got? how many shoes you got
@@kellyarchani4209 I don't have any clothes or shoes
@@ryker4549lies
You do realize that WTF means WHAT the f^^k, right? So your question makes no sense in the context you’re asking. What the f^^k needs that much space??
Why bitch and moan about a house that was built over 100 years ago?? In fact, nobody forced you to sit there and watch this video (which you probably did several times) nor did they make you hang around to leave a comment. Don’t like it? Does it bother you THAT MUCH?? Keep on scrolling.
*BOOOOM!!!* Problem solved!!!
There are many reasons people do things to cover up their wealth. Grand estates harbor grand skeletons in great closets. Questions left unanswered
I guess it's an ok house, but without its own Golf Course or private Airfield for my planes and helicopters what's the point. 🙄
Fabulous house and property. Second to none in America.
That's wonderful so how many families could live on the property and raise their children who needs all that. Peace
Communism doesn't work. That's why covetousness is a sin.
This is completely impractical and frankly, a way to gloat your wealth. Not only would your utilities be absurdly high, the staff you'd need to cook and clean is also preposterous
I think much of such construction feats where driven at the very least partly by inspiration from the grand-ness of creation.
This in particular partly as a way of proving equal success relative to Europe (and others) castles, cathedrals, pyramids and ancient structures and the likes.
You do realize it was built between 1889 and 1895, right? You know, smack dab in the middle of the Victorian Era - which was overflowing with people flaunting and gloating their wealth. Guess history wasn’t one of your strong points.
The Victorians thrived on gloating. And that's fine. It's a part of our history, for better or worse.
My sister and I were treated by my daughter to a vacation there a few years back. It was incredible. So much to see and do. The rooms were quite nice, and we felt so pampered. I'd go back in a heartbeat!
It's crazy how some have so much, and some have nothing.
Imagine you live there and you get lost.
“MA DON’T WORRY I’LL ONLY BE ANOTHER HOUR BEFORE I FIND THE DINNING ROOM!!!”
Ashville has many other attractions; completely recommend visiting
Please name them as this is the only thing i know of and i grew up here for 21 years. I know of things like this Biltmore and theme parks like Dollywood in Tennessee and Carowinds in NC/SC border! Please tell me more history as i am interested and intrigued!
Walmart @@Jay-iz6lq
You forgot the e in Asheville 😀
@@Pokey-Mom what is that? I do remember Asheville used to host a week long Festival called Bele Chere idk if it still exists!
@@Jay-iz6lq Bele Chere stopped in 2021. I spent many a good time there. I don’t know why the city stopped having it.
Location for the 1979 Hal Ashby Film: "Being There" -Peter Sellers Last Film. GREAT FILM!!!!
It was one of his best!!!!!!
Also in the movie, "Hannibal" staring Anthony Hopkins
My husband's favorite movie❤
Superb
A hallmark movie was filmed there as well. Certainly not the caliber of previous films but still trivia
That’s a dream castle home from a fairy tale 💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕✨✨✨✨✨✨✨✨🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗💕💕💕💕
What's that law that claims the government needs the land for a new highway or better yet , for a RAILROAD??? But then, the more wealth you acquire the more freedoms you have.❤😂🎉
EMINENT DOMAIN but in different states it might be called something else BUT THIS GENTLEMAN WILLIAM VANDERBILT HE DIDN'T FORCE THE PEOPLE TO LEAVE HE PAID THEM MORE MONEY THAN THEIR THAN THEIR PROPERTY WAS VALUED TO GET THEM TO SELL
"Rosebud,"
From Movie 🍿 🎥 Citizen Cane.
Wrong castle! 😄 That’s the Hearst mansion in California.
Been there done that just long ago and I had a Vanderbilt friend who let me stay there in a guest house but smaller and she was a sophisticated beautiful person inside and out that's what she made me feel like motion wise but she was like an awesome listener and teacher but significant other mother unfortunately she passed away and feeling like I felt being around her was the most beautiful and intelligent conversation I had in awhile she kept me up to date and going
Babette?
That’s pretty funny considering that nobody affiliated with the house is a Vanderbilt nor has anyone since George himself and his wife even had the Vanderbilt name. He had one daughter, Cornelia, who married a man named Cecil (pronounced sess-ell) and there hasn’t been a Vanderbilt associated with the house since his wife died. George never built any guest houses on the property because his home had 255 rooms - 35 bedrooms and 43 bathrooms. He had plenty of places for guests to stay in his home AND had a large enough staff to tend to them.
Lionheart here I know what I know I've been where I've been I done what I've done, I have lived where I have lived, can't know body tell me different numb nuts and also I was also living in a castle right after the crusades in Portugal thee templar's head knight gave me a crown and set me up high on a really tall chair above all 40 of them and a couple years passed, they got tired of not fighting and left me in the castle told me to stay out, so I did, they never returned after many many years, I ran out of food,drink so I left,loaded up a trunk full of gold coins went to try and sell them to get food and drink nobody, I mean nobody would buy those gold coins for anything so I gave them to everyone in Portugal and end up receiving food and drink went back to the castle the templar's left me,3 days down the road a weird wagon showed up at the castle so I thought it was a wagon turned out to be called something the Portuguese police called a car, and they ran me out of my castle said that I couldn't live there anymore alone I never bothered anyone, still gotten robbed for everything I owned including the castle the templar's left me, so I found a ride to the US and been here since
They told me to stay put, don't leave the castle for anything but I left anyway in search of food and drink
@@megankeeper3996Oh yeah - and liking your own comments is THE absolute lamest thing anyone can do, FYI.
The estate used to be over ten times larger, and much of the land comprised what's now Asheville itself, but the Vanderbilts had to sell bits and pieces of it over the years because George Vanderbilt spent all his money building it.