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Bellavista's Biodigesting Treehouses Are Endor on Earth
Posted by Jesus Diaz at 12:30 AM on March 18, 2008
Finca Bellavista is an Endor-like treehouse village in the making, with paths and platforms perched on 150-foot trees. Located six miles from Golfo Dulce, Costa Rica, this sustainable rainforest community doesn't have stupid Ewoks or shield generators, but cute monkeys, site-wide Wi-Fi with internet sat link and biodigestors running on solar power. We interviewed Erica Hogan, the co-founder, and got all the details about this amazing Star Wars-meets-Myst place, right next to the paradise of Piedras Blancas rainforest sanctuary, and some of the most stunning beaches on the planet.
Jesús Díaz: This place is absolutely stunning. The location, the panoramic views from the trees, the rivers and waterfalls... I would imagine that people are running to go and live in this paradise (I certainly would like to do just that). How many people live in Bellavista now?
Erica Hogan: Although things have just started to take shape now, since the beginning of 2008, Finca Bellavista is still in its infancy. At this point, nobody is living on site except for us and some of our employees. Many folks are planning on building their treehouses starting next dry season, which roughly goes from December through May.
JD: So how many structures are in place so far, then?
EH: Right now we are finishing up our personal treehouse, "Mis Ojos Miran la Catarata" (My Eyes Look at the Waterfall). This is a double-decker gem of a tree house, perched in a trio of 150-foot trees with a view of a 40-foot tall waterfall. Words and pictures can't even describe how cool this house is turning out... we're thrilled! We also have a "base area" for the community, where several structures are getting underway. We currently have two cabinas, a house/office that is getting finished, and a community centre is getting started next week. In the future, this is where people will likely come to hang out with neighbours for a meal, a game of chess, a movie, etc. We also have several platforms up in our Sky Trail network.
JD: The Sky Trail network? What is that?
EH: Transportation here is a little different... you can't drive a car in and out to your treehouse. So that involved some creativity and technology as well. The two main forms of transportation within Finca Bellavista will be through a Sky Trail network of ziplines and platforms, and a ground trail network. The ziplines provide an invigorating commute in and out of the jungle, for sure. Getting the cables and platforms up has been challenging, but once they are all in, it will make access in and out of forest much easier (and fun).

JD: It looks like it. The concept of living here is attracting at so many levels. On one side, it sounds to me a bit like the hotels with small bungalows in the Maldives islands. Like Soneva Fushi, but without the luxury of having an army of assistants and chefs. Obviously, those are hotels, but this is a true treeforest village, built from scratch... how big is this going to be?
EH: We have 72 parcels, of which we have sold 28 parcels. Additional parcels are in the process of closing right now. Some people will choose not to build on their lot, while others might have a few tree structures attached via suspension bridge, ziplines, or other means...
JD: I'm trying to imagine what kind of people would like to live here, either full-time or part-time. Looking at it, I'm tempted to leave everything and move there myself...
EH: That's okay (we won't tell your boss)...we hear it often! We've had an interesting mix of buyers... some are about to retire and are looking for an active retirement home, others are families looking at being here during summer/winter breaks, some are building vacation getaways in the trees with an intent to rent out their treehouse the other portion of the year...
Technology in the jungle
JD: How are you connected with the "outside world"? Is there any kind of computer communications? In other words, can I go and work there?
EH: We installed our Satellite for Internet and communications this January. Boy, did that change our world! Otherwise, it was a half an hour's drive in either direction to internet. Not very easy, fun, efficient or sustainable in operating a business. Our connection is the fastest we've been on in all of Costa Rica and, it's powered 100% by solar power.
JD: I guess you've got some kind of Wi-Fi network in place for the whole place...
EH: Well, the Wi-Fi zone reaches the entire base area. We have several land owners that are looking into equipment that will amplify the signal onto the mountain where the treehouses will be located, and our satellite technician just notified me today that they are getting a new system in this month that will make that process easier and more affordable! I personally will not put a connection in my treehouse, primarily because it will be my escape from work.
JD: You are sustainable community; do you use any technology to help you towards this goal? And with technology I don't only mean electronics, but any machines or mechanical gadgets.
EH: Technology is certainly our friend out here in the jungle! Our remote location also requires a fair amount of technology as well...
JD: What about energy?
EH: Right now we are operating our house/office from a photovoltaic solar system. We are in the process of getting a hydroelectric turbine built that will provide power for the entire community. To us, providing off-grid electricity to the Finca Bellavista community was very important. While we could have spent money to tie into it, Costa Rica's nationalised electricity system is notorious for its high amounts of carbon emissions and its rolling blackouts (brownouts happen almost daily). Plus, we have two powerful whitewater rivers right here for us to harness clean energy from... why use anything else?

Custom-built Canyon Crossflow Turbine that will be installed at Finca Bellavista.
JD: What about the houses themselves? I guess they have to follow some patterns, in terms of architecture (the houses remind me of the tree world in Myst).
EH: Yeah. Structures have to abide by our guidelines, which can also be found on our website. The gist is that they must tie into our electrical grid, use a biodigestor to process wastes, and utilise either rainwater catch or a spring for their water needs. All designs have to go through our Environmental Review board for approval, where we look at materials, feasibility, and systems of attachment.

As a side note, building a treehouse can be a pretty technical adventure. You have to get up in the tree via ropes, harnesses and pulleys, and then there's the whole business of finding a way to attach the house to the tree. We are using Garnier Limbs for our treehouse.
JD: How much would a house there cost?
EH: We sell the land (with the trees) on which people would build their treehouses. We are rolling into Phase 2 right now, with prices for 2-4 acre parcels ranging in price from US$49,000 to $65,000. Designing and constructing an arboreal or stilt-built dwelling would be adapted to the type and size of the property's trees, the slope of the land, and personal preferences, views, etc. Treehouses and stilt-built houses can be designed and built either by the owner or by one of our preferred builders.
JD: And those are...
EH: The treehouses can vary greatly in price, based on a person's needs and desires, but I think a very simple, safe structure can be built for as little as US$15,000 and go as high in price as your imagination and budget will allow. For US$50,000, it's likely you can have a contractor build and finish a very comfortable tree house.
JD: That's pretty cheap. I guess being so remote plays a part here. How do you get to this amazing place?
EH: Finca Bellavista is six miles from the Golfo Dulce (Sweet Gulf). The two rivers that make the property boundaries join forces and dump into Piedras Blancas National Park and the Golfo Dulce. A large portion of the area surround the Gulf is protected... therefore, it's hard to get down to the water from our side. We are about a 30-minute drive from putting in kayaks to the Gulf, where "rainforest fjords" meet the calm waters. There are beaches scattered about—all isolated. A handful of people are starting to pioneer this area for windsurfing... it's near perfect conditions for it. And tranquil, beautiful, and undeveloped.
The access issues are in the process of changing, as an international airport (that will accommodate even the largest A-380 Airbus) is being built 30 minutes north of here. All the infrastructure is getting upgraded, and it's anybody's guess how that will effect the area. They are certainly stepping up their road maintenance efforts and talking about paving.
JD: What about the surroundings? I heard you have some of the best surf beaches in the planet...
EH: The nearest surf beaches are Matapalo and Pavones (longest left in this hemisphere I've heard), and again, the access via road is tough (4WD, dirt), and 1.5 to two hours. For easier access to beaches, a drive to Dominical and all the beautiful beaches south of there are about an hour to an hour/half drive away.

Pavones beach
Most of these beaches have been "discovered" recently, but there are so many that are so beautiful and still quiet that it's worth the short drive to go check them out. Dominical is know for its surfing and has that surf-town "vibe," which is fun. My favourite beaches in the world are around there...but I'm not naming names just in case this gets published! Very private beaches with cool critters like howler monkeys and scarlet mackaws, caves and rainforest right to the edge). It sounds too good to be true, but trust me, it is!
OK, that's it. I'm there, with my Jedi suit and Hawaiian surf shorts. [Bellavista via Vancouver Sun]






































Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
J-Fu
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
It will be great until one day you wake up and everyone is gone. All you can find are these books that have screens with bad reception. Everyone keeps nagging you to find their color of pages while you try to solve all of these elaborate puzzles. I think I'll pass :)
J-Fu
nutbastard
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
@DCGaymer:
As well as the tree it's in, generally. It's no worse off than a house built in the woods, where many trees could fall on the house, and may be better, since it's a smaller target.
nutbastard
DCGaymer
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
It looks Great....but when I see a tree house I alway's think....How will it hold up in a storm?
[farm3.static.flickr.com]
DCGaymer
Out2gtcha
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
@nutbastard:
Personally IF I'm at Starfucks (usually not very often) I'm more of a X6 Cafe Americana (black coffee with 6 shots of espresso) kind of guy. It usually has none of the same kind of effect as the candy concoctions found at Starbucks.
More of a "if you haven't eaten any breakfast before sipping on this be prepared to go through the roof ala hammy-squirrel style" reaction. It's a nice kick-in-the-teeth kind of feeling. As well as the hilarious look on the Barista's face when I order a cafe Americana and follow it with "and six shots of espresso".
Out2gtcha
Bokusatsu_Tenshi
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
I'd spend vacation there... live? No freaking way.
My city is not even in the middle of the jungle, but the climate is very similar... so I must give a warning: it's unbearable. Specially on the summer. Without proper air conditioning you'll have to get used to living all day AND NIGHT all sweaty and sticky...
Most people have no idea of how bad it is.. so I suggest trying for a week.
Also, the most important question was left out (or I didn't read it): BUGS. I mean, obviously it has lots of them, but which ones, and how many can make a whole difference.
And I'm assuming they will install bug-nets and other stuff like that, but usually this isn't enough. Specially in tropical jungles.
Shure for some living in such an environment, with beautiful views and starry nights is awesome, but this comes with a price...
Bokusatsu_Tenshi
JesusDeSaad
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
This looks like a dream come true, but I'm afraid there's too many parameters non-jungle folk never take into account. From big things like tropical rainstorms and their subsequent destructive lightnings and high winds, to little things like malaria-carrying mosquitoes, rabies-infested rats, poisonous snakes, and frogs and monkeys that create a ruckus bigger than a pack of stray dogs, to the nerve-wrecking termites/ants/lice/myriads of other insects and critters that could kill you by even looking at you.
But to be fair, on the other hand, since I've already faced most of this, I'm already considering the idea.
I'm just wondering about the safety of elderly city couples who thought they would be able to stay in Tarzan shape forever, my 70-year grandmother has faced all this crap I've mentioned before but I bet she'd have a hard time moving around in hanging paths and wire lines.
One other thing I noticed is the absolute lack of mention of wind power. Solar power yes, hydroelectric yes, but wind no? Doesn't make much sense to me if you're looking to extract all the juice you can from your surroundings and not to consider wind power...
JesusDeSaad
TheCyberBob
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
@nutbastard: Actually I like StarBucks for their super sweet monstrosities but at home I like normal coffee or homemade cappucino, espresso or lattes... Essentially if it has caffeine in it I'll go for it. But ya. Starbucks is for the sugar... It's a weakness I know :(
Just a further point on this I checked out their site the fee's to live here are amazing. According to the site it's $250/yr... Yes. Per year. Not per month. I'm looking out my window at this snow crap we have here and going "What the hell am I still doing here?"
TheCyberBob
nutbastard
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
@MooseDesign:
Depends on how much you compensate for such growth... Trees (with few exceptions) don't get a lot wider very quickly (about 1/8"-3/8" /year - One tree ring, as it were) and if you tie cables around the trunk of a tree, you can restrict the growth there to about 10% of normal. Theres no reason a soundly constructed tree house couldn't last 50 years without a major rebuild.
nutbastard
MooseDesign
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
How long would a house like that actually last? Surely as the tree ages, grows or weakens over time the structural integrity of the houses may be compromised. Doesn't seem like a very long term investment...
MooseDesign
nutbastard
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
@GiltProto:
You know, you Fourbucks Coffee automatons really freak me out. Starbucks has created a whole generation of people who are convinced they like coffee. Well, they don't like coffee, they like coffee-flavored liquid candy. Last time I checked, that was called Kaluha and nobody pretended it was actually coffee.
Order a real macchiato - that's espresso poured through a dollop of milk foam and not some frozen caramel monstrosity as SB would have you believe - and tell me, after drinking that undoctored, that you liked it. Yeah I didn't think so.
nutbastard
Out2gtcha
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
This would be a stellar place to take a vacation.
Except for the humming coming from the damn imperial shield generator it's a complete paradise.
Out2gtcha
Sockpuppet
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Sounds like the plot of Mosquito Coast. Harrison Ford at his craziest, brilliant.
Sockpuppet
SneakerFiend
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Now only imagine how much they bought all that land for.
Im all for this because they're mostly trying to save the environment with the solar panels and hydropower electricity.
I'd go buy a couple of acres over there and make a nice mansion above ground where every room is connected by a bridge. That'd be so hot.
SneakerFiend
TheCyberBob
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
@GiltProto: Ok. True. That I'd miss a lot too. :(
TheCyberBob
TheCyberBob
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
I wonder what the monthly fee's are like. Seriously. The cost of getting a top end tree house with the best land according to the above article is like $40k less than what I paid for my 3 story 50yr old townhouse on a like an 1/5 acre of land (possibly less!).
TheCyberBob
Arelar
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
how do you get the groceries up there?
Arelar
Nicholas Carlson
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
"stupid Ewoks or shield generators" pssshhh
Nicholas Carlson
Kaiser-Machead
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
@GiltProto: Sounds like heaven to me. Bring crates full of Izzi water, and you got the only thing about Starbucks I like right there.
Kaiser-Machead
Kaiser-Machead
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Yes, J.J. Abrams is pleased.
Kaiser-Machead
GiltProto
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Without a Starbucks it just wouldn't seem like a pleasant place to live.
GiltProto
cscamp20
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Nice and in a way scary...looks like it's really secluded area. After watching the movie "Turistas" last week, i think i'll pass on this
cscamp20
dvicklund
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
So many hippies...
dvicklund
rg
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Hey, let's live in the trees and get completely back to nature...don't forget your laptop dude!
rg
strider_mt2k
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Del Boca Vista?
strider_mt2k
caleone
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
Aren't the wood floors a little redundant?
caleone
Curves
Posted 5:41 AM 18/3/08
It looks beautiful there, I hope it stays that way and it sounds as if they have good controls in place to assure that. Who did'nt want a tree house as a kid (I still do) and what a view!
Curves
Set to evil
Posted 9:39 AM 18/3/08
@JesusDeSaad: I with you! In My experience, the more beautiful a place is, the more likely somthing lives there that will kill you!
Set to evil
ntrgc89
Posted 9:39 AM 18/3/08
@JesusDeSaad:
They probably aren't doing windpower because of the whole eyesore thing. Personally, I don't think they look bad at all, but that's because I'm a tech-freak not a nature freak who's thinking "awww I can't see da pwetty birdie anymore!!!"
But who knows, maybe they're considering it and just haven't settled on right design/contractor/site/cut to the empire/etc.
ntrgc89
samurailynn
Posted 11:42 AM 18/3/08
It doesn't seem to me like wind power is that viable of an option in a rain forest. Sure, there might be wind, but you would have to either mow down some of those beautiful trees, or you would somehow have to have the wind turbines built above the forest canopy. Either way, you would have to disturb the plants and wildlife.
On the other hand, I remember a tour guide in Costa Rica telling me that the majority of their nation's power comes from geothermal sources. I don't know if it's possible for this community to hook up to any geothermal source, but if it is I'm sure that could be a big source of energy for them.
samurailynn
Set to evil
Posted 11:42 AM 18/3/08
+ Watch video
Set to evil
Set to evil
Posted 11:42 AM 18/3/08
here is their national Anthem:
Set to evil
jcraig
Posted 2:05 PM 18/3/08
@J-Fu:
Hell yes. Myst was the first thing I thought of. But people like us would be ok because we know what to do. I think it starts with a match and a tree elevator…
jcraig
tameanaka
Posted 1:33 AM 21/3/08
My only concern would be food
tameanaka
smeee
Posted 5:13 PM 23/3/08
Holy crap, i grew up in that area. Pavones is one of the best places to surf in the world. If you want to get away from life, go to any beach in that area. Life is slow in Costa Rica, it's even slower in the really rural areas. If you have culture shock, don't come, if you are a pansy about heat/humidity don't come. If you do come you have no excuse to not like it, beer is cheap, people friendly, woman beautiful. But our MJ is crap, just a warning.
peace
smeee
Blamminski
Posted 5:13 PM 23/3/08
My God. I'm glad I left that falling Empire.
Idiots.
The majority of Costa Ricas power comes from Hydro and wind. Lake Arenal and Parcelas wind mill farm.... and other smaller hydro-wind projects.
I know this since I can see both the volcano, lake and windmills as I type this.
Wind isn't as reliable where these guys built their awesome project..
Mr. Tropical. You need a blanket at night....even in the Osa.
Starsucks buys there coffee here for around $3 a kilo and you morons pay $4-5 a cup
Bokushitzu.
Costa Rica is NOT Malasia.....
My howlers are yelling.
Time to toss them some guavas.
I better get my flannel shirt on...kinda cool in this jungle in the morning.
No insect spray required.
Pura Vida.
Save your $1 bills.
You can stuff them in a trash bag to keep you warm at night... LOL
Blamminski
olivius
Posted 5:13 PM 23/3/08
it looks really nice, is a nice place for the people who want to relax themselves
but i will take that as a vacation place
because sometime live in the forest quite inconvenient
somehow i think if this place is too popular, maybe the habitat inside the forest will get some effect on it.
olivius
olivius
Posted 5:13 PM 23/3/08
it looks really nice
just like some movies which shows the people who live on trees
but i will take that as a vacation place
because sometime live in the forest quite inconvenient
somehow i think if this place too popular, maybe the forest will get some effect on it.
olivius