The Commute Home Is Half the Experience
For most people, the trip from their car to the front door takes a few seconds. Here, it is part of the charm. The tram ride itself takes around three minutes to reach the main stop, which means every arrival comes with a built-in pause between the outside world and home life. Instead of rushing in with your keys still in hand and your brain still stuck on errands, traffic, or work, you get a few quiet minutes suspended above the hillside. It is the kind of detail that sounds impractical at first, but the more you picture it, the more it starts to feel like a luxury.
The ride is not just scenic. It also changes the mood of the house. Because you have to approach it differently, the place feels more tucked away, more personal, and a little more magical than a standard home would. Even groceries become part of the story. The tram can carry several people at once and makes hauling bags up easier than dragging them through hallways or up flights of stairs. What seems like the weirdest part of the home can also become one of the most practical.
Of course, it is not all effortless. Moving in furniture took patience, disassembly, and hauling items up in stages. That only adds to the fascination. A house like this demands commitment. It asks a little more from the person who lives there. But in return, it gives you a daily entrance that no apartment complex or suburban cul-de-sac could ever match. Coming home is not just functional here. It is an experience.