
So Who Will Be the Next Owner?
We've been giving it a lot of thought. While the future of our family is our top priority, we also care deeply about who moves into the house.
We'd love for someone to live here who appreciates the home and garden as much as we do, and who values good relationships with the neighbors.
So, who would find this house a great place to live and why would they truly appreciate it?

A family that needs space...
…will find plenty of it - both inside the house (see the layout at the Log Home page) and out in the garden.
Upstairs, there's a truly spacious master bedroom, two large children's rooms (each easily fitting two kids), and a smaller room that can also be used as a home office.
On the ground floor, in addition to a generous living area with a large kitchen, there's another room that can serve as a guest bedroom, a home gym combined with a workspace, or a living space for a family member with limited mobility. The entire ground floor - including the entrance from outside and the garage, as well as the walk-in shower and toilet- is wheelchair accessible and has wide, easy-to-navigate spaces throughout.

A connection to wood...
... a log home has a very different atmosphere compared to brick houses or timber-frame buildings with plastered walls. You're living in a home made from trees shaped by nature itself.
Ours is built using a rare method not often seen in log homes—each log was left in its natural form. It wasn't flattened with a drawknife, so you won't find the typical smooth facets. Only the bark was washed off with a pressure washer, leaving behind the inner layer and the tree's original shape. Even the joints between the logs are crafted without the common "beaver tail" narrowing.
For the exterior chinking, we chose a bold white to create contrast. Personally, I would've liked the same look inside too—but my wife had other ideas :) So for now, the interior logs remain natural, without chinking.

A place for a family business…
... if you don't need the entire house just for living, it could be beautifully transformed into a café or bistro.
There's a marked blue hiking trail that passes right by the house, and on weekends, plenty of walkers and cyclists head to or from the Voděradské bučiny forest. Right now, the property is bordered by a fence thick with wild roses and blackthorn, but it could easily be opened up—partially or fully—to welcome passersby.
Louňovice already has a few pubs, but the nearest bistro or pastry shop is in the neighboring village of Mukařov, and the closest café is even farther. I've often imagined guests relaxing by the garden pond in summer or warming up by the tiled stove in winter—people looking for something different from the usual village pub. I genuinely believe a concept like this would find many fans among locals as well.
A great source of inspiration could be the iconic Villa Vojkov - highly recommended if you haven't been!

The location is the real treasure...
…and this one is truly special. If you're looking for a home where it's just 84 meters from your front gate into deep forest on one side, and 400 meters to the village square on the other—and if you'd love to look out across the road at a forest kindergarten next to a gamekeeper's lodge—then honestly, there's nowhere else quite like this.
I'll share more about the area soon—there's so much to see and explore nearby, whether you're in the mood for a peaceful walk or a scenic bike ride.
Come visit, take a look around the property, and then go for a stroll into the forest. You'll feel it.