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There's A Real-Life Version Of The Simpsons House And It's Actually Uncanny

There's A Real-Life Version Of The Simpsons House And It's Actually Uncanny

The home, built by Kaufman and Broad builders, looks identical to the cartoon property in The Simpsons.

Joanna Freedman

Joanna Freedman

A real-life version of The Simpsons' iconic home has been replicated - and it's honestly uncanny.

Yep, builders Kaufman and Broad have recreated the cartoon abode - belonging to Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa and Maggie - in super-precise detail, on the streets of Nevada.

The property cost $120,000 (£87,892) to complete, and looks the spitting image of 742 Evergreen Terrace in Springfield - where we've seen the Simpsons have lived happily for over three decades in the much loved series.

Trawling through every nook and cranny of the home on TV, the orange house has four bedrooms and two bathrooms - much like on screen - as well as the Simpson family's famous bay windows and driveway (which has seen many a car crash from drunken Homer over the years).

The garden also features Bart's treehouse, and there's a barbecue and a swing set out there, too.

The Simpsons kitchen replica (
Fox/ Kaufman and Broad)

Just a look at pictures from the property and you can see just how spot on the decoration is, as well.

From the orange sofa and lopsided boat painting on the wall to the yellow and blue tiled kitchen floor and the purple kitchen cupboards and identical light fittings, they really have thought of everything.

The home has copied every little detail from the cartoon (
Fox/Kaufman and Broad)

Designers said they honed in on two rooms specifically, for the refurb - Bart's room and the living room - although they still think the whole property replicates about 90 percent of what you see on the show.

You'll have to get your microphone out for the finer details, like the peanut butter and jelly sandwich under Bart's bed and the miniature Duff beer cans dotted about, the saggy living room couch and those corn kitchen curtains.

Every detail of the home has been considered (
Fox/ Kaufman and Broad)

Located at 712 Red Bark Lane in Henderson, Nevada, the home was originally part of a competition, run by Pepsi and Fox, and was available to win back in 1997.

The winner of the competition was eligible to either take the home or accept a $75,000 (£55,673) cash prize.

However, things backfired when the winner, Barbara Howard, went for the cash instead, explaining she lived almost 2,000 miles away on a farm in Richmond, Kentucky, and needed the money to support her family, instead.

Bart's bedroom was replicated in fine detail (
Fox)

She told LA Times at the time: "Honey, I'd give my eyeteeth to pick up and move there, but my family being in the shape it's in, I can't."

Subsequently, thousands of people lined up to see the property, with queues as long as two hours at a time when it first opened to the public.

Then, eventually the house was sold to Danielle - a secretary at Kaufman and Broad, who repainted much of the property and repaired the ware and tear from all the visitors it had welcomed.

Maggie's bedroom (
Fox)

"They had put in flooring, but the paint was original, so no two touching walls were the same colour," she told Mental Floss. "The master bedroom had a lavender ceiling, pink moulding, and four different-coloured walls. It was like being in a Crayola box."

While Danielle confirmed that she sometimes get visitors to her home, and always keeps the doors locked, she acknowledged that it was just part and parcel of living in the iconic property.

Homer and Marge's bedroom (
Fox)

Believe it or not, she added that she regularly gets letters addressed to the Simpson family - and, what's more, she even lives next to the son of a pastor (let's hope he's less annoying than Ned Flanders!).

Featured Image Credit: Fox

Topics: Life News, the simpsons, Real, Property, TV Entertainment