At Cameron Airpark Estates, a community of pilots and air enthusiasts, every home has a hangar and aircraft have the right of way.
With a sprawling sculpture garden, a bone collection and a million-tile mosaic, this artist's home creates a surreal world all its own.
This Lake Tahoe compound's 30-car underground garage is entered via a massive yet disguised hydraulic lift. For $50 million, it's yours.
The thick walls of this post and beam home are insulated with stacked bales of hay, a material so effective that no heating system is needed.
According to its owners, this old Arizona gold mine could produce $60 m. in the glittery stuff, but you'll have to pony up $43 m. first.
Want to own Katniss' hometown? The old mill village that served as District 12 in The Hunger Games is on the market. Peeta not included.
With its underground caves and a natural spring that produces 10,000 gallons of water a day, Albion Castle is one of the city's unique historical landmarks.
This home in the Mojave gets its energy from the sun and is lifted off the desert floor to allow a seasonal stream to flow underneath.
Seeking the smallest possible footprint, Dee Williams built her tiny home to stand just shy of 14 feet tall and 9 feet wide.
Reclaimed wood, pieces of junkyard cars, and an old shipping container all went into building this super eco-friendly California home.
A developer in Kansas is building and pre-selling high-end survival condos, but banks aren't helping interested buyers finance these unique properties
The walls have no corners and the rocks have faces in the magic mushroom house, which was built under the influence of hallucinogens.
Jamesburg Earth Station, a decommissioned global satellite base built in the 1960s, can be yours for $3-million.
This Hollywood Hills home has gorgeous views, an emergency chopper pad and an advanced security system that allows you to smoke out intruders.
There's graffiti on the outside and no running water for now, but this renovated railcar can be yours for under $100,000.
It's not really haunted, but it is really expensive. The mansion featured in FX's 'American Horror Story' is on sale for $17 million.
This San Fran home looks out at the Presidio National Park and was once a Prohibition-era speakeasy.
For $750K you can own The Volcano House on top of this once-active volcanic peak in the California desert.
This California home, perched on a seaside cliff and only accessible by a secret, 70-foot tunnel is on the market for $10 million.
Ringmaster Johnathan Lee Iverson lives aboard the Ringling Bros. circus train with his wife and two small children.
In a city where outdoor space is nearly nonexistent, this Manhattan apartment boasts its own putting green.
The Hyatt family in Florida spends months and thousands of dollars preparing their home for the holidays.
The Astor Suite located in the Plaza Hotel is the most expensive rental in New York City and is filled with one-of-a-kind furniture, artifacts and iPad controlled technology.
10.4 feet across at its widest point, Boston's 'Spite House' is the undisputed narrowest in Beantown. Curious? It's available for rent.
One die-hard Tolkien fan built his own Hobbit house to store his collectibles in southern Penn.
The Los Angeles landmark home with 20 statues of Michelangelo's David is on the market for $2.4 million.
Tucked into the Hollywood Hills, this former military research site, with sound stage and film vaults that stored top secret atom bomb films, can be yours for $6.3 million.
Take a tour of Hicksville Trailer Palace in Joshua Tree, Calif. where each trailer is decorated in a unique theme.
Residents of one New York building pay a premium to park their cars in private garages directly outside their apartment doors.
The Clingstone House in Jamestown, RI, sits on an island in the middle of Narragansett Bay and cost former architect, Henry Wood, a mere $3,600 in 1961.
Peek inside this environmentally-friendly, dome-shaped home in upstate New York.
Home managers pay a fraction of the rent to live in million dollar listings waiting to be sold.
20 years ago, Bruce Francisco and his business partner bought an old Cold War missile base in the Adirondacks. After a few million dollars in renovations, the silo is now a luxury home.