Guest
Not only the highest point in Ohio, but the former home of the 664th AC&W Squadron Airbase. There is a welcome center, it was closed when we went. A career center now uses most of the property.

The road climbs steadily before the landscape opens into something that stops you mid-sentence. High Point: Views On Top Of A Mountain is exactly what its name promises, a residence perched at elevation where the surrounding peaks and valleys stretch out beneath you in every direction. This is not a property that whispers about its setting. It announces it, floor-to-ceiling, from every room.
The home itself is built to frame the panorama. Large windows pull the mountain scenery inside, collapsing the boundary between architecture and landscape so that mornings begin with ridgelines and evenings end with sunsets that feel uncomfortably close. The living spaces are open and generous, designed for gathering around the view rather than away from it. A well-equipped kitchen anchors the interior, inviting long, unhurried meals prepared with the kind of ease that only comes when there is nowhere else you need to be. Multiple bedrooms offer comfortable retreats for families or groups, each oriented to take advantage of the elevation that gives this property its character.
Outdoors, the experience sharpens. Deck space extends the living area into open air, and this is where the property earns its name. Whether you are holding a coffee at dawn or a glass of wine as the light fades, the vantage point transforms ordinary moments into something more deliberate. The surrounding terrain invites exploration on foot, and the remoteness of the setting creates a quiet that feels earned rather than manufactured.
High Point operates as a self-contained residence, which means the rhythm of your stay is entirely your own. There are no lobby check-ins, no restaurant reservations to keep. Instead, the property rewards those who arrive with provisions, a sense of curiosity, and an appetite for stillness. Settle into the pace of mountain time, where the hours feel longer and the air feels sharper, and where the most compelling thing on the agenda is simply stepping outside and looking out.
The road climbs steadily before the landscape opens into something that stops you mid-sentence. High Point: Views On Top Of A Mountain is exactly what its name promises, a residence perched at elevation where the surrounding peaks and valleys stretch out beneath you in every direction. This is not a property that whispers about its setting. It announces it, floor-to-ceiling, from every room.
The home itself is built to frame the panorama. Large windows pull the mountain scenery inside, collapsing the boundary between architecture and landscape so that mornings begin with ridgelines and evenings end with sunsets that feel uncomfortably close. The living spaces are open and generous, designed for gathering around the view rather than away from it. A well-equipped kitchen anchors the interior, inviting long, unhurried meals prepared with the kind of ease that only comes when there is nowhere else you need to be. Multiple bedrooms offer comfortable retreats for families or groups, each oriented to take advantage of the elevation that gives this property its character.
Outdoors, the experience sharpens. Deck space extends the living area into open air, and this is where the property earns its name. Whether you are holding a coffee at dawn or a glass of wine as the light fades, the vantage point transforms ordinary moments into something more deliberate. The surrounding terrain invites exploration on foot, and the remoteness of the setting creates a quiet that feels earned rather than manufactured.

There's a particular quality to a place that sits on its own mountain — not grandeur exactly, but a quietness that comes from elevation and solitude. High Point earns its name honestly: six private acres of Joshua Tree desert, a 2,300-square-foot house that feels more like a considered home than a rental, and a design sensibility that balances modern restraint with genuine warmth — local artisan pieces, generous natural light, windows that treat the landscape as the main event. It's the kind of property where the national park is ten minutes away but you might not leave for hours, because the terrace and the fire pit and the sheer scale of the night sky feel like enough. What stays with you isn't luxury in any conventional sense — it's proximity to something ancient and unhurried, and a house thoughtful enough to get out of the way.
Guest
Not only the highest point in Ohio, but the former home of the 664th AC&W Squadron Airbase. There is a welcome center, it was closed when we went. A career center now uses most of the property.
Guest
Though it may be an underwhelming location for a high point, there is beauty everywhere if you look close enough. You can drive right up to the top or take a small walk up the hill to some old radar stations that were set up for defense purposes during world war 2. I’m not sure if you can tour these historic buildings as they’ve been closed everytime I’ve got. There is a historical marker and some benches to relax at and take in the view.
Guest
Amazing house with amazing view , definitely recommend
Guest
We had an amazing experience. The location was perfect and peaceful. House was clean and spacious.
Guest
Host was great and communicated very well. Would stay here again.
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