The road narrows before it ends. Past the last cluster of mailboxes and through a canopy of hardwoods, the land opens into something unexpectedly vast. Glasco Woodstock sits on sixteen acres of rolling meadow and mature forest in the foothills of the Catskill Mountains, a private residence where the scale of the property feels less like a vacation rental and more like inheriting a piece of the landscape. The house itself is a contemporary structure with clean lines and generous windows that frame a panoramic view of Overlook Mountain. From nearly every room, the ridgeline anchors your attention, shifting in color and mood with the hour.
Inside, the design is warm and uncluttered. An open-plan living area connects the kitchen, dining space, and a sitting room that draws your eye immediately to the mountain view beyond the glass. The kitchen is fully equipped for long, unhurried cooking sessions, the kind that stretch across an afternoon with local produce from nearby farm stands. Bedrooms are spacious and simply furnished, allowing natural light and the surrounding greenery to do the work. The property accommodates guests comfortably across multiple bedrooms, making it well suited for families or small groups seeking space without separation. There is a sense of proportion here, rooms that feel generous but never hollow, and a layout that encourages gathering without forcing it.
Outside is where the property reveals its true character. The sixteen acres include open meadows, wooded trails, and enough distance from neighboring properties to create genuine seclusion. A fire pit area offers an evening gathering point with unobstructed views of the sky, and the surrounding land invites long walks, quiet reading under the trees, or simply standing still in the tall grass watching the light change over the mountains. The region itself carries the cultural imprint of the Woodstock community, with its independent shops, galleries, and restaurants a short drive away. The village of Woodstock and the town of Saugerties both offer a mix of farm-to-table dining, live music, and the kind of creative energy that has defined this part of the Hudson Valley for generations.
What stays with you after Glasco Woodstock is not any single detail but the accumulated quiet. The mornings when the mountain is half-hidden in mist. The afternoons when the meadow hums with insects and the house fills with cross-breezes. The evenings when the fire crackles and the stars appear in a sky unmarked by light pollution. It is a property that asks very little of you and, in return, offers the rarest thing a place can provide: uninterrupted stillness on a scale that makes the rest of the world feel very far away.