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Man chisels out massive boulder to build sprawling 5,700 sq ft desert cave home
I can't believe how much natural light he has inside considering he lives in a rock. It's beautiful. 😍
Jessica Adler
02.28.23

What would you think if someone told you they were living in a cave?

Thoughts of Geico’s “caveman” might want to spring forth but, believe it or not, there are modern “cavemen”.

Grant Johnson is one of them.

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

Grant is someone who really does live in a cave, and he’s anything but stuck in the past.

He’s showing the world that living in a cave can be a pretty awesome experience for anyone willing to exist outside the norm.

In fact, his off-the-grid desert abode is over 5,000 square feet of hugely impressive craftsmanship, complete with a music studio and modern decor.

It started in his 20s.

Johnson moved to Utah in his 20s and bought a large piece of land.

Eventually, the area would become a national monument, but his parcel is an inholding, which keeps it private and allowed him to develop it as he saw fit.

While the massive cave house he spent 20 years building is off-grid, he designed a system to bring in running water and electricity.

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

It’s got all of the modern creature comforts and you can even rent a private room inside the compound on Airbnb.

One renter gushed about their experience:

“There is nowhere on Earth quite like the Boulder house. It is one of the wonders of the modern world – a fully functional, modernized house carved into a giant Boulder. The drove across the stream to get to it was harmless, but thrilling. The horses and cows surrounding the place were charming, and the views in every direction magnificent. Don’t miss your chance to stay here!”

At 17, Johnson moved to Moab for school. While getting his education, he also got into hiking and worked in the town’s mines when he wasn’t in school.

But it didn’t take long for him to appreciate nature-to-town life.

“I got involved in stabilizing Indian ruins, and I got more and more into the wilderness. And then I didn’t see any news. Didn’t read anything. I completely got away from it,” he told Tiny House Giant Journey.

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

He decided to try an off-the-grid lifestyle and find a spot in the canyons to irrigate and grow his own food.

The result was his sprawling cave home, one that he no doubt would not have pictured decades ago.

He started with dynamite.

No minor equipment could make this happen, he needed dynamite.

At first, he doubted his ability to pull together the materials and make the space livable. Nevertheless, he went for it.

But the process wasn’t a quick one.

“I started blasting in 95, blasted a little tunnel here first. From the first blast I was committed, and then it was like eight winters probably of blasting.”

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

When he was done blasting, the property sat largely unused for a few years while he decided what he wanted to make of it (and pull together the funds).

“I didn’t know what I wanted. You know, how I wanted to finish it.”

He brought in the light.

Johnson managed to blast holes for windows, reinforce them with steel, and then add glass to create windows with an epic view.

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

Of course, if one is going to live truly off the grid, power, food, and water are pretty big factors, but Johnson found a way to make it work in the desert.

He planted trees.

“I planted the orchard right away. And we had a water wheel, big 22 foot in diameter water wheel that ran the pump. We put in about 6,500 feet of pipeline from the pond that ran the water wheel because I always knew if we could afford to do it, we’d have gravity flow because we’re a mile below the pond…So I just plugged into it and put in a turbine.”

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

If you want meat as well as vegetables in your diet, you have to set up a mini-ecosystem rather than a simple garden.

Bringing home the bacon.

“The biggest crop is tomatoes and peppers and corn potatoes, lots of garlic, but then, you know, all sorts of little stuff, greens and carrots and beets. I love bacon, sausage, and that pork. So to raise pigs, we have to have a cow that’s milking because the pigs eat the milk. Otherwise, it’s not worth it. You know, it costs so much to feed them. So we’d feed them milk. You know, you have to get the milk cow bread and then you have to milk it. And then you have to have a way to feed the milk cows. And so that’s what all these fields are for is feeding the animals, the horses, and the cows,” he explained.

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

Twenty years later, the land is beautiful and sustainable and Johnson loves his home and his lifestyle.

He just thinks it’s too big.

That’s why he rents it out to guests – and it’s a great way to meet new people.

“People get inspired by it. I didn’t expect that so much. And it really is the case.”

YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey
Source:
YouTube - Tiny House Giant Journey

One thing is certain, this cave stands out from all the rest in the best way possible.

Take a full tour of Grant’s stunning cave home in the video below!

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