IN 2018, BRENT UNDERWOOD SUBMITTED A WINNING $1.4 MILLION BID on a network of dried-up silver mines in Southern California. The property includes 336 acres (136 ha) of high-desert terrain and the remains of a mining boomtown called Cerro Gordo, or ‘Fat Hill’.
After Covid-19 hit, Underwood moved from his home in Austin, Texas, to live at Cerro Gordo full-time. Now he’s the sole inhabitant of a genuine Wild West artefact.
The day we closed on Cerro Gordo, my partner and I met the caretaker to receive the most preposterous key chain I’ve ever seen. There must have been 40 keys hanging off it. It happened to be Friday the 13th and my partner’s birthday, so after signing the papers, we retreated to Cerro Gordo to celebrate.
The plan back then was basically the same as it is now: We want to turn the old mining town into an offbeat hospitality destination and artist retreat. Things just haven’t run as smoothly as we’d hoped.
Originally we talked about soft-launching a few cabins on Airbnb by Halloween 2019, but logistical challenges,