The largest treehouse in the world is located in Crossville, Tennessee (USA).
Horace Burgess, the owner, says that God gave him the commission to construct the home. “The Minister’s Tree House” is another name for it.
The home’s ten levels, which are supported by a base of six oaks, were built using about 250,000 nails since 1993.

The aggregate of all levels, or “living space,” is more than 3000 square meters.
Although being built completely of wood, it was reported to have cost about $20,000 and took 14 years to finish.
Who would create anything like that, exactly? You speculate that she might be insane.
Horace Burgess claims that in 1993, God gave him the order to build the tree house and promised him that he would never run out of wood.

It looks that God has kept his word thus far.
The building has a large center space that is used for both basketball games and prayer, as well as a penthouse on the tenth floor.
A half-ton church bell is also included in it.
The numerous wood boards that make up the structure now bear the traces of visitors.
Due to violations of the local fire code, the residence, which had been open for quite some time, was forced to close its doors in 2012.
A large fire could start, which would be terrible for a structure constructed completely of wood, according to the local fire department.

In the end, it did occur…
In less than 30 minutes, the 97-foot-tall wooden building that was the largest treehouse in the world, located in Crossville, Tennessee, burned to the ground.
When architect Harold Burgess stated in an interview that “If you build a tree home, you’ll never run out of material,” construction got under way in the early 1990s.
He did as instructed.

Using locally donated raw lumber, the Minister’s Treehouse was built over the period of two decades.
The mansion had five stories and eighty rooms, including bedrooms, classrooms, and a kitchen, all held together by an 80-foot-tall white oak tree.
The levels were connected by a wide, wraparound porch and a winding staircase. The interior decor, which included a hand-carved Bible, a massive crucifix, and wooden pews, skillfully mixed the eccentric and the holy.
Below the structure, the word “JESUS” was spelled out in meticulously groomed grass.
The fact that it was utilized for church services attracted people looking for a different kind of experience to the treehouse.

Tourism at the treehouse was halted in 2012 by state fire marshals due to numerous breaches including a lack of a load distribution system, uneven flooring and fall dangers, exceeding regulations, and the absence of a licensed design professional.
Burgess posted a sign that read, “Closed by the state fire marshal,” after the state fire marshal ordered the building to be shut down. Send them your complaints.

Captain Derek Carter of the Cumberland County Fire Department was there when local police were phoned to report the fire.
“When we arrived, it was just a pile of wreckage. We had to park 500 yards away because the fire was so severe, according to Carter. As they arrived on the site, it took firefighters roughly 15 minutes to put out the fire.
Pigeon Forge native Macy Leatherwood spent Christmas 2018 with her family at Cumberland Mountain State Park.
The scale and strangeness of The Minister’s Treehouse, in Leatherwood’s words, made it “the highlight of the vacation.”
She still had a great view, even though she could only see the house through the fence.
She was inconsolable when she learned that the house had burned down.
“I’ll never forget the treehouse, and it will undoubtedly be a treasured memory of a family vacation.
Before it was made off-limits to the public, Captain Carter went to the treehouse while not on duty and called it “a deathtrap.”
It was incredibly cool, but it was also very risky, he concluded.
Please TELL your family and friends about the once-largest treehouse!