A private Ann Arbor retreat that lives like its own world
There are homes with amenities, and then there are estates that seem to redraw the boundaries of what home can be. The Retreat at Turtle Point belongs firmly in the second category. Set on 253 acres just minutes from Ann Arbor, this is less a single residence than a complete private resort: a place for gathering, sport, wellness, family, guests, horses, gardens, long weekends, and quiet mornings surrounded by land.

The scale is immediately striking — 12 beds · 14 baths, 53,364 sq ft · 253 acres — but the more compelling story is how much life the property is built to hold. A golf course, riding arena, full recreation building, ice rink, pavilion, greenhouse, multiple outbuildings, private in-law quarters, and a caretaker’s house create a rare estate environment where nearly every part of daily living, entertaining, and escape can happen without leaving the grounds.
For buyers who want privacy without giving up proximity, that combination is the magic. Seven minutes from Ann Arbor, the estate offers the feeling of a remote retreat with the convenience of a major university city, celebrated restaurants, cultural life, medical centers, and Big Ten energy close by. It is grand, yes, but its real strength is usefulness: a property designed to be lived in fully.
See the dedicated property showcase for photos, key details, and private inquiry options for 5200 Turtle Point Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48105.
View showcase pageFrank Lloyd Wright inspiration, translated into everyday warmth
At the heart of the estate is a nearly 10,000-square-foot main residence inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright. That reference matters because Wright’s best residential work was never simply about drama. It was about proportion, horizontality, natural materials, and a deep relationship between architecture and landscape. Here, that influence gives the home a grounded, timeless quality that suits the acreage around it.

The listing describes expansive living spaces and a seamless connection to the surrounding landscape, and that is exactly the kind of detail that separates an estate from a large house. A property of this size needs rooms that can handle grand entertaining without feeling anonymous. It needs sightlines that remind you why the land matters. It needs architecture that lets the outdoors do some of the work.
That is the emotional center of Turtle Point: the feeling that the house and land are in conversation. The main home is not merely placed on acreage; it is oriented toward it. The result is a residence that can host beautifully, retreat quietly, and still feel connected to the fields, trees, gardens, recreation spaces, and long views that define the estate.
It also sits within our Private Acreage collection, where buyers can compare similar luxury homes by lifestyle, setting, and presence.
A compound built for family, guests, and staff
One of the most powerful details in the listing is the presence of three custom residences: the main home, private in-law quarters, and a caretaker’s house. That immediately changes the way the property can be used. This is not a home where guests are simply accommodated; it is an estate where different generations, long-term visitors, support staff, or extended family can each have appropriate space.

The private in-law quarters give the property multigenerational flexibility, which is increasingly one of the defining luxuries at the top of the market. Parents, adult children, guests, or close friends can be nearby without sacrificing independence. The caretaker’s house adds another layer of practicality, especially on 253 acres with recreational and equestrian components to maintain.
That infrastructure is what makes the estate feel complete. Beautiful land is one thing. A beautiful main house is another. But a property that has been planned as a true compound — with separate residences, specialized buildings, and meaningful support spaces — has a different level of polish and long-term usefulness.
The recreation building is a destination of its own
The recreation building may be the showstopper. The listing calls it “a destination of its own,” and that does not feel like exaggeration. Inside are the kinds of amenities people usually drive to clubs, resorts, and wellness centers to find: a full sports court, indoor pool, fitness center, racquetball court, spa, sauna, hot tub, and game room.

That collection changes the rhythm of the home. Winter weekends no longer need to be planned around what is open or available nearby. A morning workout, an afternoon swim, a game of racquetball, a sauna, a soak, or an evening with friends can all happen on the property. For families, it creates a magnetic center of activity. For guests, it turns a visit into an experience.
The indoor pool and wellness spaces are especially important in Michigan, where the most desirable estates often need to deliver year-round enjoyment. Turtle Point is not dependent on perfect weather. It has indoor recreation, outdoor acreage, equestrian facilities, golf, ice, gardens, and gathering spaces — a four-season private resort with enough variety to stay interesting.
Golf, horses, ice, gardens, and room to breathe
A golf course and riding arena on the same private estate immediately tell you this is a property with extraordinary range. Golf brings one kind of rhythm: open greens, long views, quiet mornings, friendly competition, and the pleasure of stepping outside into a game that usually requires a club. The riding arena brings another: horses, training, movement, discipline, and a country-estate quality that feels increasingly rare so close to Ann Arbor.

Then there is the ice rink, a detail that gives the property a distinctly Michigan sense of joy. It suggests winter gatherings, family traditions, late-afternoon skating, and the kind of seasonal memory-making that turns an estate into a legacy property. Add the pavilion and greenhouse, and the lifestyle expands again: outdoor entertaining, gardening, events, meals, flowers, vegetables, and the slow pleasure of tending something beautiful.
The best estate properties are not impressive because they have one big feature. They are impressive because the features work together. Turtle Point offers sport, wellness, hospitality, privacy, land, architecture, and practical support in one setting. That is what makes it feel so unusually complete.
Designed for grand weekends and everyday ease
The listing says the estate was designed for both grand entertaining and everyday enjoyment, and that is the balance a property of this caliber has to strike. It is easy for a large estate to feel ceremonial — beautiful, but too formal for ordinary life. Turtle Point avoids that by offering many different ways to use the property, from polished entertaining to casual recreation.

Imagine a weekend that begins with guests arriving through the acreage, settling into private quarters, gathering in the main residence, moving to the pavilion for an outdoor meal, then ending the evening in the game room, spa, or pool. The next morning could mean golf, riding, skating, a workout, a walk through the grounds, or coffee with a view of the landscape. The property is built for that kind of layered hospitality.
Yet the everyday side may be just as compelling. A home like this is not only for events. It is for the quiet Tuesday when the pool is empty, the sauna is waiting, the grounds are still, and Ann Arbor is close enough for dinner. That is the luxury: not simply having more, but having more of the right things close at hand.
A rare estate because the pieces are already here
Many buyers dream of building a private retreat piece by piece: the acreage first, then the main house, then guest space, then sport facilities, then wellness, then gardens, then staff support. Turtle Point is compelling because so much of that vision already exists. The estate reads as a finished world, not a project waiting for imagination.

That matters at this level. Time is one of the true luxuries. A property that already offers three residences, a recreation complex, golf, equestrian amenities, an ice rink, pavilion, greenhouse, and outbuildings removes years of planning and execution. It gives a buyer the chance to step directly into the lifestyle rather than spend the next decade assembling it.
The result is a home that deserves a closer look not because it is expensive, but because it is unusually complete. Turtle Point has the privacy people want, the amenities people remember, the architecture to anchor it, and the proximity to Ann Arbor that makes the whole thing usable.
A legacy property minutes from the city
5200 Turtle Point Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 is the kind of estate that can be understood quickly and still reward a much deeper look. The headline features are obvious: 253 acres, three residences, a Wright-inspired main house, golf, riding, recreation, wellness, ice, gardens, and outbuildings. But the real story is how those pieces come together into a property with genuine identity.

For the right buyer, this is not just a place to live. It is a place to gather people, host beautifully, stay active, retreat privately, care for family, welcome guests, and build traditions across seasons. In a market where many luxury listings compete on finishes alone, Turtle Point offers something more durable: a complete private world close to one of Michigan’s most beloved cities.
The next step is to review the full Two Comma Homes showcase for photography, details, and private inquiry options. A property this layered deserves to be seen slowly, both in images and in person.
A property worth a closer look.
For buyers searching the upper end of the market, 5200 Turtle Point Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48105 offers a useful benchmark: not simply a home above the luxury threshold, but a residence with a clearer story. The next step is to review the full Two Comma Homes showcase page for this property, compare the photography and details, and decide whether it belongs on a private-tour list.