• 5 BDRM
  • 3 BTH
  • 3,290 SQ.FT
  • 120′ WF
1841 Resort Road Alanson MI 49717
Waterfront: Burt
$1,590,000
Status: Sold

Description

Built in 1910 and sitting on 120’ of sandy waterfront on Burt Lake, this classic northern Michigan cottage is custom built and cute as a button! Centrally located to Petoskey and Harbor Springs; you can enjoy all the best shopping, dining, golf courses, and small town charm of northern Michigan. The interior boasts a beautiful sunroom perfect for sipping your morning coffee as the waves roll in or enjoying dinner and a cocktail in the evening breeze. The spacious kitchen has plenty of counter space and cabinetry, and the formal dining room can seat your family and friends for Sunday dinner. Two living areas provide ample space for watching TV, reading a book, or playing board games. Upstairs are five generous sized bedrooms with beautiful woodwork adorning the ceilings, and two full baths with claw foot tubs for a relaxing soak after a day on the water. The sprawling yard is perfect for kids, pets, or a family game of flag football. The back patio is the perfect place to relax in the sun, and the two-car detached garage will house all your water toys. Spend your summers swimming off the dock, kayaking, and boating on Burt Lake! Home is offered mostly furnished with the dock.

Directions

US 31 N to Alanson, take a right onto M-68 W/Sturgeon St, left onto Rolter Road, left onto Resort Road, home is on the left.

Disclaimer

Copyright © 2025 Northern Michigan MLS (NMMLS) Listing provided by Northern Michigan MLS (NMMLS). The information in this listing was gathered from third-party sources including the seller. Home Waters LLC its subscribers disclaim any and all representations or warranties as to the accuracy of this information.

Property Listed By

Kidd & Leavy Real Estate Co. Llc. 325 E Lake St. Petoskey Michigan 49770

Property Sold By

Kidd & Leavy Real Estate Co. Llc. 325 E Lake St. Petoskey Michigan 49770

About Burt Lake

Burt Lake, named after the surveyor, William Austin Burt, is the anchor of the Inland Waterway and the Cheboygan River Watershed.

The lake is a beneficiary of the last glacial age where receeding ice flows helped carve a series of large depressions that are now home to several reknowned lakes and rivers. The most notable of these took its name from one of the men assigned the responsibility of conducting the original government survey including portions of the upper peninsula. William Burt and Henry Mullett performed their initial survey between 1840-1843. The entire region was covered by huge swaths of deciduous conifers including virgin forests of red and white pine. This timber became the lumber that fueled the construction of cities like Chicago and Detroit while creating more wealth and millionaires than all the gold discovered during California's more famous 49er rush.

Burt Lake currently receives the waters of Douglas Lake through the Maple River at Maple Bay, in the lake's north west quadrant near Emmett County. The Sturgeon and Little Sturgeon Rivers provide additional flow after combining at Indian River in the southwest portion of the lake. All told, the lake covers 17.120 acres and runs 10 miles north-to-south and five miles wide. It's 73 feet deep and covers 30 miles of shoreline making it the fifth largest inland lake in Michigan.