$19,950,000
Girdwood, AK 99587
MLS# 26-7529
4 beds | 2 baths | 1234 sqft

1 / 54
Property Description
A once-in-a-lifetime offering. For more than five decades, the Toohey family has stewarded Crow Creek Historic Gold Mine, a National Register landmark in the upper Girdwood Valley and one of Alaska's most authentic and recognizable properties. Now, for the first time ever on the open market, this extraordinary holding is offered for sale.
Details
Maps
Documents
Location, Legal, and School Info
Region: 1 - Southcentral Alaska Region
Borough/Census Area: 1A - Anchorage Municipality
Grid # (Muni Anch): SE4218
Tax Map #-Mat-Su: N/A
Tax ID: 0760510100001
Taxes (Estimated): 2700
Tax Year: 2026
School-Elementary: Girdwood
School-Middle: Girdwood
School-High: BTV-Undiscl by LL
Legal: US Survey 11872 T11NR2ESEC27/34
Contract Info
Foreclosure/Bank Own: No
Price-List: 19950000
Date-Listing: 2026-06-22
Status: Active
Property Info
Realtor.com Type: Residential - Single Family
Construction Status: Existing Structure
Property Attached/Common Walls: No
Bathrooms Half: 1
Bathrooms Three Quarter: 0
Bathrooms Full: 1
Bathrooms Total: 2
Acres: 53
SF-Lot: 2308680
Lot Area Source: Survey
Zoning: GCR-3 Commercial Recreation (Crow Crk Historic Mn)
Garage Spaces: 0
Carport Spaces: 0
Beds: 4
SF-Res: 1234
Year Built: 1898
Remarks and Directions
Directions: Head S on Seward Hwy from Anchorage. Drive ~37 miles to Girdwood turnoff. Turn L onto Alyeska Highway. Go ~2 miles, turn L onto Crow Creek Road. Continue ~3 miles. Property on the R
Residential Type
B & B Potential: 1
Recreational/Cabin: 1
Single Family Res: 1
Exterior Finish
Wood: 1
Heating
Unknown: 1
Topography
Gently Rolling: 1
Level: 1
Sloping: 1
Steep: 1
Roof Type
Unknown - BTV: 1
Construction Type
Wood Frame: 1
Unknown: 1
Other: 1
Foundation Type
Unknown - BTV: 1
View Type
Mountains: 1
River: 1
Unobstructed: 1
Wtrfrnt-Access Near
Creek: 1
Garage Type
None: 1
Wtrfrnt-Frontage
Creek: 1
Carport Type
None: 1
Waterfront Details
Waterfront Name: Crow Creek
Floor Style
Cabin: 1
Multi-Level: 1
Two-Story Tradtnl: 1
Features-Additional
Barn/Shop: 1
Fenced Yard: 1
Fire Pit: 1
Generator: 1
Landscaping: 1
Outhouse: 1
Poultry Allowed: 1
RV Parking: 1
Storage: 1
View: 1
Waterfront: 1
Shed: 1
Water Source
Private: 1
Well: 1
Access Type
Government: 1
Maintained: 1
Private: 1
Sewer Type
Septic Tank: 1
Docs Avl for Review
Docs Posted on MLS: 1
Location Legal and School Info
Area: 101 - Girdwood/Turnagain Arm
Street #: 601
Street Name: Crow Creek
Arterial: Road
Closest USPS Town: Girdwood
State: AK
Zip Code: 99587
Property Features
Residential Type: B & B Potential; Recreational/Cabin; Single Family Res
Construction Type: Wood Frame; Unknown; Other
Exterior Finish: Wood
Roof Type: Unknown - BTV
Foundation Type: Unknown - BTV
Floor Style: Cabin; Multi-Level; Two-Story Tradtnl
Garage Type: None
Carport Type: None
Heating: Unknown
Sewer Type: Septic Tank
Water Source: Private; Well
Features-Additional: Fenced Yard; Poultry Allowed; Barn/Shop; Fire Pit; Generator; Landscaping; Outhouse; Shed; Storage; View; Waterfront; RV Parking
Access Type: Government; Maintained; Private
View Type: Mountains; River; Unobstructed
Topography: Gently Rolling; Level; Sloping; Steep
Wtrfrnt-Frontage: Creek
Wtrfrnt-Access Near: Creek
Docs Avl for Review: Docs Posted on MLS
Supplements
A once-in-a-lifetime offering. For more than five decades, the Toohey family has stewarded Crow Creek Historic Gold Mine, a National Register landmark in the upper Girdwood Valley and one of Alaska's most authentic and recognizable properties. Now, for the first time ever on the open market, this extraordinary holding is offered for sale.
Set in the upper Girdwood Valley, Crow Creek is the area's only large, privately held development property. The offering is 53 fee-simple acres at the base of the Chugach Mountains, along the lower reach of Crow Creek just above its confluence with Glacier Creek. It conveys with full surface and subsurface rights and no split estate, carries National Register of Historic Places status, and holds a property-specific GCR-3 zoning designation created for Crow Creek by the Municipality of Anchorage. Bordered on three sides by Chugach National Forest, its viewshed and wilderness character are permanently protected. More than half the acreage is buildable, a rare profile in the floodplain-constrained Girdwood corridor, with the balance providing buffer, viewshed protection, and direct creek frontage.
The zoning is the defining advantage. GCR-3, Commercial Recreation, was written specifically for this parcel. In plain terms, it authorizes overnight lodging, an owner residence, commercial retail, weddings and events, social and recreational activities, recreational and small commercial mining, and overnight camping, all concurrently on the same property. That removes the entitlement risk that usually defines a mixed-use project, because the foundational use authorization is already in place. Expansion and new construction proceed through the area master plan process administered by the Municipality.
Buildable ground is the scarce commodity in Girdwood, where steep terrain and floodplain limits leave little room to grow. A single parcel with this much developable acreage and a use authorization already granted is something the corridor cannot reproduce. Because growth runs through the area master plan process rather than a rezoning fight, a buyer can phase construction against demand, adding lodging, event, or residential capacity as the valley's year-round visitor base expands. The same flexibility supports a patient hold: carry the property at its current scale while the surrounding resort economy matures around it.
The original infrastructure remains intact and protected as authorized current uses under GCR-3. Improvements include restored historic structures among the oldest surviving buildings in the greater Anchorage area, along with period mining equipment, artifacts, and outbuildings. Original cabins, a bunkhouse, and a mess hall anchor the historic core; a gift shop and visitor reception building serve daily operations; owner residence accommodations are integrated; and manicured grounds and gardens frame the established wedding and event venue. Visitor parking and RV and tent camping complete the footprint. The historic structures qualify for federal Historic Preservation Tax Incentives on certified rehabilitation, a meaningful advantage for a buyer pursuing lodging, events, residential development, or a strategic hold.
Crow Creek arrives as a working foundation rather than raw land. For decades it has hosted heritage tours, gold panning, weddings, salmon bakes, camping, and educational programs, with the gift shop, visitor reception building, parking, and event grounds already established and the name recognized across Alaska. Recent ownership has prioritized preservation over growth, so present-day activity understates what a buyer inherits: built infrastructure, an established reputation, and a legally authorized use mix that very few Alaska properties can claim. Whether the next owner runs it as is, scales the hospitality and events side, or repositions it entirely, the groundwork is in place.
For generations, guests have come for hands-on gold panning, guided history tours, and miner-for-a-day experiences that made Crow Creek a fixture of the Alaska summer. The creek runs directly through the property, and recreational miners recover coarse gold and nuggets, providing both operational water access and a guest draw protected by right under the zoning.
The surrounding asset base supports almost any direction. The Historic Iditarod Trail sits adjacent, and the Lower Winner Creek Trail and the 23-mile Crow Pass Trail through Chugach State Park are immediately accessible. Four miles down the valley, Alyeska Resort offers world-class skiing, an aerial tram, summer mountain biking, paragliding, and year-round amenities, with Turnagain Arm beyond for fishing, beluga whale watching, and some of Alaska's most photographed scenery. The corridor operates 365 days a year.
The setting performs in every season. Alyeska averages more than 650 inches of snowfall a year, among the deepest in North America, feeding a winter economy of skiing, the aerial tram, and backcountry access. Summers turn temperate, with days in the 60s and 70s and the long subarctic light that draws visitors north, while spring and fall carry steady shoulder-season traffic through the corridor. For an owner, that rhythm means earning potential is not confined to a single season, and a use mix of lodging, events, and guided experiences can flex to match the calendar.
That matters now more than ever. The valley is in active transformation from a seasonal ski destination toward a year-round resort community, anchored by Alyeska Resort's planned Winner and Glacier Creek expansion. Every dollar Pomeroy invests in the valley increases the value of the only large, privately held, commercially zoned parcel above it. Crow Creek Mine is that parcel.
The gold history is woven into the story of Alaska itself, and that authenticity is both the heart of the business and a commercial asset. Prospectors located the first claims in 1896, mining began with pick and shovel, and operations reached industrial scale with hydraulics in the early 20th century. By the 1920s Crow Creek ranked as the largest historic placer producer in the Kenai Peninsula and Turnagain Arm region, a distinction documented by the U.S. Bureau of Mines. Of the property's documented 42,500 ounces of total production, roughly 41,000 came before 1940.
Large-scale mining ended in 1942 under the War Production Board's Order L-208, not through resource depletion, and federal price controls then held gold at $35 per ounce through 1971, making a restart of capital-intensive hydraulic mining uneconomical. Geologists familiar with the drainage and the U.S. Bureau of Mines description in Information Circular 9091 (1986) believe a substantial portion of the original deposit remains in the ground; IC 9091 rated the property's mineral potential as High. Gold here is coarse, with nuggets up to several ounces recovered. Small-scale extraction continues today as part of the guest experience and can be operated at current scale, expanded through Forest Service permitting, or held as an in-ground asset.
Separately from the deeded acreage, the historically most productive ground upstream lies within a group of unpatented federal placer mining claims on Chugach National Forest land. These claims are not part of the 53 fee-simple acres or the base offering, but may be available to a qualified buyer for additional consideration as a separate possessory interest subject to Forest Service and BLM requirements. Acquired together with the deeded land, they would consolidate the heart of the Crow Creek drainage, surface and mineral, under single ownership.
The property sits roughly 45 miles south of Anchorage and Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport via the Seward Highway. Year-round access is by paved Alyeska Highway, with the final approach on a maintained gravel section of Crow Creek Road. The result is a true Alaska wilderness setting with year-round road access, an international airport within an hour, and a working resort next door. Few offerings anywhere combine a resort-town location, a National Register landmark, an operating heritage business, rare development optionality, and a documented mineral history under one title. Crow Creek Historic Gold Mine has never come to market before, and a property like it will not again.
IDX
Listing Office: Hayden Outdoors, LLC
Last Updated: June - 23 - 2026
The listing content relating to real estate for sale on this web site comes in part from the IDX Program of Alaska Multiple Listing Service, Inc. (AK MLS). Real estate listings held by brokerage firms other than the site owner are marked with the AK MLS logo and information about them includes the name of the listing brokerage. All information is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified for accuracy. Site contains live data.
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