Themed mansions for obsessive fans

To some people, home is just four walls—a place to retreat for eating, sleeping, and other mundane activities.  For a special few, though, a house is a blank canvas on which to paint their personality, a stage for their creativity.

When homeowners display their obsessions on a grand scale, those homes become the stuff of dreams — and of slideshows. See even more pictures at CNBC.com:



The following collection of unusual homes features tributes to television shows, superheroes and sports. Read on to witness the lengths that enthusiasts will go to bring a theme home.


Batman
Location
: Hinsdale, Ill.
Price: $2.55 million
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 4 full, 1 half
Square footage: 3,754

The ivy-covered Tudor 1932 exterior of this, uh, stately manor gives no hint that behind the house, the pool has an aquatic bat signal. Zillow reported that the sellers’ son was a Batman fan as a young lad, so they surprised the lucky boy when he was 3 or 4 by painting the bat symbol at the bottom of the pool.

“A guy came out and freehand drew it, and they just kept it over the years,” the listing agent Beau Carstensen told Zillow. “One of the son’s friends posted it on YouTube later, and that’s when it went viral.”


Elvis
Location
: Los Angeles
Price: $7.5 million
Bedrooms: 4
Square footage: 8,000

Melody Land in the Northridge neighborhood of L.A. is not an exact replica of Elvis Presley’s Memphis home Graceland, but it’s close enough for retired Elvis impersonator Danny Uwnawich, otherwise known as Danny U., who built it in 1991 at a cost of $3 million.

The $7.5 million sale price also includes one year of maintenance. The sale website says that over $11 million has been invested in the house, but that likely includes extensive repairs after the house was badly damaged in the 1994 earthquake that brought down chandeliers, broke walls and shattered marble and glass.

The house comes with “over $1.2 million of artifacts,” including the Rolls Royce seen in some of the photos, the $200,000 custom sofa, $100,000 chandeliers, and a $10,000 toilet. As a final selling point, the master bath has a Roman guard statue ... no word on whether Danny U.'s two televisions in the bath are included.


Munster Mansion
Location
: Waxahachie, Texas
Square footage: 5,825

The Munster Mansion is the project of Sandra and Charles McKee, superfans of the old sitcom, “The Munsters,” who since 2000 have built and transformed their home to be as close to the one in the classic TV show as possible.

To make the mansion, the couple watched recordings of all 70 episodes of the 1960s series, pausing to get down the exact layout and furniture. The FAQ on their website boasts, “We are always working on ways to make the house look older and dilapidated.” The McKees open to the public their private tribute to the Munsters for charity once a year. This year’s event takes place Oct. 19 and 20.


Star Wars & More
Location: Carmel, Ind.
Price: $5.5 million
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 6 full 1 half
Square footage: 16,326

This party palace, built in 1995 as a place to entertain up to 500 guests, boasts a ballroom, men’s lounge with weaponry hung above the numerous urinals, a ladies’ room for multiple guests, and a cloak room with rotating rack.

The home celebrates the “Star Wars” movies with a themed bar silently policed by realistic life-size figures of Darth Vader and Stormtroopers. Another bar fitted out with an antique poker table is an homage to old-school Chicago mobsters. (Darth Vader and antiques sold separately.)

The owners are selling because,  says Jimmy Dulin of Re/MAZ Ability Plus, “they don’t entertain like they used to.” But really, does anyone?


Hockey and Golf
Location
: Long Lake, Minn.
Price: $4.95 million
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 7
Square footage: 9,078

The putting green and a swimming pool on this 2-acre estate on Lake Minnetonka are nothing new as far as luxury entertainment goes. But the indoor hockey arena indicates a particular passion. The home also has an indoor golf simulator in the pub. One thing’s for sure: no one who buys this home is going outside to the Minnesota winter to practice their sport of choice, as long as those sports are hockey and golf.

Go to CNBC.com to see even more photos of obsession homes.