Sacramento area home asking $3.9M has it all — even infinity bathtub that never gets cold

Up a gated driveway, past a lily pond with a fountain, beyond a beautifully landscaped five-acre yard, through the front door, across a spacious foyer with wood-beam ceilings and finally into the primary ensuite bedroom — this where you’ll find perhaps the best amenity in a Sacramento area home that just hit the market for $3.9 million.

The main residence spans 5,455 square feet with four bedrooms, but the primary bathroom — one of seven — ranks right up there with the rest of the house’s fine details and comforts. The Loomis estate features a swimming pool surrounded by stone, an extra-large standalone workshop with room for eight cars and an RV, and a luxury guest house built for multi-generational living.

Loomis, California, is about 25 miles northeast of Sacramento.

Behold the home’s spa-like primary bathroom. The bathroom comes with an attached exercise room that has access through French doors to an outdoor hot tub on a private deck.

Inside the bathroom, a waterfall faucet cascades from the ceiling into a roomy, infinity-edge bathtub.

The spa-like bath puts an end to an age-old problem: Bath water eventually gets cold, so you need to refill the tub or get out. Instead, this tub’s water spills over an infinity edge, reheats and recycles.

“So what makes this really cool is that your tub will never get cold,” listing agent Cynthia Smith of Guide Real Estate said.

Also, the bathtub faces a lush garden setting.

“It’s brilliant to do a pop out and build a stone wall and have some greenery, live foliage and a beautiful fountain so when you’re in your spa bath, you have something beautiful and serene and calming and relaxing to look at,” Smith said.

The property at 4645 Hidden Oaks Lane is the vision of Kevin Yttrup, president and founder of Premier Homes, who knows a thing or two about building custom estates. He first built and then lived in the charming and fully loaded guesthouse on the property while planning the rest of his estate’s elegant finishes, quality details, comfortable amenities and picturesque landscaping. The house was built in 2004.

The two-bedroom, two-bathroom custom guest house spreads over 1,450 square feet in a single-level layout with a loft. The vaulted ceilings give the unit an open feeling. There’s a full kitchen and laundry facilities there, too, for extended stays or separate living space for guests.

The style of the main residence might be called Lake Tahoe luxury cabin mixed with Craftsman elements. There are dormer windows, deep eaves and heavy use of natural materials.

Each bedroom offers an ensuite retreat. The living room features a vaulted ceiling and stone fireplace. There’s also a hidden, 10-foot theater screen that drops down. Thick wooden rafters and rich, wood floors give an inviting, warm feeling to the space.

“It’s very livable,” Smith said. “It has all the spaces and rooms that you would want. It even has a hidden theater screen inside the living room so (it’s) beautifully curated and thoughtful throughout.”

On the five acres are fenced pastures, a stream, vegetable garden with raised beds and fruit trees. There is also a four-car garage attached to the main residence.

The home is equipped with cutting-edge smart home technology, “seamlessly blending modern convenience with timeless charm,” according to the property listing.

The property offers the potential for living off the grid, Smith said, with solar power, a 1,000 gallon-propane tank, generator, two wells and three septic tanks.

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