This $6 million antique-style village with more than a dozen buildings in central Maine is on the market — again.
The more-than-36-acre property in Pittston, named Tut Hill by its creator, contains 21 structures, including seven residential units and a restored 1825 church. The site sits near the eastern side of the Kennebec River, roughly a 10-minute drive south of downtown Augusta.
The other structures in the village are outbuildings, including multiple barns and multi-bay garages, said Anna Boucher, an agent with Summit Real Estate who owns the property with her husband. Altogether, the buildings in the village comprise 14,000 square feet.
It illustrates the lack of desire for a large and one-of-a-kind compound in the Augusta area, even as the state’s real estate market caught fire during and immediately following the pandemic. The hefty price tag also hints to how few buyers can afford a complex of this scale.
The property was initially listed for sale five years ago. Boucher and her husband were ready to get out of the landlord business and focus on family, she said. But they haven’t received many serious offers on the property due to its sheer scale and strange setup.

“It’s a white elephant type of property in the middle of central Maine,” Boucher said. “There aren’t a lot of buyers for a property like this. We’ve gotten a lot of interest, but nothing has really come together.”
The village began with the Greek revival-style main house, which Boucher’s husband grew up in, she said. His father, an antiques dealer named Ken Tuttle, bought the 3,800-square-foot home in the 1960s and restored it. Not long after that, Tuttle bought the 1825 church next door, which later became his antiques store, Boucher said. It now serves as cold storage.
Into the 1980s, Tuttle began buying up buildings he liked and trucking them onto the property, creating the antique village. Boucher and her husband live in the main house, which has one bedroom, three bathrooms, an attached two-bay garage, office space and a recreational room.
Tuttle died in 2002 and the estate was put into a family trust until 2008 when Boucher’s husband bought it out, she said. All but one of the six other residential properties in the village, including single-family homes and apartments, are rented out, Boucher said.
The village was listed for sale again in March 2022 for $5.5 million, taken off the market, then posted for the same price in October 2022, according to the listing history from Zillow. The village hit the market once more in April 2025 for $5.5 million and was taken off the market. Then it was listed again last October for $6 million.

The price increase, Boucher said, is due to the extensive renovations and upkeep the family has done on the property and the many buildings there and the roads connecting them over the last several years.
The main house has been fully renovated “down to the nuts and bolts,” including new windows and flooring, Boucher said. Other buildings have been repainted and had their roofs replaced and received chimney repairs over the last five to eight years.
While the owners have a decades-long connection to the village, Boucher said she hopes the next owner “has some imagination to make the property into what it needs to be.”
Alongside from potentially hosting weddings and other events, the village could be turned into an equestrian facility, as the site offers plenty of land for pastures and two barns, one of which has stalls and is already home to two horses, Boucher said.
“My husband has basically been using the majority of the property for his personal use, but there’s a lot of potential for somebody to make an income from all that additional space,” she said.


