阿斯彭附近的山间住宅,最初为僧侣建造,现以1.2亿美元售予Palantir公司首席执行官。
Mountain home near Aspen, built for monks, sold to Palantir CEO for $120M

原始链接: https://coloradosun.com/2025/12/19/monastery-sells-palantir-ceo/

经过70年,位于科罗拉多州老斯诺马斯镇的圣本笃修道院——一个价值1.2亿美元、占地3700英亩的房产——已售予数据公司Palantir的首席执行官、亿万富翁亚历克斯·卡普。这座修道院建于20世纪50年代,供寻求祈祷和宁静生活的特拉普修僧侣居住,并于2022年开始关闭。尽管当地居民(“修道院之友”)和县政府的保护提案努力阻止,但出售仍得以进行。 圣本笃修道院对查克·麦肯纳产生了深刻影响,他曾在那里度过了四年的时光。他认为在圣本笃修道院的时光启发了他每天对学生和老师说“我爱你”的习惯,因为许多人从未听过这些话。 麦肯纳现在是一名治疗师,回忆起僧侣们鼓励他将修道院的教训——特别是内在反思的价值——带入世界。他 fondly remembers 与女儿们分享修道院的宁静氛围和精神讨论,从而促进了关于生活和死亡的有意义的对话。此次出售标志着这处僻静房产及其曾经的沉思生活的终结。

科罗拉多州阿斯彭附近的一处山间住宅,最初是为僧侣建造的,最近被帕兰提尔公司首席执行官亚历克斯·卡普以1.2亿美元的价格购买。这引发了黑客新闻网站上关于僧侣生活及其出人意料的吸引力的讨论。 一位名为“sallveburrpi”的评论者分享了自己学生时代在德国修道院度过“反思日”(Besinnungstage)的经历。尽管最初对天主教环境有所抵触,但他发现僧侣们简单、专注的生活方式以及强烈的社群意识令人深感启发。 该评论者反思道,即使是青少年时期对这种生活方式的短暂接触也留下了持久的积极印象,突显了修道院墙内观察到的满足感和兄弟情谊。这场讨论微妙地将僧侣生活的简朴与帕兰提尔公司首席执行官的高科技世界形成了对比。
相关文章

原文

At the end of every school day for nine years, Chuck McKenna, the principal at Longfellow Elementary in Salida, would tell his teachers and students that he loved them. 

“From my very first day to my last, I would say ‘I love you all.’ Different kids would come ask me why I said that. Some of them had never heard that before,” McKenna says. “That came from that place. It had very little to do with me. I just allowed that to happen. That came from the monastery.”

McKenna spent four years 40 years ago at the St. Benedict’s Monastery in Old Snowmass. The 3,700-acre property recently sold for $120 million. The Wall Street Journal this week identified the buyer as billionaire Alex Karp, the co-founder and CEO of Palantir, a 22-year-old Denver-based data analysis firm that recently landed a $10 billion software contract with the U.S. Army. The sale marks one of the largest residential sales in Colorado history. 

The monastery was built in the 1950s — including a 24,000-square-foot main building — by Trappist monks seeking a life of silence and prayer. Located in the Capitol Creek Valley, the property includes a cemetery as well as three creeks, irrigated meadows for cattle and senior water rights in the Roaring Fork Valley. The Mirr Ranch Group listed the property for $150 million last year, following a decision by the abbey to begin closing down in 2022.

The St. Benedict’s Monastery in Old Snowmass includes a 24,000 square-foot monastery on 3,700 acres of mesas and meadows adjacent to Forest Service land and conserved private parcels. (Courtesy, Mirr Ranch Group)

For seven decades, the St. Benedict’s Monastery has been one of the largest privately-owned properties in Pitkin County, a span that has seen spectacular growth in the Roaring Fork Valley. The property is bordered by Forest Service land and private parcels that have been protected with conservation easements held by the Aspen Valley Land Trust and Pitkin County Open Space. Pitkin County in 2022 proposed a conservation easement on the property for $27 million. A nonprofit group of Roaring Fork Valley residents calling themselves “Friends of the Monastery” formed last year to help the monks and conserve the monastery’s open spaces. 

Ken Mirr with the brokerage did not identify the buyer but told the Wall Street Journal the new owner was planning to use the property as a home. 

About a half-dozen monks live at the St. Benedict’s Monastery. The seller is the General Chapter of the Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance, which oversees about 150 Trappist communities across the world, including 14 abbeys in the U.S

A schoolhouse on the 3,700-acre St. Benedict’s Monastery. (Courtesy, Mirr Ranch Group)

McKenna left St. Benedict’s in the early 1990s. He eventually married and raised two daughters in Salida. His family would often visit the monastery, where he maintained close relationships with the monks. 

He remembers how the monks embraced his decision to leave. Back then, leaving a monastery was a sign of failure. But Abbott Joseph Boyle and the monks urged him to take the lessons he learned at St. Benedict’s into the world, McKenna said, “and do that well.” 

“I fell in love with the place and that idea that if everything goes quiet, the thing you start hearing is what’s going on inside of you,” said McKenna, who now works as a therapist in Salida. “So many learning experiences there.”

He remembers bringing his daughters to services honoring Boyle, who died in 2018. They were young as they solemnly sat with the abbot’s body in the chapel. 

“My oldest said ‘He’s not there any more isn’t he? He’s gone somewhere else,’” McKenna said. “What a great thing to notice. We had this wonderful discussion about what happens when you die with an 8-year-old and a 10-year-old. And that’s what the monastery did. It gave us a spot to talk about things we don’t have much opportunity to talk about elsewhere.”

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com