Explore Bishop Castle, The 16-Story Mountain Palace Built By One Man

Ever since 1969, Jim Bishop has singlehandedly constructed Bishop’s Castle, which is the largest self-built palace in the United States — and may be the largest self-built architecture project in the entire world.

Jim Bishop bought the land for Bishop Castle in 1959 when he was just 15 years old.Chris Waits/Flickr Bishop eventually began building the palace on the property as a one-room cabin for his growing family, but it soon became a larger venture.polymerchemist/Flickr Today, Bishop Castle stands 160 feet tall — and was made entirely by Jim Bishop himself.Joshua Gallegos via Bishop Castle Colorado/Facebook The castle is build from rock found in the surrounding mountains.Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons It's estimated that Bishop handles each individual stone six times in its journey from being foraged to permanently placed and mortared. texas_tongs/Flickr Chris Waits/Flickr The bell in the tower works if one can climb high enough to ring it. According to Bishop, he dropped out of high school because of a fight with the English teacher, who said he would never amount to anything. Bishop Castle Colorado/Facebook A bridge leading to nowhere in particular.Chris Waits/Flickr Bishop's son now helps him to manage visitors at the castle.Chris Waits/Flickr Bishop owned an ironworks business with his father, which is how he was able to forge such fantastic wrought-iron arches like these.Chris Waits/Flickr wiremommy/Flickr Signs on the property warn that if you don't believe in free speech or Bishop's right to build his castle to his own specifications, (or if you're drunk when visiting) then you are trespassing.Chris Waits/Flickr "Everything just seems to work," Bishop said of the castle. "What's real neat about not having blueprints is that if you make a mistake, you call it art." whatknot/Flickr To his point, Bishop used no blueprints nor plans to construct his wonderful palace.Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons Thanks to the castle's grand façade, it's a popular spot for weddings. gmeador/Flickr Bishop Castle sits at an elevation of 9,000 feet above sea level. texas_tongs/Flickr mrccos/Flickr A rubble pile arranged to look like art. Bishop used a lot of recycled material to construct his palace, including warming plates and a donated hot-air balloon warmer that were used to make a dragon head jutting out of the front of the castle.Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons In 1995, Bishop added a 30-foot steeple — making the total height of the castle 160 feet tall. unclebucko/Flickr The fireplace in the palace cleverly ventilates through the dragon's nostrils.branditressler/Flickr Memorials to Bishop's deceased wife, Phoebe, and son, Roy. Bishop Castle Colorado/Facebook There's nothing traditional about Bishop's castle, and that's what makes it so intriguing. Hustvedt/Wikimedia CommonsCastle Iron Arched Gate 23 Jaw-Dropping Photos Of Colorado’s Bishop Castle View Gallery

There were no blueprints or diagrams for the eccentric Bishop Castle in Rye, Colorado. Built by Jim Bishop over the course of 60 years, the monumental structure is the result of his own imagination and lackadaisical building style. As he told one interviewer, "I just build. I don't measure."

Made of high, teetering bridges and stairs, Bishop's Castle is constructed on top of what once was his one-room cottage using over 1,000 tons of rock from the nearby San Isabel National Forest.

It is also littered with signs that warn visitors not to excessively shake them or they could collapse, as Bishop didn't believe in building codes.

Nevertheless, people flock from all around to see Bishop's Castle — and to marvel at its craftsmanship. Indeed, even though some may be wary of its stability, the beauty of the castle stands on its own merit.

Why Jim Bishop Built Bishop Castle

Bishop Castle Side View

Hustvedt/Wikimedia CommonsView of Bishop Castle from the ground.

It was 1959 and Jim Bishop was 15 years old when he fell in love with two-and-a-half acres for sale in the mountains outside Pueblo, Colorado. He had enough money saved for the $450 down payment — of the total $1,250 price — from mowing lawns and delivering newspapers. His parents had to sign the paperwork since he wasn't legally able to buy the land himself.

His dream was to build a family cabin. For the next handful of summers, Bishop and his dad went camping at the site and made building plans. Those plans remained dreams until Bishop married his girlfriend, Phoebe, and decided to begin building them a place to live.

Taking rocks from the surrounding parkland, Bishop set out to construct a simple, one-room cottage. Building season in the mountains is quite short, however, between snowmelt and snowfall. Bishop and his father alternated weeks; one working on the home while the other ran the family's ironwork business.

There wasn't any running water at the cottage, so Bishop had to build a 40-foot-tall cistern for the water supply. When he began constructing it from stone as well, it resembled a castle tower. Neighbors noticed and jokingly asked if Bishop was erecting a castle.

The comments sparked his imagination: Why not build a castle?

Bishop's father thought this sounded like more work than he was willing to do, and with the main cabin finished, gracefully bowed out and let his son go on building to his heart's content.

Constructing The Eccentric Palace

Working in his family's iron shop meant Bishop learned how things came together. He chopped down trees and milled them into lumber. He dug 12-foot foundations and created scaffolding and pulley systems as he went.

According to Bishop, he'd dream up some feature he wanted, build it, and when it was finished it'd spark an idea for the next part of the castle.

The ironwork arches on the second floor of Bishop Castle are perhaps one of the palace's best examples of precision geometry. The support trusses are so large that it's hard to fathom them being put into place by one man. But they were. All of the castle was built by Bishop alone.

He would say Bishop Castle was "Built by one man with the help of God."

Dragon At Bishop's Castle

mapio.netA closeup on the dragon head that juts out of the front of Bishop Castle.

The facade of the building features a fire-breathing dragon made from recycled warming plates and a donated hot-air balloon warmer. The fireplace cleverly ventilates through the dragon's nostrils. Stained glass windows decorate the palace's grand hall.

Bishop Castle kept growing, and more visitors showed up to see it, but Bishop never considered charging them admission to enter. Bishop Castle can still be accessed free of charge.

In fact, Bishop drew up legal documents stating that as long as Bishop Castle stands, no one can ever charge admission. However, he did eventually set up a donation box.

Visiting Bishop Castle

Because of its unwieldiness, the Colorado Chamber of Commerce refused to list the castle as an attraction in their pamphlets. There was already some bad blood between Bishop and the state of Colorado, however, as he technically built his palace with rocks that belonged to a national park.

Additionally, no insurance company wanted to be responsible for the ongoing construction at the code-less "attraction."

Jim Bishop Portrait

Derik Hicks via Bishop Castle Colorado/Facebook
After he's gone, Jim Bishop said that he hopes his kids and grandkids will carry on the traditions of the castle.

Today, the castle is 160 feet tall, and construction has slowed considerably as Bishop has gotten older — but will probably not stop anytime soon. His eldest son, Daniel, handles the upkeep and interacts with the visitors. He put his own business on hold to help his parents as they moved into old age. Sadly, his mother, Phoebe, died in 2018.

The castle is no stranger to sad tales. Bishop and Phoebe lost another son, four-year-old Roy, in a tree-felling accident years earlier. There have been fires that claimed parts of the castle, including a gift shop, but they were always rebuilt.

Bishop still occasionally gets out to talk with tourists. He may be prone to anti-government rants, as is outlined by some of the signs on the property, but he is truly still humbled that people stop by to see his life's work.

He added memorials to Phoebe and Roy inside and maintains he built the castles for others, not himself.

"Them walls, them buttresses, arches, towers. If there wasn't somebody to climb on them, be inspired by them, get married up there, and use them, and have fun screamin', hollerin' and climbin', there'd be no point in doing it," he said. "It would be like the noise in the forest. Did it really happen? Was there a noise? Oh yes, there was, but how can you prove it? Well, the castle's its own proof."

After this look at Bishop Castle in Colorado, read about a similar palace in Florida known as Coral Castle, whose very construction still remains a mystery. Then, take a look at seven supposedly haunted castles.

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