Imagine owning a place people call “The End of the Carretera Austral”; ancient forests, singing rivers,
glacier views, and the unmatched feeling of absolute exclusivity. This is not just land, it’s a legacy
opportunity and a hedge against inflation and global warming.
Black Carpenter Park is a Patagonian sanctuary of approximately 1,550 hectares, located at the
southernmost stretch of the Carretera Austral, one of Chile’s most iconic scenic routes. The property
combines native forests, watercourses, rolling hills, and open views of the Andes, offering a unique
canvas for conservation projects with controlled public use and low-impact tourism. Its scale and location
make it suitable for blended models: conservation + experiences (trails, shelters, wildlife observation,
overlanding), plus monetization of ecosystem services under international standards.
GENERAL INFORMATION
• Operation: Sale of large-scale tract (entire property)
• Surface area: ~1,550 ha
• Location: Southern end of the Carretera Austral (7 km south of Villa O’Higgins, Aysén Region, Chile)
• Access: Route 7 (Carretera Austral) + airport 7 km away + seasonal connectivity via ferry and rural roads
• Price: USD 7,000,000
• Reference coordinates: (F9QX+6Q Villa O’Higgins, O’Higgins)
HIGHLIGHTS
• World-class landscape: native forests, rivers/streams, and views of mountains and glaciers
• Rarity and scale: very few tracts >1,000 ha with direct access to the Austral network
• Territory branding: “At the end of the Austral” �` a powerful narrative for destination hospitality
• Long-term resilience: irreplaceable real asset, climate resilience, hedge against inflation and currency
depreciation
• Value capital: potential for carbon credits (IFM/ARR) and biodiversity projects
• Responsible development: ideal base for eco-lodges, research, and private conservation with ecological
easements
SUGGESTED USES
• Private conservation with controlled public access
• Eco-hospitality (refuges, premium glamping, boutique lodge)
• Research and education (partnerships with universities)
• Carbon and biodiversity projects (IFM/ARR)