The views stop you mid-sentence. A full, uninterrupted, front-row seat to Sedona's most iconic red rock panoramas framed exactly the way they should be: wide, open, & impossible to replicate. This is what a true ''10'' looks like. Architecture That Finally Matches the Setting Mid-century modern, reimagined with intent. Taken to the studs & rebuilt with precision, the home now lives the way Sedona demands: clean lines, volume, and glass in all the right places. A 16-foot wall of sliding glass disappears, & suddenly the line between inside & out is gone. Living room, deck, red rocks: it all becomes one continuous experience. A Kitchen That Understands Its Role: This isn't where you cook: It's where people gather & stay longer than they planned. Custom Crystal cabinetry. Gaggenau everything A 5x10 island that anchors the space without blocking what matters: the view line to Snoopy Rock and beyond.Even the storage is thoughtful. Pullouts, hidden systems, appliance garage. It's all there, quietly doing its job. Glass, Light, and PerspectiveWalls were removed. Ceilings raised. Windows repositioned. Not for the sake of remodeling but for architectural balance and sightlines that make sense. The dining room doesn't just connect to the kitchen now. It connects to Sedona. Floor-to-ceiling glass turns every meal into something cinematic, backed by a 200-bottle glass wine display that feels more gallery than storage. The Primary Suite: Private, Elevated, Intentional. Vaulted ceilings. A 12-foot slider opening to the outdoors. Light where you want it, blackout where you don't. And then the bath: 11 feet of floating vanity, a statement quartzite wall, dual-entry glass shower, soaking tub positioned exactly where it should be. The Sanctuary: A separate, purpose-built space for what most homes ignore. Yoga. Meditation. Or nothing at all. Framed views of Coffee Pot Rock, private access, and a full indoor sauna. It's quiet in a way that's hard to explain until you're in it. Lower Level That Actually Lives Well. Guest suite with private entrance. Gym or flex space with its own beverage station. Office with separate access for real work, not "work from the couch." Everything here has a use. And of course an elevator. Outdoor Living That Competes With the Interior. Multiple decks. Flagstone patios. Gas fireplace. Hot tub. Lighting designed for evenings, not just function. And everywhere you sit, the same thing happens: your eye goes straight to the red rocks. The Work You Don't See: New electrical. New plumbing. Rebuilt HVAC. Reengineered drainage. Smart systems. Tankless water heater. EV-ready. This wasn't a cosmetic flip. It was a full-scale reconstruction with long-term thinking behind it. The Bottom Line: In a market full of "almost," this one doesn't compromise. Views: Elite. Design: Intentional. Execution: Thorough. And that combination? Rare. Own Rare!