When Lee and Patricia Justen want to spend time with their grandson they don't have to arrange a visit. Owen, age 8, lives just steps away, in the house behind the Justens' home.
"He's got two houses," said Patricia.
On the days his mother is working, Owen just heads to his grandparents' house, where they hang out together or take an outing, like a recent trip to the Science Museum.
"If he were far away, we'd have had to plan a week ahead," said Patricia. "Now we do things on the spur of the moment. It's fantastic."
The family's unusual living situation took root when the Justens' daughter, Leeanne Lonson, and her husband, Rick, were expecting Owen and looking for a larger home. They found one they liked in Mendota Heights — one that came with an adjacent vacant lot at the rear of the property.
"Leeane said, 'If we buy this, you have to build here,' " recalled Patricia.
At the time, the Justens were living on their family farmstead in Marystown. Lee, an organic soybean grower, had recently given up farming, and the couple were ready to try something new.
"We're at a different stage of our life," said Patricia. "We loved it [on the farm]. We had horses. Then the kids moved, the horses died, the dog died, and we were there alone."