Long before the Lake Norman region became synonymous with sprawling waterfront compounds and race car royalty, the late Kyle Busch quietly planted roots in Denver, NC.

Denver, formerly known as Dry Pond, is an unincorporated lakeside community roughly 25 miles north of Charlotte where winding roads, private docks and tucked-away gated enclaves have turned into a haven for drivers, team owners and NASCAR veterans looking for a slower pace off the track.

“Busch loved this area, made a home here, expanded his businesses,” one source connected to the driver’s longtime real estate dealings told The Post. 

Kyle Busch, the two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion who died May 21, 2026 at age 41, spent more than a decade quietly rooted in Denver, North Carolina, a small, unhurried community on the western shore of Lake Norman. Getty Images

The source added that the region offered “everything a NASCAR driver and retired drivers would ever need,” citing nearby country clubs, lake access and the concentration of racing figures who have settled around Lake Norman over the years.

Busch’s connection to the area stretched back more than a decade. In 2012, the two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion paid a then-Charlotte-area record $7.5 million for a massive waterfront estate, records show. 

The property sat inside the gated Norman Estates community on a secluded stretch of Lake Norman, the massive man-made reservoir that has effectively become NASCAR’s unofficial backyard. 

The brick and stone 15,000-square-foot mansion included seven bedrooms, multiple fireplaces, an elevator, a private beach, a boat dock and a resort-style pool complete with a swim-up bar and a hot tub. 

Busch purchased a 15,000-square-foot lakefront mansion in 2012 for a then-Charlotte-area record $7.5 million. Courtesy of Canopy
The gated Norman Estates property, where he and wife Samantha raised their two children, offered the seclusion and stillness that stood in sharp contrast to his life on the track. Courtesy of Canopy

Travertine and walnut flooring ran throughout the home, while sweeping lake views stretched across the property’s 1.3-acre lot. 

From nearly every room, 180-degree views of the lake unfold. The home also received a $1 million kitchen renovation, adding two marble waterfall islands, sensor-touch cabinets and high-end Miele appliances. 

Listing agent Heather Gibbs of Corcoran HM Properties noted that because few boats pass the relatively secluded Norman Estates community, the private beach at the property never erodes.  

For more than a decade, Busch raised his family behind those gates. He and his wife Samantha welcomed son Brexton in May 2015 and daughter Lennix in May 2022. The house even appeared on the reality series “Racing Wives,” one of the few windows fans ever got into how the most polarizing driver in the sport actually lived away from the track.

The home features seven bedrooms, a private beach, a boat dock, a swim-up pool, a home theater and a five-car garage. Courtesy of Canopy
It boasts a $1 million kitchen renovation with marble waterfall islands. Courtesy of Canopy

His business life was rooted nearby. Kyle Busch Motorsports and Rowdy Manufacturing, his NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series team and chassis-building operation were based in a 77,000-square-foot facility in Mooresville, just a short drive from Denver along the lake.  

He launched the truck team in 2010, and over its run it accumulated 100 wins, seven owners’ championships and two drivers’ championships, with Erik Jones taking the title in 2015 and Christopher Bell in 2017.  

“When we started the Truck Series team back in 2010, I never imagined that we would be able to win 100 races with 18 different drivers and that one day I’d be racing in the Cup Series alongside so many of the drivers that I once mentored at KBM,” Busch said when he announced the sale. “It took countless hours by so many amazing people to make KBM the winningest team in Truck Series history.”

That sale, to Spire Motorsports in late 2023, coincided with a broader unraveling of his North Carolina footprint. 

He and wife Samantha raised their two children there for over a decade before briefly listing the property for $13 million in 2023, only to pull it from the market months later. Getty Images

In June of that year, Busch had listed the lakefront Norman Estates mansion for $13 million. 

“The owners are just ready to move elsewhere after living in the home for so long,” Gibbs said at the time. The Mooresville facility sold to Spire for nearly $14.5 million, according to Iredell County real estate records.

But the pull of the place proved stubborn. The Norman Estates listing was pulled from the market in October 2023.

Meanwhile, he had already acquired something very different a short distance away.

In 2023, Busch purchased a sprawling 35-acre property in Cleveland, North Carolina, featuring a nearly 15,000-square-foot barndominium originally built in 2020 by the Deegan family, who had relocated to Florida to support Hailie Deegan’s racing career. 

Separately, Busch acquired a sprawling 35-acre compound in nearby Cleveland, North Carolina, a nearly 15,000-square-foot barndominium, with underground garages, private fuel storage, a saltwater pool, a basketball court and two fully independent living quarters — which he later listed for $4.5 million, saying he simply didn’t have enough time to enjoy it. Courtesy of Canopy

The estate was designed for automotive and off-road enthusiasts, featuring underground garages, private fuel storage, a saltwater pool, a basketball court, a private bar and two fully independent living quarters.  It sat close enough to the Lake Norman corridor to keep him tethered to the community he had spent over a decade building a life in.

By mid-2025, that property too was on the market, listed at $4.5 million. 

“We love this piece of land and the amazing barndominium, but right now we just don’t have enough time to spend there,” Busch wrote on social media. “We can’t wait for someone to love it as much as we have!”

Even with all its grandeur, the setting itself remained strikingly understated. Denver has a population of fewer than 3,000 people and lacks the glitzy image often associated with celebrity enclaves. But around Lake Norman, that low-key atmosphere is precisely the appeal. 

Denver is an unincorporated, suburban-rural community on the western shores of Lake Norman in Lincoln County with a population of about 3,000. Mark Castiglia – stock.adobe.com
Located roughly 25 to 30 miles north of Uptown Charlotte, it is known as “Denver of the East” and offers a peaceful, small-town lifestyle with commutable proximity to the city. Courtesy of Visit Lake Norman

His family also became deeply rooted in the community. Busch and his wife Samantha launched the Bundle of Joy Fund, an organization helping couples struggling with infertility and IVF costs, while raising their children along the lakefront. 

Busch died Thursday, May 21 at the age of 41, after being hospitalized with what his family described as a severe illness, three days before he was set to compete in the Coca-Cola 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway. His death remains a shock to many; he is survived by his wife Samantha and their children.

“Our entire NASCAR family is heartbroken by the loss of Kyle Busch,” NASCAR said in a joint statement with Richard Childress Racing and the Busch family. “A future Hall of Famer, Kyle was a rare talent, one who comes along once in a generation.”



Source link