3-Bed Energy-Efficient Holiday Home Near Keiheuvel Nature Park, Mol – Move-In Ready



Hoeveloopweg 60, 2400 Mol, Belgium, Mol (Belgium)
3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 139m² Floor area
€335,000
House
No parking
3 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
139m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Step out the back door on a Saturday morning, coffee in hand, and you're looking at a south-facing garden so quiet you can hear the birds sorting themselves out in the hedgerows. No traffic. No neighbours backing out of driveways inches from your terrace. Just the particular stillness that only comes from a dead-end street in a well-planned Belgian residential pocket, where the houses are spaced generously and the green doesn't stop at the garden fence.
That's the daily reality at Hoeveloopweg 60 in Mol — a three-bedroom family home built in 2010, maintained with the kind of care that means you walk in, put your bags down, and start living. No snagging list. No decorator required. Just a well-proportioned, energy-efficient house on a calm street, 500 metres from the edge of Keiheuvel Nature Park.
Mol doesn't get the attention it deserves from international buyers, which is precisely why it's interesting right now. The town sits in the Kempen region of Antwerp Province — flat, forested, laced with cycling routes and sandy heathland that turns amber in autumn. It has a genuine community feel, a functioning town centre with a weekly market on the Markt square, and enough infrastructure (two supermarkets within walking distance of this address alone — a Carrefour and a Spar) that you don't need to drive for every errand. For a second home or holiday property in Belgium, it hits a rare combination: accessible, affordable relative to the Brussels or Bruges markets, and genuinely pleasant to spend time in.
Keiheuvel is the draw for families. It's a leisure park and nature area rolled into one — walking and cycling trails through pine forest, a toboggan run that the kids will demand every single visit, and seasonal events that fill the calendar from Easter through to the first cold weekends of November. In summer, the area around Mol and the nearby Molse Nete river becomes a quiet hub for kayaking and open-air swimming. The Zilvermeer provincial park, about ten minutes by bike, has a beach on a lake that locals treat like a coast town treats its shoreline. Pack a picnic. Bring the inflatables.
The house itself is straightforward in the best possible sense. Built to modern standards, EPC label B at 139 kWh/m²/year, fully asbestos-free, electrical installation fully up to code — the kind of practical boxes that save international buyers from unexpected costs. The high-efficiency gas boiler runs central heating throughout, a Type C ventilation system keeps the air clean and fresh year-round, and aluminium double-glazed windows do their job quietly and well. There's even a rainwater tank for garden use. Nothing flashy, but nothing neglected either.
Downstairs, large windows pull the garden into the living space. The front of the room works as a sitting area; the back opens into dining, and sliding glass doors connect straight to the terrace and lawn. It's a layout that makes sense for holiday use — you can have breakfast outside, retreat inside when the Belgian clouds roll in (and they will, charmingly, roll in), and be back on the terrace with a glass of Flemish jenever by evening. The kitchen is equipped with Siemens appliances throughout: hob, combination oven, fridge, dishwasher. A utility room off the kitchen handles the practical overflow — the extra fridge, the bikes, the gear that accumulates when you're actually using a place.
Upstairs, three full-sized bedrooms each come fitted with insect screens and blackout blinds — small details that matter enormously when you're sleeping in on a bright summer morning or trying to keep mosquitoes out on a warm August evening. The bathroom has two sinks and a bath-shower combination. There's a second toilet off the landing. It functions exactly as you'd want it to for a family of four or a group of friends sharing for a long weekend.
Outside, the carport handles one vehicle at the front. Visitor parking sits directly across the street, which matters on the weekends when guests arrive. The rear garden is enclosed by tall hedging on all sides — private without being claustrophobic — and a gate at the back makes it easy to wheel bikes out or manage garden waste without tracking through the house. A garden shed keeps everything organised.
Getting here is easier than the rural setting suggests. The N71 Geel-Pelt road is minutes away, connecting to the broader Antwerp Province road network. Antwerp city centre is under an hour by car, and Brussels is reachable in around 90 minutes. Eindhoven Airport in the Netherlands sits roughly 50 kilometres north, and Brussels Airport handles the long-haul routes. For a second home in continental Europe, the logistics work.
The Belgian property market has remained notably stable compared to many Western European counterparts, and the Kempen region in particular is seeing steady interest from buyers priced out of the Antwerp metropolitan area. A move-in ready, energy-efficient home at this price point, in a family-friendly area with genuine outdoor recreation on the doorstep, represents solid value. Whether held as a personal retreat or put into the short-term holiday rental market during the busy Keiheuvel season, the numbers make sense.
Key features at a glance:
- 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, 139 m² of living space on a south-facing plot
- Built 2010, move-in ready condition throughout
- EPC label B, 139 kWh/m²/year — well above average energy performance
- High-efficiency gas central heating with Type C ventilation system
- Fully asbestos-free; electrical installation compliant with current standards
- Aluminium double-glazed windows and exterior joinery
- Rainwater tank for sustainable garden use
- Siemens-equipped kitchen with dishwasher, combination oven, and hob
- Private carport plus street-level visitor parking opposite
- South-facing garden with tall hedging, terrace, shed, and rear gate access
- 500 metres from Keiheuvel Nature Park and leisure facilities
- Walking distance to Carrefour, Spar, schools, and public transport
- Quick access to N71, Antwerp (~55 km), Brussels (~90 km), Eindhoven Airport (~50 km)
- Dead-end street with minimal through-traffic — quiet even by Kempen standards
Priced at €335,000, this is a vacation home in Belgium that you'll actually use — not a renovation project that swallows weekends, not a compromise on quality, and not a location that requires a car for every small thing. If you're ready to see it in person or want more information about the ownership process as an international buyer, reach out through Homestra today. Properties at this condition and price point in the Mol area don't sit on the market for long.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 139m²
- Price per m²
- €2,410
- Garden size
- 386m²
- Has Garden
- Yes
- Has Parking
- No
- Has Basement
- No
- Condition
- good
- Amount of Bathrooms
- 1
- Has swimming pool
- No
- Property type
- House
- Energy label
Unknown
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