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- This article is about the home of Lucas Scott and his mother, Karen Roe. For other homes associated with members of the Scott family, see Scott residence.
1829 Barnette Drive, better known as the Roe-Scott residence, was originally the home of Karen Roe and her son, Lucas Scott. Situated in a quiet neighborhood of Tree Hill, North Carolina, the house served as a central location during the first six seasons of the series.
From its introduction in the first season, the Roe-Scott residence was visited by several characters close to Lucas and Karen, namely Keith Scott and Haley James. During Karen's six-week study abroad program in Florence, Keith temporarily moved into the house when he promised to look after Lucas while she was away. During the second season, Lucas briefly moved out of his mother's house and in with his estranged father, Dan Scott. As he was living in Dan's house at the time, Lucas and Karen arranged for his former girlfriend, Brooke Davis, to move into his former bedroom for the remainder of the school year after her parents sold their house and moved to California.
By the beginning of the fifth season, which was set four years after the previous season, Karen had seemingly left the house to Lucas, who resided there with Lindsey Strauss, his then-girlfriend and eventual fiancée. After their aborted wedding, however, Lucas lived in the house alone until resuming his relationship with his high school girlfriend, Peyton Sawyer. Upon their engagement, Peyton moved into the house at the beginning of the sixth season. After their marriage and the birth of their daughter, Sawyer Scott, the family continued to reside here before moving away from Tree Hill prior to the start of season seven.
History[]
- To be expanded.
Season 1[]
Season 2[]
Season 3[]
Season 4[]
Season 5[]
Season 6[]
Interior[]
Living room[]
Kitchen[]
Primary bedroom[]
Seasons 1-4: Karen Roe[]
Season 6: Sawyer Scott[]
Lucas's bedroom[]
Bathroom[]
Exterior[]
Porch[]
Gallery[]
Pilot[]
Series[]
Trivia[]
- The address of the Roe-Scott residence was not revealed until the third season. It was first shown on the letters Brooke wrote but never sent to Lucas during the summer after the second season finale, then again in a later episode on a letter Lucas was mailing to Brooke.
- The addresses shown were inconsistent throughout the season. In its first appearance, Brooke's letters to Lucas showed the house's address as 1829 Burnette Drive, Tree Hill, NC 01982. ("First Day on a Brand New Planet") However, when Brooke looked through her letters again in a later episode, a slightly different address appeared with two of the numbers reversed: 1892 Burnette Drive. ("How a Resurrection Really Feels") Two episodes later, when Lucas was delivering his letter to Brooke at the post box, his return address was listed as 1829 Barnette Drive. ("Return of the Future") As Lucas actually lived in the house at the time, it can be assumed his version of the address is the correct one.
- While exterior shots of the Roe-Scott residence were shot on location at a house located on Wrightsville Avenue in Wilmington, North Carolina, a different house was used for the pilot episode.
- This house, which continued to be featured in one of the closing scenes of the opening credits, had a significantly different exterior, with a green-accented sunroom on its right side. Located on Grace Street, the original house is located only a short distance from the houses used as the exteriors for the James and Sawyer homes.
- While the house used in the pilot was shown to have a different interior layout, Lucas's bedroom notably continued to feature two windows after production was moved to the house used for the remainder of the series. This contradicts the house's exterior appearance, however, which only features a single window on the side which would include his bedroom.
- Over the course of its appearance in the first six seasons of One Tree Hill, details of the house's interior were changed multiple times. The most significant of these changes occurred between the first and second seasons, when the layout of the house's interior was altered after production expanded the set to include Karen's bedroom and the house's living room.
- During the first season, scenes in the house's living and dining rooms appear to be filmed inside the actual house that was used for the exterior. This was a common practice in earlier seasons of the series, as scenes inside both Peyton's house and Dan's beach house were also filmed on location. From the second season onwards, however, scenes featuring the interior of the Roe-Scott residence were filmed on set. As such, the house's layout was significantly altered, with the bathroom at the opposite end of the hallway from the kitchen replaced with the new living room.
- In the season one episode in which the real house's interior appears, the living room, which was later shown to be located at the front of the house, was accessed through the dining room and was situated in the location of Lucas's bedroom in the show. Both his bedroom and the real house's living room featured a fireplace on a diagonal wall, though the archway to its left leading to the dining room was removed from Lucas's room for the series. ("Suddenly Everything Has Changed")
- Throughout the first four seasons, Lucas's bedroom featured a sealed fireplace on a diagonal wall, with his bed placed directly in front of it during the first season. After the second season, his original twin bed was replaced by a queen-sized bed that remained centered between the room's two windows for the remainder of its appearance in the series. After set production renovations for the third season, however, the fireplace was removed without explanation, though the diagonal wall on which it had been situated remained.
References[]
- ↑ One Tree Hill, Season 3, Episode 11: "Return of the Future"