Point lots like this one surface once in a generation on Lake Keowee, and almost never inside the gates of The Cliffs at Keowee Springs. 233 Sandy Hollow Court sits at the end of a private cul-de-sac on its own point, with more than 425 feet of shoreline wrapping two and three tenths acres of mixed hardwoods. The water runs long here. So do the mountain and sunset views. The approach sets the tone. A quiet lane gives way to a wooded cul-de-sac, and the lot opens at the end of it, private on three sides by water and screened by mature trees. There is a stillness to a point lot that an interior waterfront cannot offer. You feel it the moment the drive ends and the lake takes over the view. What makes this homesite rare is not only the frontage. It is where the house can go. The 804 line that governs how close any structure can sit to the water falls low and close to the lake on this lot, which means a future home can be set near the shoreline and built to capture panoramic, uninterrupted water from nearly every room. Most lakefront lots push the house up and back. This one invites it forward, toward the water. The scale of the parcel opens the rest. 2.3 acres leave room for a pool, fire features, a winding private drive, and the outdoor living that turns a lakefront address into a true retreat. The point siting means morning light on the water from one side and the full color of a Blue Ridge sunset from the other, a quality of light that changes with every season and never repeats. The lot is dockable by permit through Duke Energy, a meaningful head start for a buyer who wants water access without the wait. Picture a dock off the point, a boat ready, and open water that runs to the horizon. From here the lake is not a feature of the home. It is the back yard. For those who would rather see the finished vision, a six thousand square foot estate plan designed specifically for this site by Milestone Builders is available, with renderings to follow. Walk through a turn key concierge build process with Milestone, or bring your own architect and builder. Either path begins with a setting that cannot be manufactured. The Cliffs at Keowee Springs surrounds it. Membership opens the Jack Nicklaus golf course, tennis, pickleball, the pool, the Beach Club, and the Sportsman Trail, with a new Lake Club that has been very well received. That lakeside complex adds two swimming pools, a restaurant, and a wellness center, all on the water. A single Cliffs membership carries across all seven Cliffs communities, the full range of golf, wellness, dining, and social life spread across the Blue Ridge and Lake Keowee. Few addresses anywhere in the Southeast open that much lifestyle from one front door. Scarcity is the quiet headline. Buildable point lots with this combination of frontage, low siting, and long water are effectively gone on the developed shoreline of Lake Keowee, and the ones that trade rarely reach the open market. Land like this holds its value because it cannot be replaced, only claimed. Location carries its own value. The east side of Lake Keowee puts Clemson and Greenville within easy reach for dining, shopping, theater, and game days, and the GSP International airport sits a straightforward drive away. This is the kind of homesite that defines an estate rather than merely holding one. For the buyer who has been waiting for the right point on the right lake, this is the one worth building on.