Location from Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling
The Weasley family home near Ottery St Catchpole — a ramshackle, magically-expanded house of many crooked stories, with a garden full of gnomes and more warmth than any manor in Britain.
The Burrow is the opposite of everything Harry grew up with at Privet Drive. It is loud, messy, cramped, and the happiest place he has ever been. Molly Weasley's cooking fills the house with the smell of onion soup and shepherd's pie. The family clock tracks nine Weasley hands pointing to options like 'home,' 'school,' 'work,' 'traveling,' 'mortal peril,' and during the war, most hands stayed on the last. The house runs on love and magic in roughly equal measure — enchanted knitting needles work in the corner, dishes wash themselves in the sink, and the ghoul in the attic bangs on pipes when it wants attention. It was attacked during the Second Wizarding War and rebuilt. The garden gnomes were never successfully eliminated despite Molly's best efforts. Harry considers it his true home.
A tall, narrow house that looks like it was once a stone pigpen and has had rooms added in every direction, held together by magic. Several stories lean at angles that defy architecture. A garden full of wellington boots and gnomes surrounds it. Chickens wander the yard. Inside: a clock that shows where each family member is instead of the time, a self-washing sink, a kitchen table never quite big enough for everyone, and the constant smell of Molly Weasley's cooking. Ghoul in the attic. Broomsticks in the shed.
Also known as: the Burrow, The Burrow, the Weasley house