Jennifer Aniston nabs $36 million; high-end homes are moving in the wealthy
enclave
By JULIET
CHUNG OCTOBER 28, 2011 for WSJ.com
In August, fashion designer Vera Wang bought a midcentury modern-style home in
Beverly Hills for $9 million from real-estate investor and designer Steven
Hermann. He'd bought it for $5 million in 2008, then spent more than $3 million
on a gut renovation.
In nearby Holmby Hills, Lions Gate Entertainment Chief Executive Jon
Feltheimer and his wife, Laurie, recently sold a five-bedroom home that they had
bought in 2009 for $9.8 million. A family spokesman said the Feltheimers
intended to build a new home but sold after deciding the process would be too
time-consuming. They got $14.4 million, from Russian soccer player Gurgen
Khachatryan.
At a time when luxury homes are making up an increasingly large share of
foreclosures, an unexpected number of high-end owners in and near Beverly Hills
are demanding—and in some cases getting—millions more for properties they've
recently bought.
Brokers say the appetite has remained remarkably healthy for prime property
in this area, particularly for renovated homes. For the year to date ended
Thursday, 25 homes in the greater Beverly Hills, Bel Air and Holmby Hills area
had sold for $10 million or more, according to Jeff Hyland of Hilton &
Hyland, a Christie's International Real Estate affiliate. That's more than the
16 and 21 sold over the same period in the hot years of 2006 and 2007.
Last summer, Jennifer Aniston sold her nearly 10,000-square-foot Beverly
Hills home, which she bought in 2006 for $13.5 million, for $36 million. The
actress set a local price-per-square-foot record—$3,600—with the sale. Designed
by late architect Harold W. Levitt, the home recalled Bali and featured five
bedrooms, extensive stonework and a bridge over a koi pond. A spokesman for Ms.
Aniston didn't respond to requests for comment.
Not far from Ms. Aniston's former home is another house designed by Mr.
Levitt that's been heavily renovated to include Asian influences. The house went
on the market in June asking $14.9 million; it's now asking $10.9 million. Owner
Tim Mulcahy says he bought the house speculatively, paying $4.6 million for it
last year and spending a further $3.5 million on the renovation. Mr. Mulcahy
says he's aware there's a housing downturn but calls Beverly Hills a unique
market. "I don't feel I've lost money; I feel that I will have some gain," he
adds.
In Beverly Hills' gated enclave of Beverly Park, a European businessman
bought a 20,000-square-foot contemporary, sight unseen, for $16.5 million last
fall. Now, he is asking $25 million for the house—without having done any work
on it.
"We thought, 'Let's throw it up on the market and see what happens,' " says
the broker, Josh Altman of Hilton & Hyland, of the home, which sits on
nearly seven acres and has a dining room with a grotto and waterfall. The
attempted sale makes sense, Mr. Altman says, because he was able to get his
client a good price on the home and because similar super-size homes in the area
are scarce.
Also testing the waters: Paramount Chairman Brad Grey, who, after
buying a home in Holmby Hills in the winter for $18.5 million, put it back on
the market in September for $23.5 million. Mr. Grey never intended to sell the
property, says his broker, Stephen Shapiro of the Westside Estate Agency. He
adds that Mr. Grey decided to sell after renovating another property he owns
nearby.
Write to Juliet Chung at juliet.chung@wsj.com
Showing posts with label Luxury Homes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luxury Homes. Show all posts
Monday, October 31, 2011
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Coldwell Banker: Inside Malibu's Famous $75 Million Mansion
Coldwell Banker's Chris Cortazzo presents a tour of the home where 'True Blood' and 'Funny People' were filmed.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Are McMansions Coming Back in Style?
Original Post: http://blogs.wsj.com/developments/2011/06/29/are-mcmansions-coming-back-in-style/
By Wesley Lowery June 29, 2011, 7:00 AM ET
By Wesley Lowery June 29, 2011, 7:00 AM ET
Getty Images
For a while now, new-home buyers have spurned oversize homes with lavish features in favor of smaller, energy-efficient dwellings. It made sense: With the housing market collapsing, homeowners dropped dreams of big plots with celebrity-caliber amenities in lieu of more functionality. Home theaters were out, replaced by home offices.
But the Home Design Trend Survey, released today by the American Institute of Architects, shows a slight change from previous years on home size and buyer sentiment.
The survey, which has been conducted quarterly since 2005, asks a panel of 500 architectural firms that focus on residential properties what customers are asking for in new developments. The percentage reporting that customers wanted smaller houses has seemingly started to drop.
This year, about 52% of firms surveyed reported a decrease in the square footage of the houses they’re designing this year, down from 57% last year. Today’s numbers also show fewer firms reporting decreases in lot size (down to 22 percent from 32 percent) and lot volume (down to 18 percent from 21 percent).
“Overall, home-and-lot sizes showing signs of increasing slightly indicates that the housing market is stabilizing after being in a downward spiral since 2007,” says Kermit Baker, AIA’s chief economist.
Outdoor space is also more sought after: About 60 percent of firms surveyed reported increases in the number of homes with outdoor living space, up from 56 percent last year. “The features that households are looking for are accessibility, a single-floor design and open space – both indoors and outdoors,” Mr. Baker says.
Even if the trend towards smaller homes is slowing, the McMansion isn’t back just yet.
In January, we reported that the average size of a new single-family home shrunk to 2,377 square feet last year, down 3 percent from 2009, according to the National Association of Home Builders.
And it’s not clear that younger buyers will embrace the McMansion in the same way their parents did. Presenters at the annual NAHB convention in Orlando told Developments in January that large, cookie-cutter suburban homes wouldn’t appeal to the younger generation of home buyers.
“It’s not that we’re going to move back to McMansions anytime soon,” Mr. Baker says. “But I think we’ll start to see house sizes start to edge up a bit.”
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