Russian Billionaire’s Purchase of French Villa Sets New World Record for Most Expensive Home - $750 million!
The market for the average priced
US residence may be soft, but the über rich
(especially the Russians) continue to drive prices up
at the very top of the world’s luxury market. Case in
point -- Villa Léopolda, one of the most historic
estates on the French Côte d'Azur, is now under
contract by an anonymous Russian billionaire for $750
million (€500m). This three-quarters-of-a-billion
dollar sales price sets a new record for the most
expensive home sale in the world. The previous record
was set earlier this year by Indian billionaire
Laksmi Mittal, with the reported purchase of a London
home for his son for about $236 million.
Villa Léopolda, a cream-colored, turreted mansion
with two guest houses, is midway between Monaco and
Nice overlooking Cap Ferrat, near
Villefranche-sur-Mer. The villa was originally built
about 1902 by King Leopold II of Belgium. The grounds
are regarded as among the most spectacular on the
Côte d'Azur. Fifty full-time gardeners look after 20
acres of gardens and terraces, planted with 1,200
olive, orange, lemon and cypress trees.
The property’s new owner is said to be a Russian oil
oligarch but not – despite initial rumors – Roman
Abramovich, the highly visible owner of Chelsea
Football Club, who already owns a €100m mansion near
Antibes.
According to the Nice-Matin newspaper, a contract was
signed last week to transfer ownership of the villa
from Lily Safra, the widow of Edmond Safra, a
murdered banking billionaire. Rumor has it that Mrs.
Safra held out for months as the persistent mystery
buyer kept raising his offering price. The paper also
reported that 60 villas or mansions on Cap Ferrat are
now owned by wealthy Russians.
The property has a unique history. In 1916, King
Leopold’s nephew and heir, King Albert I, turned the
villa into a hospital for officers wounded during the
First World War. It later passed into the hands of
the Agnelli family – Fiat automotive tycoons -- and
became the scene for legendary jet-set parties in the
1960s, attended by Frank Sinatra, Ronald Reagan (in
his acting days) and others.
“This sale raises the bar and makes the half dozen or
so $100 million U.S. properties on the market seem
like bargains,” said Laurie Moore-Moore, Founder of
The Institute for Luxury Home Marketing, a US-based
organization which trains real estate agents who work
in the luxury market and awards the international
Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist
designation. “Today’s affluent are citizen’s of the
world and the successful luxury agent must know how
to reach them and what lifestyles they are seeking.
It’s an exciting and active market for agents at the
top.”
(Photo from pmo's flickr photostream)
Source: http://www.LuxuryHomeMarketing.com
Posted by Waco Moore on August 11, 2008
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