

Decorated alpine skier Lindsey Vonn, who has her sights on more Olympic gold at the upcoming Winter Games, has put her home in central L.A. on the market for $3.795 million.
The sexy two-story is in Beverly Grove, a desirable neighborhood that abuts Beverly Hills and West Hollywood, and was completed last year. Vonn paid $3.55 million for it.
Adramatic glass-enclosed entry and floating staircase set the tone for the contemporary-style home. The main floor is devoted to open-plan space and includes a living room with a wall fireplace, a custom Miton kitchen and a dining area. Contemporary barn doors slide to reveal an office/den.
Custom blown-glass light fixtures and Porcelanosa artistic tile create visual interest throughout the 4,037 square feet of interiors. A cascading waterfall feature sits just outside the glass front door.
Pocketing walls of glass open to the backyard, where decking surrounds a zero-edge swimming pool. A front-facing terrace creates an additional 400 square feet of living space and holds a fire pit. The master suite, one of four bedrooms and 3.75 bathrooms, has a private balcony.
Vonn, 32, was the overall World Cup champion from 2008 to 2010 as well as in 2012. She has won two Winter Olympics medals, including a gold for downhill in 2010.
Gregory Masi of Gibson International holds the listing.
An Eagle’s nest is set for feathering
The Brentwood estate of late rock ’n’ roll star Glenn Frey has come on the market at $14.995 million.
Frey, who died last year at 67, bought the home in 2002 for slightly more than $10 million. Late entertainment mogul Michael King of King World Productions was the home’s previous owner, records show.
Built in 1996, the gated
Mediterranean-style home has six bedrooms, 8.25 bathrooms and a powder
room in more than 8,000 square feet of space.
Features
include plaster walls, arched doorways and wood and stone flooring. A
double-height entry has a decorative wroughtiron staircase that leads to
the second floor. There are fireplaces in the family room, library and
living room.
Formal
gardens, fountains and statuary create a backdrop for various patios and
sitting areas in the backyard. A cabana/lounge accompanies the tiled
swimming pool and spa. The guesthouse holds a gym.
David Offer of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties holds the listing.
Frey
co-founded the Eagles in 1971 with drummer Don Henley. With the group,
Frey won six Grammys and was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame in 1998.
His solo albums include “No Fun Aloud” (1982), which spawned apair of Top 40 singles, and “Strange Weather” (1992).
Ex-couple make another split
The marital home of actor and comic Mike Epps and actress Mechelle McCain Epps has sold in Encino for $3.5 million.
The
former Hollywood couple, whose divorce was finalized this year, bought
the house more than adecade ago for $3.4 million, records show.
The
traditional house was built in 1990 and features an open floor plan,
two libraries, a media room with a wet bar, five bedrooms and six
bathrooms. There is 6,828 square feet of living space across two
stories.
Three custom
fireplaces grace the family room, living room and master bedroom. Fabric
wallpaper and coffered ceilings create visual interest in the oversized
dining room. In the updated kitchen, double ovens, cooktops and
refrigerators are served up in pairs.
Flagstone surrounds the swimming pool and spa in the backyard.
Lynne
Weiss of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage was the listing agent,
according to the MLS. Real estate broker George Sherf represented the
buyer.
Epps,
46, is best known for his role as Day-Day Jones in the “Friday” film
comedies. Last year he appeared on “Uncle Buck,” an ABC sitcom based on
the 1989 film that starred John Candy.
McCain Epps’ film credits include “The Fighting Temptations” (2003) and “Forgiveness” (2015).
Classic Hollywood background
ASpanish-style home built for film pioneer Carroll Dunning has listed for sale above the Sunset Strip for $5 million.
Dunning,
co-founder of Dunningcolor Corp., developed one of the first “green
screen” processing techniques for adding backgrounds to scenes filmed in
a studio. Known as the Dunning Process, it was first used in the 1933
monster-adventure classic “King Kong.”
His
onetime residence, designed by architect Paul Revere Williams and built
in 1929, sits on a triangular corner lot in Hollywood Hills with
city-light and mountain views. Recently renovated, the four-story house
offers a nod to a bygone era, with arched picture windows, wrought-iron
fixtures and oak floors.
Interior
spaces include a living room with an artistic-tile fireplace, aformal
dining room, an office and an eat-in kitchen with walls of bi-folding
doors. There are five bedrooms and five bathrooms in 5,000 square feet.
Terraced
patios create additional living space outdoors. Various steps and
pathways navigate manicured gardens, a sunken fire pit and a saltwater
swimming pool.
Travis Canby and Judith Lovingfoss of Keller Williams Realty are the listing agents.
New castle rises along the coastline
Living like Malibu royalty just got pricier.
The “New Castle,” a newly completed spec mansion on a hilltop in Malibu, is now for sale at $85 million.
The
contemporary showplace sits on a 3.5-acre hilltop where Castle Kashan, a
local landmark lost to fire a decade ago, once stood. It was previously
offered for $80 million during its construction.
Developed
by Scott Gillen, the 15,500-square-foot house boasts dry-aged oak
floors, hand-cut beams, a game and movie room and a 120-foot-long great
room. A wine and cigar lounge, which features walls of teak wood, cost
more than $1 million to assemble. Furnishings by Minotti Los Angeles are
included. A4,000-square-foot guesthouse has two bedrooms and 2.5
bathrooms plus a gym with a coldplunge spa. Other amenities include a
three-sided infinity pool and a butterfly sanctuary.
Sandro Dazzan and Brittany Monforte of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage hold the listing.
neal.leitereg@latimes.com