
Malibu transaction rises $10 million above the previous county record.
In April, the Multiple Listing Service saw two L.A.-area homes with design pedigrees sell for north of $30 million. But it was an off-market tsunami of a deal in Malibu that swept in to set a new price record for Los Angeles County. Here’s a larger look.
$110 million — Malibu Hard Rock Cafe co-founder Peter Morton sold his oceanfront home on Pacific Coast Highway to natural-gas billionaire Michael S. Smith and his wife, Iris Smith, for $110 million — setting a new L.A. County price record for singlefamily home sales.
The astronomical transaction is another notch in the belt for the county, which saw two recordsetting sales of $100 million in 2016:
for the sale of the Playboy Mansion in Holmby Hills, and for a megamansion built on speculation in the same neighborhood.
The half-acre compound comprises two parcels with two structures and more than 100 feet of frontage on tycoon-studded Billionaires’ Beach.
Designed by architect Richard Meier, the main house and guesthouse feature teak wood siding, automated shutters and windows and wraparound balconies that face the ocean.
The two homes combine for about 8,000 square feet of living space with seven bedrooms and nine bathrooms.
Aswimming pool and courtyard make up the grounds.
Hilton
& Hyland agents Branden and Rayni Williams represented Morton in
the deal. Barry Peele of Sotheby’s International Realty represented the
Smiths.
$33 million — Hollywood Hills West
On
North Stanley Drive, a newly built showplace featuring interiors by
Lenny Kravitz and his design firm sold for $5 million less than the
asking price.
Perched
above the Sunset Strip, the three-story, 10,700- square-foot house is
visually dramatic, with offset rooflines, marble walls and retractable
expanses of glass that center on 270-degree city and ocean views.
The
home, designed by late Xten Architecture co-founder Austin Kelly, also
includes a lowerlevel nightclub, indoor-outdoor terraces and a circular
70-foot swimming pool. A12,000-pound granite boulder incorporates an
outdoor fire feature.
Branden
and Rayni Williams, who were co-developers on the project, had the
listing. Darryl Wilson of Rodeo Realty represented the buyer, a
Delawarebased limited liability company.
$32 million — Beverly Park ABeverly Park mansion designed by architect Richard Landry sold to timepiece entrepreneur John Simonian, founder and owner of luxury watch company Westime, for $32 million.
The
22,905-square-foot house, which evokes a French chateau, was built in
2009. The private and gated estate sits on more than 2 acres of grounds
with formal gardens, water features, a motor court and a tennis court.
There are indoor and outdoor swimming pools.
Inside,
amenities include a ballroom, a wood-paneled office and a library with a
glass-bottom floor that looks into a brick wine vault. The movie
theater is Moroccan-themed. Sauna and steam rooms adjoin the indoor
pool.
Aaron Kirman and
Neyshia Go of Pacific Union International were the listing agents.Jeff
Hyland of Hilton & Hyland, an affiliate of Christie’s International
Real Estate, represented the buyer.
$20.75 million — Holmby Hills
On South Mapleton Drive, the estate of the late Elizabeth Keck, former wife of Superior Oil Co. heir Howard B. Keck, sold to a limited liability company for $20.75 million.
The
neoclassical villa-style home, built in 1963, has more than 10,000
square feet of space that begins with a marble-lined foyer with a
curving artistic staircase. A circular receiving room sits behind the
entry and opens to a gardenview living room.
Alibrary, office, dining room, six bedrooms and nine bathrooms complete the floor plan.
The
1.27-acre property is walled and gated and features various specimen
trees, reflection pools and spouting fountains. A twobedroom guesthouse
sits near the swimming pool.
Elizabeth
Keck, who died last year at 96, appeared in a handful of films in the
late 1940s under the stage name Bettye Avery. Later in life, she was
known as an ardent Francophile and collector of French tapestries,
paintings and antiquities.
She
acquired the property in 1991, records show. Prior to that, it was
owned by Verna Harrah, the late widow of hotel and casino magnate
William F. Harrah.
Jeff
Hyland and Rick Hilton of Hilton & Hyland were the listing agents.
Drew Fenton, also with Hilton & Hyland, represented the buyer.
neal.leitereg@latimes.com Twitter: @LATHotProperty