
Los Angeles businessman Ron Burkle has doubled down on Bob Hope estates, buying the late comic’s longtime Toluca Lake compound for $15 million.
Two years ago, the billionaire paid $13 million for a modernist home in Palm Springs that was designed and built by architect John Lautner for Hope and his wife, Dolores, The Times previously reported.
The Toluca Lake home was designed for the Hopes in the English traditional style by architect Robert Finkelhor. In the mid-1950s, the couple wanted a more contemporary style and commissioned John Elgin Woolf to remodel and update the 1939 house.
The property is composed of parcels totaling a little more than 5 acres.
The 14,876-square-foot house, which Burkle intends to restore, is accompanied by a two-bedroom guesthouse and separate staff quarters and offices.
The structures combine to offer eight bedrooms and eight bathrooms.
Aswimming pool, a one-hole golf course, mature trees, rose gardens and a large expanse of grass also lie within the grounds. An indoor swimming pool and spa sit adjacent to the guesthouse.
Bob Hope, who died in 2003 at 100, had a prolific career as a comic actor, singer and dancer, appearing in scores of films that included the “Road” series with Bing Crosby.
He won five honorary Oscars and one humanitarian award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Burkle, 65, built his fortune buying and selling supermarket chains such as Ralphs, Fred Meyer Inc. and Food4Less. He has an estimated net worth of $2.3 billion, according to Forbes.
An architectural connoisseur, he also owns the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Ennis House in Los Feliz, which he purchased in 2011 for about $4.5 million.
Craig Strong of Pacific Union International had the listing.
A new face at cover girl’s home
Supermodel Cindy Crawford and her husband, businessman Rande Gerber, have sold their renovated compound in Malibu’s Encinal Bluffs area for $45 million, records show.
The couple bought the 3-plusacre estate and an adjacent parcel of about 2.75 acres in 2015 for a total of $50.5 million.
Set
behind walls and gates, the bluff-top residence features four bedrooms
and 5.5 bathrooms in 5,300 square feet of living space. Interior details
include custom built-ins, natural materials and white walls that make
for a casual beach aesthetic. Oversized windows and pocketing doors are
centered toward the ocean.
Wraparound
decking and terraces create additional living space outdoors. The
scenic property also includes a tennis court and a swimming pool. At the
edge of the property is a path that leads to the beach below.
Crawford, 52, took to modeling in her teens and has appeared on hundreds of magazine covers.
Gerber,
56, is a former model and a nightlife industry businessman. He
co-founded the tequila brand Casamigos with actor George Clooney.
The
couple put the compound up for sale in 2016 for $60 million before
dropping the price last year by $10 million. They own other property in
Los Angeles, including aBeverly Hills home they bought last year from
OneRepublic frontman Ryan Tedder.
Christopher
Cortazzo of Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage and Kurt Rappaport of
Westside Estate Agency were the listing agents. Jade Mills, also of
Coldwell Banker, represented the buyer.
Hockey star skates out of South Bay
Two-time Stanley Cup champion Dustin Brown has wrapped up some business away from the ice, selling his home in Manhattan Beach for $6.9 million.
Custom-built
by Matt Morris Development for Brown and wife Nicole the
traditional-style house weds California casual and East Coast flair. Set
behind a white fence, the two-story home opens to acovered and heated
patio with a fireplace. An infrared sauna sits near a saltwater swimming
pool.
Inside, the
6,450-square-foot home displays a range of character. Styled by interior
design firm Lucas Studio, the home features bright wall coverings,
detailed millwork and built-ins in the living room and den. On the
basement floor, there are movie and game rooms plus a custom bunk room.
The six-bedroom, 6.5-bathroom house hit the market in April for a dollar shy of $7 million.
Matt
Morris and Christa Lyons of Strand Hill Christie’s International Real
Estate were the listing agents. Morris also represented the buyer.
Brown,
33, has spent his 11-year professional career with the Kings, joining
the team as a first-round draft pick in 2003. The all-star scored a
career-high 61 points in 81 games played this season.
Amped for a sale in Beverly Hills
Russell Weiner, creator
of the Rockstar energy drink, has put a Beverly Hills mansion that once
belonged to pop icon Madonna back on the market for $35 million. The
French country-style estate was offered last year for as much as $49
million.
A500-foot
tree-lined driveway enters the gated compound, which spans1.25 acres of
manicured grounds. In addition to the main house — an opulent space
filled with cathedral-style ceilings and stylish chandeliers — there are
two guesthouses, a tennis court and a 60-foot swimming pool.
Within
17,000 square feet of living space are nine bedrooms, 15 bathrooms and
seven fireplaces. Highlights include a woodbeamed living room with a wet
bar and a two-story dining room lined with French doors.
The gourmet kitchen boasts custom cabinetry and a long center island. Other amenities: a theater room, gym and art studio.
Madonna owned the home from 2003 to 2013, records show, and Weiner picked it up two years later for $19 million.
Mauricio Umansky of the Agency holds the listing.
Weiner, the son of radio host Michael Savage, created Rockstar in 1998. Forbes puts his net worth at $4.4 billion.
No
stranger to the real estate game, Weiner bought NBA star Carlos
Boozer’s Sunset Strip estate in 2006 and sold a concrete megalith in the
Hollywood Hills for $8 million in 2009.
He’s got a stake in ‘Dracula’ history
Nickelback bassist Mike Kroeger’s new haunt in the Outpost Estates section of the Hollywood Hills has an eerie past, The Times has confirmed.
The
two-story home, which Kroeger bought for $3.795 million, first belonged
to Bela Lugosi, the actor famous for playing Dracula in the 1931 film.
Built
in 1935 by Charles E. Toberman, the Mediterranean-style estate is
reminiscent of a bygone time. A pair of gargoyles frame the entry, and
it’s said that Lugosi used to let his pet panther roam the half-acre
grounds.
Past the
ivy-draped facade, there are 4,568 square feet of hardwood-lined
interiors. The kitchen features booth seating and a brick fireplace, and
other spaces include aliving and dining room topped with chandeliers
and a study atop the staircase.
Four
bedrooms and 5.5 bathrooms fill out the rest of the floor plan, with
the master suite boasting a balcony and free-standing tub.
Outside, hedges flank a swimming pool and pool house.
The
house was also once home to Ed Limato, the late talent agent who
represented such high-profile clients as Nicolas Cage, Mel Gibson, Steve
Martin and Denzel Washington.
John Michael Iglar of Douglas Elliman held the listing. John K. Herkenrath of the Agency represented the buyer.
Kroeger,
who founded the Canadian rock band in 1995 with his brother Chad, is
trading in one set of palm trees for another. His coastal retreat in
Maui is on the market for $4.88 million.
Pair are off the coast of Orange County
Television producer and director Bill D’Elia and his wife, interior decorator Ellie D’Elia, have sold their longtime vacation home in Seal Beach for $3.275 million.
Located
in the small gated community of Surfside, the beachfront property had
been in the couple’s possession for about two decades.
Ellie
remodeled the 1950s house to give it a Cape Cod cottage style complete
with grayish shingle siding, white trim and blue shutters.
Entered
through a Dutch door set up several steps from the street, the home’s
2,375 square feet of living space includes a living room with a brick
fireplace, a dining area, four bedrooms and three bathrooms.
The interiors have a beachy vibe, with white walls, blue accents and a blue checkerboard floor in the entry and kitchen.
Views take in the ocean, Catalina Island and the cityscape. The fenced patio opens to the sand.
Bill
D’Elia has television credits that include “Chicago Hope,” “Ally
McBeal” and “Boston Legal.” More recently he served as an executive
producer on the series “How to Get Away With Murder.”
Chuck
Buscemi of First Team Real Estate was the listing agent. Sean Stanfield
of HOM Sotheby’s International represented the buyer.
neal.leitereg@latimes.com lauren.beale2@latimes.com Twitter: @LATHotProperty