Los Angeles Times

Storied acreage goes up for sale at $150 million Mogul Paul Allen is selling one of Westside’s largest undevelope­d sites

- By Neal J. Leitereg and Roger Vincent

It’s the type of location moguls dream of: 120 acres of undevelope­d land in one of L.A.’s ritziest pockets. And it’s now for sale at $150 million.

Owned by billionair­e Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen, the sprawling Beverly Crest property is one of the largest undevelope­d sites remaining on the Westside.

Over-the-top dollar figures are often bandied about more as attention getters than as a bar for realistic value. But estates of this magnitude are a rarity in L.A., and a prized chip in a high-end market where affluent individual­s put a premium on personal and private space.

The multi-parcel property crests a hilltop between Beverly Glen and South Beverly Park and was once the site of an architectu­ral treasure: a Spanish Colonial-style home designed by architect-to-thestars Wallace Neff and built in the 1920s for cowboy actor Fred Thomson and his Oscar-winning screenwrit­er wife, Francis Marion.

“It was the greatest Wallace Neff ever built,” real estate agent and historic architectu­re author Bret Parsons said.

The estate originally encompasse­d about 24 acres, but was later expanded to its current size by Paul Kollsman, inventor of the altimeter, during his decades of ownership.

The Times reported that Allen bought the property in 1997 from Kollsman’s widow for $20 million and had planned to renovate the grand residence. However, the 10,000-square-foot home and the surroundin­g structures — a guesthouse, stables and chauffeur’s quarters — were razed three years later.

On the site, once among L.A. County’s largest single-family home properties by acreage, are two gated entrances and a snaking one-mile-long private street installed during Allen’s ownership. The property, which takes in city, ocean and mountain views, is being offered as the site of a

future compound or as five graded lots for future developmen­t.

The location has internatio­nal appeal — even with its nine-figure price tag, said Ken Kahan, a Los Angeles developer of high-end apartments.

“There are a lot of people on the planet who, crazy as it sounds, can afford that,” said Kahan, founder of California Landmark Group. “Beverly Hills is still a magical place to a lot of people. It’s associated with wealth, the rich and the famous, and has been for 100 years.”

Still, almost any home for sale at that price point is a gamble.

One potential challenge for Allen: Although the location carries a coveted 90210 ZIP Code, the property lies outside the city of Beverly Hills in an area associated with Beverly Crest, according to the L.A. Times’ mapping tool.

But being outside of Beverly Hills has its advantages from a developmen­t standpoint. In Beverly Crest, which is part of Los Angeles, there are far fewer restrictio­ns on what can be built.

Underscori­ng this point is Palazzo di Amore, which features a 35,000-squarefoot main house, a 15,000square-foot entertainm­ent complex and a vineyard capable of producing 400 to 500 cases of wine a year. The estate is on 25 acres with a vineyard developed by real estate entreprene­ur Jeff Greene and is on the market for $129 million, a price cut from the $195 million it first listed for three years ago.

Other Beverly Crest properties with nine-digit price tags include a 35,000square-foot mansion linked to late Saudi Prince Saud alFaisal that carries a $110-million asking price.

Also nearby is a lot with 12 contiguous undevelope­d parcels totaling 97 acres that has sat on the market since last year, when it listed for a whopping $250 million.

L.A.’s red-hot developmen­t market is a safe bet, according to some agents with knowledge of the area. And the potential to build a home from scratch will be especially appealing.

“With a property this size, you do not want a future buyer to be in any way restricted by your taste,” said Neville Graham, a real estate agent who specialize­s in land. “Especially with something in this price range.”

Beverly Park, the uberrich developmen­t east of the site, offers some idea of what the site’s future may hold if subdivided. The exclusive, large-lot developmen­t is similarly part of the city of L.A., but carries Beverly Hills’ 90210 ZIP Code.

Homes in the neighborho­od average 20,000 square feet and tens of millions of dollars apiece. Current and former residents of Beverly Park include magnates Sumner Redstone and Ed Glazer, baseball’s Barry Bonds and celebritie­s such as Denzel Washington, Mark Wahlberg and Sylvester Stallone.

Still, speculativ­e developmen­t brings a level of uncertaint­y.

It would be financiall­y risky for a housing developer to acquire the land and then try to make a profit by speculativ­ely building high-end houses, Westside real estate broker Jay Luchs said.

The likely buyer for Allen’s property is another individual high-roller who wants to build his or her own compound.

With other Los Angelesare­a residentia­l properties recently selling for more than $100 million, “the timing is perfect,” said Luchs of Newmark Knight Frank. “The market is showing that it can sell to a high-end customer today.”

Though Los Angeles has always had wealth, its internatio­nal status is rising among people of great means who like the idea of having a suburban-sized estate in the middle of a big city, Luchs said.

“L.A. has become the next destinatio­n for uberwealth­y people, where tech meets fashion meets entertainm­ent,” he said. “It’s all here.”

 ?? Berlyn Photograph­y ?? THE BEVERLY CREST property encompasse­s 120 acres in one of L.A.’s ritziest pockets and takes in city, ocean and mountain views.
Berlyn Photograph­y THE BEVERLY CREST property encompasse­s 120 acres in one of L.A.’s ritziest pockets and takes in city, ocean and mountain views.
 ?? Photograph­s by Berlyn Photograph­y ?? THE ESTATE is being offered as the site of a future compound or as five lots for future developmen­t.
Photograph­s by Berlyn Photograph­y THE ESTATE is being offered as the site of a future compound or as five lots for future developmen­t.
 ??  ?? THE PROPERTY crests a hilltop between Beverly Glen and South Beverly Park.
THE PROPERTY crests a hilltop between Beverly Glen and South Beverly Park.

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