Los Angeles Times

Mega-mansion gets big tax break

Assessed value of unfinished Bel-Air project falls from $70 million to $29 million.

- By Nina Agrawal and Emily Alpert Reyes

Mohamed Hadid’s unfinished Bel-Air home was valued at $70 million. It was reassessed at $29 million, saving him half a million a year in taxes.

Real estate tycoon Mohamed Hadid once boasted that a luxurious mega-mansion he was building in the hills of Bel-Air would sell for more than $100 million.

Hadid, known for his lavish homes and stints on reality television, chronicled the progress of constructi­on on Instagram. In one post, he billed a cavernous space where workers were laying rebar as “home for the next largest IMAX home theater in the world.” In others, he showed off Italian marble, a Moroccan room and a “modern yet classic” Turkish bath.

Led in part by those statements, the county eventually valued the home under constructi­on at more than $70 million.

But as Hadid faced delinquenc­y on a hefty tax bill for the still-unfinished mansion, he asserted the property was instead worth just $10 million.

Last month, the county reassessed the property at close to $29 million, saving Hadid half a million dollars a year in property taxes.

The question of how much the colossal home is worth opens a window into the rarefied world of highend real estate in Los Angeles, where developers compete in Bel-Air, Brentwood and Malibu to build the biggest, most extravagan­t and most expensive homes.

Despite the sweeping size and prized details of Hadid’s house, some county officials questioned whether it was truly “ultra-high-end luxury” constructi­on.

The decision to drop the value drew scrutiny from John Loew, a deputy assessor seeking to unseat Assessor Jeffrey Prang in the November election. “Everybody should pay their fair share of taxes,” Loew said. “The perception of the public is that these celebritie­s get special treatment.”

Robert Kalonian, spokesman for the assessor, said that wasn’t the case at all and that appraisers had based the lower value on new informatio­n that came to light in the battle over the Bel-Air property.

Bruce Rudman, an attorney for Hadid, said $41.8 million — the amount that pushed the property’s assessed value past $70 million — should never have been added by an assessor last year, calling it “a gross error.” Even without it, he contended, the assessment was not justified.

“The value as stated on the assessment is excessive, particular­ly with regard to the incomplete constructi­on,” Rudman said.

The tussle over taxes is the latest developmen­t in the saga over the Bel-Air behemoth, which became a flashpoint amid booming post-recession constructi­on on the Westside.

Neighbors complained that the home on Strada Vecchia Road, which some dubbed the “Starship Enterprise,” had destabiliz­ed the surroundin­g hillside. City officials ordered a halt to constructi­on and ultimately revoked the project’s permits. Prosecutor­s alleged that the mansion was bigger and taller than city rules allowed and included entire areas that were never approved.

Hadid and his project manager insisted city inspectors were aware of changes during constructi­on. But Hadid pleaded no contest last year to criminal charges tied to illegal constructi­on on the property. He was sentenced to three years’ probation, thousands of dollars in fines and 200 hours of community service.

As for the hillside, “there is no danger of the house falling down the hill — zero danger,” Rudman said. “There is some loose soil that needs to be remediated ... and there is a slope stabilizat­ion plan” awaiting approval to do so.

The developer is also facing a civil lawsuit from neighbors demanding that he tear down all unapproved constructi­on and restore the hillside. Hadid has sued back, alleging attempted extortion by his neighbors.

As he faced an overdue bill for taxes on the property, Hadid lodged appeals with the Los Angeles County Assessment Appeals Board, arguing that appraisers had overstated the value of the unfinished site.

Late last year, appraiser Rachel Geist estimated that new constructi­on on the land in 2017 was worth $41.8 million, bringing the total value of the property to more than $70 million. In a memo reviewed by The Times, she cited claims in media reports and on Hadid’s Instagram account that the property would be worth $100 million upon completion, span 30,000 square feet and feature an Imax theater.

“Due to the unique nature of this property and craftsmans­hip/detailing as well as location and off-hill constructi­on, standard costing amounts do not apply,” she wrote in the memo.

In a 2018 memo she reaffirmed her estimate. The memo described details such as flooring in a “Moroccan room” that appeared to be “antique, possibly imported.”

Hadid’s appeals have yet to be scheduled for hearing by the appeals board, an independen­t entity.

But in August, appraisers signed off on dropping the property’s total value, including the land and unfinished home, to about $29 million, according to records provided by the assessor’s office.

The change will save Hadid $1 million in general property taxes and municipal levies owed for 2017 and 2018. Taxes on the property are currently delinquent, the assessor’s office said.

Rudman said he was looking into the tax matter. “My understand­ing is all the property taxes have been paid,” he said.

In a memo explaining the change, appraiser Laura Booth said the $41.8-million increase had been erroneousl­y added. She said new constructi­on on the site was “not an ultra-high-end luxury improvemen­t” and noted the owner would have to demolish some of it under the terms of his plea.

In interviews, Kalonian, assistant assessor George Renkei and supervisin­g appraiser Milan Garcia said “ultra-high-end luxury” was a subjective term defined in relation to a scale set by the market — essentiall­y a you’ll-know-it-when-yousee-it type of standard. They also said the cost and quality of materials, with some custom-made or imported, would be a factor.

The trio said previous assessment­s had consisted largely of guesswork, because appraisers weren’t allowed onto the property and there were few comparable homes to use as benchmarks.

But after the appeals were filed, appraisers were allowed onto the site, leading them to reconsider their estimates, Kalonian said.

“The property as it stands now is not the property that we believed was being built,” he said, describing it as simply “luxury” instead of “ultra-high-end luxury” and pointing out that the size and features of the property would have to be scaled back to comply with the plea.

When asked about the chain of events, deputy assessor Loew said the county appeared to have helped Hadid.

Loew said appraisers shouldn’t have given any credit for demolition until they could verify the property had actually been demolished, because in the meantime the developer could still get value from the illegal constructi­on but not pay taxes on it. Guidelines for valuing properties instruct appraisers to verify a property has been demolished before deducting its value, Loew said.

But Renkei said the overarchin­g standard for assessing a property is “market value,” defined as what a buyer is willing to pay a seller on the market.

If a property owner builds an addition to his home and appraisers boost the home’s value assuming that the new constructi­on is permitted, Renkei said, they will take the value back off once they find out it’s illegal and must be torn down.

Buyers “know this when they’re purchasing the property, so they’re not going to give you value for that improvemen­t because they know it’s worthless,” he said.

Ignacio Rodriguez, an architect for the Bel-Air property, said builders have torn down a portion of a pool deck and begun separating the pool from the main structure “to show the city in good faith that we were trying to comply.”

Department of Building and Safety records show the property owners are still correcting plans to bring them in line with city rules.

Joseph Horacek, a neighbor who is suing Hadid, said he didn’t think Hadid was getting an undue benefit from the reassessme­nt.

“The house is totally illegal, and he has destabiliz­ed the hillside and created great risk to the surroundin­g properties,” Horacek said. In light of that, “the house was over-assessed.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? THE REASSESSME­NT of the Bel-Air mansion, shown in 2017, will save celebrity tycoon Mohamed Hadid half a million dollars a year in property taxes.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times THE REASSESSME­NT of the Bel-Air mansion, shown in 2017, will save celebrity tycoon Mohamed Hadid half a million dollars a year in property taxes.
 ?? Astrid Stawiarz Getty Images for Meesika ?? DEVELOPER Mohamed Hadid once said the mega-mansion would be worth $100 million upon completion, but later said the unfinished property was worth just $10 million. It’s currently assessed at $29 million.
Astrid Stawiarz Getty Images for Meesika DEVELOPER Mohamed Hadid once said the mega-mansion would be worth $100 million upon completion, but later said the unfinished property was worth just $10 million. It’s currently assessed at $29 million.

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