The Mercury

Designer home sold

- Kevin Gray

NE OF the US’s landmark homes, the Miami Beach mansion that once belonged to Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace, was sold at an auction on Tuesday for $41.5 million (about R407 million) to a business group that includes the owners of the Jordache jeans brand.

The 1930s-era Mediterran­ean-style estate, which has 10 bedrooms, 11 bathrooms and a pool inlaid with 24-carat gold, was auctioned off as part of a bankruptcy proceeding by its current owner, telecom magnate Peter Loftin.

Bidding opened at $25.5m and the winning offer was made by the mortgage holders of the property, VM South Beach, a company affiliated with New York’s Nakash family, which controls Jordache Enterprise­s.

The group beat out two other bidders, including billionair­e Donald Trump and a Florida developer who owns the Palm Beach Polo and Country Club.

Potential buyers participat­ed in a poolside auction at the three-storey mansion on Miami’s Ocean Drive. The property is now known as Casa Casuarina.

The Nakash family jointly own a hotel next door to the mansion with the Gindi family, who founded the Century 21 department store chain.

They plan to consolidat­e the properties to create a hotel that will possibly carry Versace’s name.

Joe Nakash told reporters he planned to ask Versace’s family for permission to name the new property the Versace Hotel Villa.

“Everything will stay as is,” he said. “It is history – every day you see how many people take a picture of this place.”

Bidders were required to sign a confidenti­ality agreement and meet financial requiremen­ts that included a $3m deposit and proof of funds to pay at least $40m. The sale was a cash transactio­n.

The 2137m mansion, which has hand-painted frescoes, Italian marble and a gold-andmarble toilet, has been the subject of a long legal battle.

In 1997, Versace was gunned down at the mansion’s entrance gate by spree murderer Andrew Cunanan.

Three years later, Versace’s family sold the property to Loftin, who is now facing

Obankruptc­y and who had been trying to sell the house for more than a year.

The property was initially listed on the market with an asking price of $125m. The price was later lowered to $75m before it wound up in bankruptcy proceeding­s.

In recent years, the mansion had been used as a private club and a boutique hotel.

Versace bought the property in 1992 for $2.9m. He then purchased a hotel next door and spent $33m on renovation­s to add another wing.

Inside, he decorated with an over-the-top style that included paintings of Grecian, nymph-like characters playing lyres under palm trees. The snake-haired Medusa head, Versace’s logo, can be seen throughout the house.

When Versace owned the property, he helped usher in a renaissanc­e of Miami’s South Beach. His presence attracted models, jet-setters and celebritie­s including Sylvester Stallone and Madonna, who also bought homes in Miami.

The former Versace mansion was originally built by Standard Oil heir Alden Freeman.

It was modelled after the Alcazar de Colon palace built in the Dominican Republic in 1510 by the son of Italian explorer Christophe­r Columbus. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? People attend the auction of the South Beach mansion that once belonged to Gianni Versace. The property, which sold for $41.5 million, was bought by Versace in 1992. He was fatally shot on its steps in 1997 by a serial killer. His family sold it in...
PICTURE: AP People attend the auction of the South Beach mansion that once belonged to Gianni Versace. The property, which sold for $41.5 million, was bought by Versace in 1992. He was fatally shot on its steps in 1997 by a serial killer. His family sold it in...
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