Baltimore Sun Sunday

Your chance to stay at Prince’s island mansion

Property is in Turks and Caicos islands southeast of Miami

- By Joe Marusak The Charlotte Observer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A Charlotte family is offering stays at their two mansions in the tropical Turks and Caicos islands, including one formerly owned by musical legend Prince.

The price of a night’s stay?

It’s $12,000 to $36,000, depending on the season and whether you lease one or both mansions, which overlook the turquoise waters of a private bay in the warm Atlantic, 575 miles southeast of Miami.

Tom Barnes, who owns a Charlotte-based private-equity firm, made headlines in the Wall Street Journal and other media in 2019 when he bought Prince’s former mansion on Providenci­ales, the third-largest island in Turks and Caicos, for $10.8 million.

Barnes idolized Prince as a teen growing up poor in Gastonia in the early 1980s, the 54-year-old said. He said he never imagined one day owning one of the star’s mansions.

Prince died at age 57 in 2016 in his home state of Minnesota of an accidental overdose of the opioid fentanyl.

In 2021, Barnes and his wife, Sharon, also bought the mansion next door to Prince’s for over $8 million, he said.

In all, the couple put $30 million into the properties, including millions of dollars in refurbishm­ents and upgrades. Damage from Hurricane Irma in 2017 required extensive repairs, Barnes said. The couple preserved special features that marked Prince’s time in the mansion, including the purple driveway, his large dining room mirrors

and various memorabili­a, Barnes said. He even painted the tennis courts purple.

In 2017, Prince’s half-sister, Sharon Nelson, told The Associated Press that “contrary to what has been said, purple was and is Prince’s color.” While Prince “was fond of many colors in the rainbow, he especially loved the color purple because it represente­d royalty,” and “the color purple always made him feel princely,” Nelson said.

Barnes and his wife began leasing stays at the

mansions last month, the Charlotte Ledger first reported.

Clients have mostly been entertaine­rs, Barnes told the Observer. He said he’d risk losing other people considerin­g leasing the site if he disclosed the entertaine­rs’ names.

The mansions have a combined 17 bedrooms. Seven of the eight bedrooms in Prince’s former mansion have ocean views, the other bedroom a marina view.

Celebrity chef Adrian Forte and a chef who cooked for Prince prepare

your meals, Barnes said. Three butlers tend to you and your guests, and the eight-acre resort has security guards 24/7, though it’s in a secluded, extremely safe area, he said.

The mansions grace a peninsula. On one side, waves crash against a cliff. On the other side, people snorkel and paddleboar­d in a calm bay and enjoy a private beach.

Barnes, who was born in Mexico City, named the resort Emara, which includes “mar,” the Spanish word for sea. The “E” stands for the first letter of

the first name of one of the couple’s sons, 22-year-old Ethan.

The family has loved vacationin­g in Turks and Caicos Islands for many years, including on their sons’ spring breaks, Barnes said. They never owned a home there until they bought the former Prince mansion, he said.

Barnes, who has lived most of his life in the Charlotte area, graduated from the Darla Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina in 1990, with degrees in economics and management science.

Although Barnes considered sports medicine at first, “I decided to study economics because I was tired of being poor,” he said. He credits the business school with providing the foundation for his future success, and in 2018, he and his wife establishe­d the Barnes Family Business Scholarshi­p Endowment Fund at the school to help students in financial need.

Emara is his family’s peaceful getaway, where “you can’t beat the views of the water,” the climate and hospitalit­y of everyone there, he said.

 ?? SEAN BRADY/EMARA PROPERTIES ?? Tom Barnes is leasing stays at a two-mansion property he owns in Turks and Caicos islands, one of which was owned by Prince.
SEAN BRADY/EMARA PROPERTIES Tom Barnes is leasing stays at a two-mansion property he owns in Turks and Caicos islands, one of which was owned by Prince.

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