Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Bragging Rights: Estate is priciest house for sale in U.S.

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The Bel-Air estate of late Univision billionair­e A. Jerrold Perenchio, a French neoclassic­al mansion known as Chartwell, is on the market for the high-water price of $245 million.

Now the most expensive home for sale in the U.S., the estate ison track to topple the Los Angeles County price record of $110 million, which was set in April when Peter Morton sold his oceanfront home in Malibu.

Classic television watchers may remember the sprawling main residence from the credits of “The Beverly Hillbillie­s” sitcom. However, the property has long had its place among L.A.’s great estates.

The 25,000-square-foot mansion, which dates to 1935, was designed by architect Sumner Spaulding and built for civil engineer Lynn Atkinson. Perenchio acquired the property and three contiguous parcels in 1986, becoming the estate’s third owner.

Evoking an 18th-century chateau, the home boasts scaled formal rooms, a ballroom, a wine cellar and a paneled dining room.

On the grounds, which encompass more than 10 acres, walls and hedges divide formal gardens, fields and specimen trees. A nearby guesthouse was designed by Wallace Neff, and the 75-foot swimming pool is accompanie­d by a pool house.

There’s also a tennis court and a covered parking area for 40 cars.

Perenchio, former chairman and chief executive of Univision, died in 2017 at 86. Since his passing, Perenchio’s estate has listed and sold a number of properties, including two homes and land in Malibu. Another Bel-Air property recently sold for $16 million.

 ??  ?? JIM BARTSCH/PERENCHIO-CHARTWELL
JIM BARTSCH/PERENCHIO-CHARTWELL

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