Los Angeles Times

Four walls, a roof and so much more

Sale of custom Bel-Air contempora­ry is county’s priciest in November.

- By Neal J. Leitereg

A Bel-Air mansion built on speculatio­n, the onetime Hollywood Hills address of a Hilton sister and a television host’s Beverly Hills home were among the priciest real estate transactio­ns in Los Angeles County in November. Here’s a closer look.

$20.5 million — Bel-Air

On Orum Road, a contempora­ry-style showplace with a 500gallon custom aquarium sold for about $500,000 less than the asking price of $20.995 million.

The multilevel house, which abuts the Bel-Air Golf Course, was built this year and features an 11-foot front door, polished glass floors and leathered marble details. An unusual limestone staircase sits beyond the entry.

Within a little over 10,000 square feet of interior are five bedrooms, seven bathrooms, a cigar room, a home theater and a cabana room. The master suite, measuring some 2,200 square feet, has a bar, a sitting room and dual bathrooms.

A 62-foot infinity-edge swimming pool sits at the edge of the acre-plus property.

James Harris, David Parnes, Mauricio Umansky and Farrah Aldjufrie of the Agency were the listing agents. Jonah Wilson of Hilton & Hyland represente­d the buyer.

$19.65 million — Bel-Air

A limited liability company tied to Ronald P. Spogli, a venture capitalist and former United States ambassador to Italy and San Marino, paid $8.35 million less than the original asking price for an Italianate-style home on BelAir Road.

Marketed as a developmen­t opportunit­y, the property was offered with plans for a French Regency-inspired chateau designed by mega-mansion architect Richard Landry. The proposed residence would have 24,000 square feet of living space including

a 4,000-square-foot subterrane­an garage.

The current residence, built in 1990, features a formal entry that opens to a beamed-ceiling living room with a fireplace.

A formal dining room, a home theater, an office, a gym, five bedrooms and seven bathrooms also lie within about 11,650 square feet of interior.

Outside, box hedges and towering cypress frame formal gardens, statuaries and lawn. There’s also a swimming pool with a spa.

The seller was a corporate entity tied to entreprene­ur and commercial real estate investor Aron Abecassis.

David Parnes and Mauricio Umansky of the Agency had the

listing. Steve Frankel of Coldwell Banker Residentia­l Brokerage represente­d the buyer.

$17.5 million — Hollywood Hills West

On Sierra Alta Way, a nearly 14,000-square-foot contempora­ry home sold after three years on and off the market. It had been listed for as much as $22.9 million.

Set on a third of an acre, the multilevel house replaced a traditiona­l-style house on the site that was once owned by socialite and model Nicky Hilton Rothschild. Rothschild sold the property in 2013 for $2.625 million; the new house was built in 2015.

The glitzy residence, with a

pivoting door at the entrance, has soaring ceilings, a floating-style staircase and walls of glass elements. A 21-foot motorized wine rack connects to the upstairs master wing and dining room.

On the basement level, which includes a lounge and a theater, a large picture window looks into the bottom of the swimming pool. Steel and glass folding doors enclose the seven-car gallery/display space.

Mauricio Umansky and Farrah Aldjufrie of the Agency were the listing agents of record. Michael Libow of Coldwell Banker represente­d the buyer.

$17.5 million — Malibu

A Delaware limited liability company paid $1 million less than the asking price for the longtime Malibu Road home of Howard

Flagg, the late founder and president of the DSL technology company Pairgain Technologi­es.

Found within gated Malibu Colony, the blue-tiled beach dwelling sits on a quarter-acre lot with a guesthouse, a teahouse and a lap swimming pool. Extensive decking overlooks the ocean and sandy beachfront.

Inside, the house holds an updated kitchen with a center island, a family room with a fireplace, four bedrooms and 4.5 bathrooms. Additional living space and a second kitchen lie in the guesthouse.

Shirley and Brittany Sherman of Douglas Elliman had the listing. Susan Monus of Coldwell Banker Residentia­l Brokerage represente­d the buyer. $15.43 million — Beverly Hills

Talk-show host Leeza Gibbons and her husband, writer-producer

Steve Fenton, sold their home on North Maple Drive to a Delaware limited liability company for about $1.6 million less than the asking price.

Set on a half-acre of grounds, the traditiona­l-style two-story features 6,570 square feet of living space, detailed woodwork, five bedrooms and six bathrooms.

There are fireplaces in the family room, living room, library/ den, master bedroom and master bath.

A second foyer and private balcony are part of the master suite.

Folding doors open to the rear, revealing a tiered patio, a swimming pool, lawn and fireplace. A two-story guesthouse, which has its own living room, kitchen, bedroom and three bathrooms, sits across from the main house.

Jade Mills of Coldwell Banker Residentia­l and Gregg Silver of Keller Williams Beverly Hills are the co-listing agents.

Valerie Fitzgerald, also with Coldwell Banker, represente­d the buyer.

neal.leitereg@latimes.com Twitter: @LATHotProp­erty

 ?? The Agency ?? THIS BEL-AIR HOME sold for $20.5 million. It is 10,000 square feet with five bedrooms and seven bathrooms. The 2,200-square-foot master suite has a bar, a sitting room and dual bathrooms.
The Agency THIS BEL-AIR HOME sold for $20.5 million. It is 10,000 square feet with five bedrooms and seven bathrooms. The 2,200-square-foot master suite has a bar, a sitting room and dual bathrooms.

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