The Mercury News

A mystery buyer acquires historic Los Altos Hills lodge

Tudor-style manor built on 44 acres sells for $12.74 million

- By George Avalos gavalos@bayareanew­sgroup.com

LOS ALTOS HILLS >> Just bought: a historic Tudor-style manor house that was built nearly 90 years ago on 44 acres in a scenic stretch of Los Altos Hills.

Tucked away in a bucolic setting, the recently purchased property has a rich history reaching back to the Great Depression.

The site has been a residence, a resort, an entertainm­ent center during the Big Band era, a country retreat, restaurant, cocktail lounge and most recently the home of a top former executive with a storied Silicon Valley tech titan.

The seller: Robert Wayman, who for 22 years was the chief financial officer of what then was called Hewlett-Packard Co.

The buyer is an entity that was organized by Francis La Poll. La Poll is a former Los Altos Hills mayor and now is a Palo Altobased estate planner and attorney with considerab­le real estate industry experience.

The property was bought for $12.74 million, according to Santa Clara County records filed Oct. 21.

Save Adobe Creek Lodge is the entity that is the official new owner of the property at 26220 Moody Road in Los Altos Hills. La Poll is listed as a manager for the buyer, according to state documents.

The state records show that a real estate investment company that represents wealthy clients and handles property exchanges also is a key player behind the transactio­n.

When asked to comment, La

Poll’s office contacted this news organizati­on Wednesday and a representa­tive stated that “Mr. La Poll doesn’t discuss client matters.”

First Republic Bank provided the new owner with $7.6 million to help finance the purchase, county documents show.

Adobe Creek Lodge has had a remarkable history over the decades since the first structures were built on the site around 1932.

Among the milestones for the property, according to a post by the Los Altos Hills Historical Society and local historian John Ralston:

• Milton Haas, the first owner and a San Francisco chemical company executive, paid $250,000 to design and build a 17-room English country estate at the site.

“The resulting property was one of the finest on the San Francisco Peninsula, where such estates sprouted after the gold rush as huge fortunes were made and lost,” the historical society stated.

• Henry Waxman, a San Francisco bakery entreprene­ur, bought the property in 1945 and launched commercial uses there. Those included two swimming clubs and a supper club that could accommodat­e 500 patrons.

• Frank Martinelli, a restaurant owner from San Francisco’s famed North Beach district, bought the property in 1955. Martinelli began operating picnic grounds and dining establishm­ents on the property. Five swimming pools, hiking trails, horseshoe pits, sunbathing lawns, basketball courts and baseball fields were added, creating a destinatio­n resort.

• David Bellucci and his brother Alfred Bellucci, hotel executives from Marin County, paid $1 million for the property in 1961. David Bellucci battled for years — but failed — to make Adobe Creek Lodge a long-term commercial site.

“The lodge acquired livery stables, carnival equipment, tennis courts, trailers, a trap and target shooting range, the Tally Ho Restaurant, new swimming pools and trailer houses for employees” under the Bellucci ownership, according to the Los Altos Hills Historical Society.

Adobe Creek Lodge during the 1960s and 1970s was so popular that as many as 8,000 people would visit the property on many weekends. Vehicles choked the country roads that snaked to the site.

In the 1970s, it became clear Los Altos Hills would allow only residentia­l uses on the site.

With the property deteriorat­ing, Bellucci was forced to auction off numerous fixtures such as restaurant furnishing­s, kitchen equipment, garden furniture and tennis nets in 1980.

Bellucci met a violent end. He lived on the Adobe Creek Lodge site until 1993 and then moved to the Santa Cruz County community of Live Oak, where he operated a local casino. He was found savagely beaten in June 1993 in his home and died soon after.

Adobe Creek Lodge tumbled into foreclosur­e and was seized in 1993 by the Resolution Trust Corp.

In 1994, H-P executive Wayman and his wife, Susan, bought the manor and some surroundin­g acreage. The property was in disrepair.

“Adobe Creek Lodge’s original buildings had deteriorat­ed,” the historical society stated. “Bob Wayman remembers a lizard poking up through a hole in the main house’s floor.”

The Waymans launched a wide-ranging upgrade of the crumbling property, Ralston wrote for the historical society.

“The Waymans consulted the archives of the Los Altos history museum and recycled or reproduced original paneling, grilles, doors, cabinets and fixtures,” according to Ralston’s post for the historical society. “The original designs were retained as much as possible.”

Ralston deemed the effort to be successful.

“I venture that Milton Haas would approve of the Waymans’ work,” Ralston said, referring to the property’s first owner.

 ?? COURTESY OF RYAN GOWDY ?? Adobe Creek Lodge in Los Altos Hills is part of a 44-acre estate that features a Tudor-style manor house.
COURTESY OF RYAN GOWDY Adobe Creek Lodge in Los Altos Hills is part of a 44-acre estate that features a Tudor-style manor house.

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