Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Tags:   purchase, Donald Trump, real estate, South Florida Homes, home buyers, investment property, south ocean boulevard, exclusive estates, auction, million, single family homes, oceanfront, palm beach, Beachfront Homes, luxury, mansion, home selling, Palm Beach Real Estate Market, property, sales

Previously unnamed, the buyer of Donald Trump’s $100 million oceanfront estate is Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev, according to reports.

Rybolovlev is said to have acquired his fortune in the fertilizer industry and has no plans to relocate his primary residence to the United States, commenting to news sources that this latest purchase is merely an investment.

Trump bought the property four years ago at auction for $41.4 million and poured $25 million into renovations, producing a 62,000 square foot estate with nine bedrooms, conservatory, ballroom, art gallery, two guest houses and 48-car garage.

Rybolovlev was listed at number 59 on the Forbes list of billionaires, estimated at a worth of $12.8 billion.

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Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Tags:   manalapan, sale, fatio, mansion, auction, south ocean boulevard, vanderbilt, historic, randolph hearst, veronica hearst, landmark

 

 

One of the country’s most expensive residences, the Hearst mansion, sold at a foreclosure auction on Monday for a bid of $22 million from New Stream Capital.  According to the attorney representing Veronica Hearst, the property will go back on the market so the creditor can recoup its investment.

 

The 20,000 square foot home was designed by Maurice Fatio and bought by Randolph Hearst in mid-2000 for $29.87 million, at that time the highest sale price on record in the state.  Hearst passed away six months later, leaving his widow Veronica without the means to maintain the property.

 

Veronica Hearst borrowed millions against the home’s value to pay for property taxes and renovations.  She sold 150 feet on the property’s south end for $6.2 million, explaining that potential buyers were uncomfortable with the considerable size of the home.  She stated that, with an older property – the home was built in 1929 – you can either destroy it or refurbish it, and her decision as the owner was to refurbish it.

 

However, to some, any change to the historic home is unacceptable.  According to one source, the daughter of the architect who designed the home says that any variation from the original design is wrong. 

 

The home is located at 1100 S. Ocean Blvd. in Manalapan, which does not have a preservation board that may have been able to block Hearst’s decision to split the lot if it had been designated a landmark.

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