Get Paid To Promote, Get Paid To Popup, Get Paid Display Banner
Showing posts with label celebrity mansion for sale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celebrity mansion for sale. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Larry House Home !!! Larry House’s Guitar House in Shoal Creek, AL

It must be a rock star’s home! It must belong to someone who loves guitars! Wrong and wrong! This home at 7 Montagel Way, Shoal Creek, AL, was actually owned by Larry House, the former CEO of MedPartners, a physician management company. If that name doesn’t ring a bell, this association might: In 1993, House was installed as MedPartners CEO by his mentor, former HealthSouthChairman and CEO Richard Scrushy, who is now serving jail time for his conviction for wide-ranging fraud within the HealthSouth Corporation.

House reportedly spent $26 million building this French-chateau-style home on 27 acres; the guitar-shaped driveway was reportedly his whimsical idea. Highlights include hand-painted frescoes in soaring domes, 15 bedrooms, 22 bathrooms, a 13-car temperature-controlled garage, a 25-seat home theater, a full-sized commercial elevator, and a 2,000-bottle wine cellar.

According to the NY Times, House’s troubles came to a head in 1998 “…after a merger with a rival fell apart and the company took a $145 million charge against earnings.” House also lost money in a contentious 1997 divorce, his involvement in a second company (Venturehouse), and millions in state and federal tax liens against his home, which forced him to sell.

House’s 34,000 sq ft home was auctioned for $3.95 million in 2003 — much lower than the $8 to $13 million anticipated. It is now for sale again, for $17,900,000.

> See more Shoal Creek real estate

> See Alabama home values

5 More Celebrity Real Estate Blunders

LOS ANGELES (TheStreet) -- No matter how big they are, how many cars their garages fit, how many pools they have or how many of them a celebrity owns around the world, celebrity homes are subject to the same market forces as anyone else's.

Investing millions of dollars in a home doesn't mean a celebrity won't take a bath if the market wanes or their own finances whittle away. Real estate data firm RealtyTrac found that foreclosures rose to a record 1.05 million last year, eclipsing the previous record of 918,000 a year earlier. That means 26% of all homes sold in 2010 were foreclosures.

That came during a period when personal bankruptcies rose 9%, to more than 1.5 million, reaching their highest point since bankruptcy law reform was introduced in 2005, according to the American Bankruptcy Institute and National Bankruptcy Research Center. Meanwhile, the National Association of realtors notes that the median price of existing homes plunged from $198,100 in 2008 to $158,800 in January.

Those foreclosure numbers aren't expected to wane anytime soon. RealtyTrac found that 2.9 million homes got foreclosure notices in 2010, with 20% more than that total expected to be in trouble this year.

Celebrities may be better able to weather a huge loss on a home sale, but that doesn't mean they're immune from losing a bundle on their extra-large listings.

Scarlett Johansson

Scarlett Johansson

When you lose $2 million on your house and that's not even your biggest public loss of the year, that's a pretty good sign you're on the A-list.

Such are the woes of Scarlett Johansson, who parted with $7 million for a 1931-vintage Spanish hillside villa in Los Angeles' swanky Outpost Estates neighborhood back in 2007, the same year she started dating Ryan Reynolds.

After three years, one marriage, turns in Iron Man 2 and Woody Allen's Vicky Cristina Barcelona and renovations to the mansion including windows, doors, appliances and tech upgrades, Johansson inexplicably turned around and listed her 4,300-square-foot, seven-bedroom manse in 2009 for $5.1 million.

Maybe neighbors such as Charlize Theron, Felicity Huffman, William H. Macy and Orlando Bloom gave off too much star power to get a decent sleep without blackout curtains. Maybe the lap pool and spa were just too small. Either way, she likely didn't have time to look the place over before she left; she sold it for just less than $5 million. Six months later, she and Reynolds called it quits.


Beck

Beck

It's getting tougher to figure Beck out. When fans think he's a stripped-down antifolk hero, he goes and blows some serious cash just to remind them he's a millionaire Scientologist.

At least now they can safely subtract "real estate expert" from his resume. Last year alone, Beck lost about $1.5 million trying to flip two properties in a tough California housing market.

The first -- a 1,600-square-foot, three-bedroom, two bathroom ranch with a two-bedroom guest house with a massive fireplace -- sold for $1.7 million last February after Beck bought it for $2.1 million in 2007. As Beck's losses go, dropping $400,000 is like dropping a $10 bill on the subway.

Beck probably didn't count on that three-year strategy biting him twice when he bought a 5,700-square-foot, six-bedroom, nine-bathroom home with a library, recording studio and lane pool for $6.8 million back in 2007. In fact, he had such high hopes for the place that he put it back up a year later for $9 million.

Years passed, the recession came, fewer people cared that Beck was the guy who sang Loser and the property lingered on the market until last year, when it caught the eye of Grey's Anatomy and Private Practice producer and writer Shonda Rimes. Instead of meeting Beck where he was at, however, Rimes saw his unrealistic asking price and undercut it by about $4.4 million -- or $1.2 less than Beck initially paid. Loser, indeed

Lenny Kravitz

Lenny Kravitz

If you think Beck would have had an easier time in New York, just ask Kravitz how little the homebuying public is willing to spend on '90s rock stars' unwanted real estate. In Kravitz's case, though, it wasn't as much about money as it was about timing.

Back in 2001 -- when Kravitz was still three years into his streak of winning four Best Male Recording Artist Grammy awards, still had songs such as Again and Dig In getting airplay, was making cameos in films such as Zoolander and was generally cared about -- the rocker listed a 6,000-square-foot, five-bedroom, seven-bathroom duplex in New York's Soho for more than $17 million.

Though the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, took a toll on all New York real estate, the property failure at Kravitz's peak should have been the first warning sign. Three years later, Kravitz dropped the asking price to roughly $13 million. The 3,000 feet of outdoor space wasn't enough, however, and Kravitz had to take the place back off the market in prerecession 2006.

Kravitz then put $1 million worth of work into the place, brightening it with a marble fireplace, two suspended glass staircases, a terrace with a wood-burning fireplace and roof deck with a built-in barbecue. The asking price this time around? Back up to $19.5 million.

Anyone who's tried to sell property in the past four years -- high-end or otherwise -- knows what happened next. Kravitz's home languished for another three years until Kravitz's agents smacked some sense into his selling price and dropped it to $14.9 million.

That was the magic number. Alicia Keys and Swizz Beats took the place off his hands last year.

Kravitz isn't taking it too badly: He still owns properties in Paris, New Orleans and Rio, among other places, and still sold the Soho place for more than the $7 million to $8 million he paid for it in 2001. By having no clue about the real estate world around him or how bigger events could influence his seemingly small sale, Kravitz went $1 million and almost 10 years into pocket just to unload a place he clearly never wanted.


Nicholas Cage

Nicholas Cage

Instead of just taking every bad sci-fi and "action" script thrown at him, Nicolas Cage should just concede his money troubles and make a documentary called How To Take A Multimillion-Dollar Bath.

Cage has a $1.7 million home in Newport Beach, Calif., listed for less than $1 million and a $15.7 million Rhode Island estate on the market for $7.8 million. It seems crazy, but so does Cage's roughly three-year adventure in the real estate market.

In 2009, the IRS filed a put a lien on some of Cage's property in Louisiana and said he owed them roughly $6 million for purchases made in 2007. Cage wasn't undergoing quick sessions of shop therapy at the local mall, mind you, but picking up that Rhode Island mansion, the more than $8 million Milford Castle in Bath, England, and some car leases: a five-year, $7,700-a-month lease on a 1964 Rolls Royce SC III; and a $3,600-a-month lease on a 2002 Rolls Royce Corniche.

As a result, his two $3.5 million homes in New Orleans were sold back to the bank for a combined $4.5 million, an $8.5 million home in Las Vegas went for $5 million, a $9.5 million Manhattan apartment for $7.5 million and -- most crushing -- a Bel-Air Tudor mansion he'd listed for $35 million hit the bargain bin at $10.5 million after it went into foreclosure.

Cage sued his business manager for $20 million over these losses in 2009, which which didn't do much good when that manager countersued and spilled the beans about other portions of his spree, including $33 million in homes, 22 cars, 47 pieces of artwork and a $276,000 skull of a Tarbosaurus dinosaur.


Toni Braxton

Toni Braxton

If ever there was a year for Toni Braxton to write another sad love song, it was 2010.

The six-time Grammy winner saw her $2.6 million home in Henderson, Nev., go into foreclosure and sell for little more than $1 million after she and her company, Liberty Entertainment, filed for bankruptcy last September. Braxton ran up debt ranging from $10 million to $50 million against only $1 million to $10 million in assets, and the worst of her troubles haven't ended.

Her $1.2 million home in Duluth, Ga., just went into foreclosure proceedings, marking the latest financial aftershock from a string of dates Braxton canceled in Las Vegas in 2008 after chest pains she experienced during performances. Those pains were later diagnosed as a heart problem that insurer Lloyd's of London called a "pre-existing condition" when refusing to cover her losses.

Later that year, she was forced to pull out of the series finale of ABC's Dancing With The Stars when she had a breast tumor removed. Braxton can't be blamed for her health issues, but creditors including the Internal Revenue Service, Flamingo Las Vegas hotel and casino, the Four Seasons Hotel in Washington, D.C., Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Neiman Marcus, the Screen Actors Guild, RCA Music Group and Tiffany & Co.(TIF_) aren't very sympathetic.

If anyone knows the difference between medical hardship and outright financial irresponsibility, though, it's Braxton. This is the singer's second bankruptcy after filing in 1998. Unlike her current situation, her past troubles were brought on by a split with her record label and poor financial choices, including accumulating $500,000 in overdraft fees in 1997 alone.



Edgar Allan Poe House !!! Where Poe Spent a Midday, Cheery





Edgar Allan Poe is famous for his ability to craft stories and poems of dread. But the author of "The Raven" and "The Tell-Tale Heart" took a break from massaging the macabre when he wrote a story that largely focused on just describing this property's beauty.

Built in the Colonial era, this $1.285 million property in Philadelphia received periodic visits from Poe, who became enamored with its fecund landscape. Spanning 1.62 acres, the residence overlooks a verdant valley that runs down to Wissahickon Creek. Poe made the river and its surroundings the setting of his travel story, "Morning on the Wissahiccon" (in which he recommended that travelers visit in "the brightest glare of the noonday sun" to appreciate the setting's full beauty and avoid any "dreariness of effect").

Named "Spring Bank," the 7,500-square-foot, three-story home has seven bedrooms, six bathrooms and a luxury eat-in kitchen. It also boasts an enclosed back porch -- along with an abundance of windows -- that afford views stunning enough to have brightened the mood of an author who specialized in chronicling bad ones.

Loretta C. Witt of Fox & Roach, Realtors, has the listing.

Harare - Residential - Ballantyne Park !!! Zimbabwe Harare Mansions For Sale

CONTACT ROS HOUGHTON ON:
CELL: +2637721153645
EMAIL: ros@rictonproperties.com

Please visit our website (www.rictonproperties.com) to view this and more great properties.

PRICE: US$1,500,000.00 ONO

3 acres - Beautiful, large, thatched home with cottage, tennis court, swimming pool, offices, cottage, salon/office. Gorgeous, character filled, established garden.

The 10 Cities With The Most Underwater Mortgages

1995 North California flood

Image: roger4336 via Flickr

Last week, President Obama announced he would extend the mortgage refinancing program in an effort to provide relief to homeowners whose mortgages are worth more than the value of their homes.

Nationwide, one in four homeowners with a mortgage — 11 million households — has an underwater mortgage. The problem is even worse in some areas of the country.

Click here to see the most underwater cities >

24/7 Wall St. has identified the ten cities with the most underwater mortgages.

Most of the cities on our list are in regions worst hit by the housing crash. These areas are all in California, Florida or the Southwest — all of which were booming housing markets before the recession hit.

In the U.S., just fewer than 15% of homes were built in the last ten years. But in some of the cities on our list of highest underwater mortgages, that number is 25% and higher.

The high supply may have contributed to the sinking home values in those cities. In the case of Las Vegas, house prices have dropped by roughly 60% from peak prerecession values, and they continue to drop to this day.

In the cities with the most underwater mortgages, home prices have dropped by an average of 8.42%, and as much as 14% in the past 12 months.

To make matters worse, the employment situation in these metropolitan areas is in worse shape than in most of the country. This is partially the result of a once-booming construction industry that has since collapsed. Of the ten regions on this list, nine have an unemployment rate that is higher than the national average of 9.1%. Many of the regions have unemployment rates that are some of the worst in the country, such as Modesto and Stockton, California.

Using data obtained from housing data and analytics firm CoreLogic, 24/7 Wall identified the ten regions built around an urban center — core-based statistical areas — with housing markets that had the highest percent of homes with underwater mortgages.

This data was compared to the number of sales of homes that had been repossessed, known as REO sales, and distressed sales (sales by homeowners who could not continue to make mortgage payments) for the same regions. Unemployment data was obtained from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Data on homes built since 2000 was obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau.

These are the American cites sunk by underwater mortgages →

This post originally appeared at 24/7 Wall St.


10. Bakersfield-Delano, California

Pct. homes underwater: 48.75%
12-month home price change: -9.58%
Homes built 2000 or later: 21.1%
Unemployment: 14.4% (tied for 11th highest)

Nearly 50% of the homes in the Bakersfield-Delano metropolitan area are currently underwater. In the past 12 months, homes have lost nearly 10% of their value, much more since the housing market first collapsed.

Distressed sales have accounted for more than half of total sales in the past year, likely because of the difficult economic conditions in the region. To make matters that much more difficult, the area has an unemployment rate of 14.4%, the 11th highest in the country.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

9. Lakeland-Winter Haven, Florida

9. Lakeland-Winter Haven, Florida
Pct. homes underwater: 50.33%
12-month home price change: -4.59%
Homes built 2000 or later: 25.2%
Unemployment: 12.1% (30th highest)

The metropolitan area of Lakeland-Winter Haven is located in central Florida. Due in part to the development of retirement communities across the state, more than one in four standing homes have been built since 2000, compared to a national average of just 14.9%.

Like most of the rest of the state, the region has been hit hard by the recession. To date, more than half the area’s mortgages are underwater, over 21% of housing units are vacant, and a total of 35.06% of home sales in the past year have been distressed.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

8. Port St. Lucie, Florida

8. Port St. Lucie, Florida

Image: flickr

Pct. homes underwater: 50.89%
12-month home price change: -4.68%
Homes built 2000 or later: 25.2%
Unemployment: 12.8% (22nd highest)

Nearly 18% of the homes sold in the Port St. Lucie region in the past 12 months have been properties that were originally foreclosed upon.

Just about 35% of home sales in the past year have been distressed sales. The region has an unemployment rate of 12.8%, the 22nd highest in the country, and a median household income of $41,346, nearly $9,000 lower than the national average.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

7. Vallejo-Fairfield, California

7. Vallejo-Fairfield, California

Image: flickr

Pct. homes underwater: 53.29%
12-month home price change: -10.5%
Homes built 2000 or later: 14.1%
Unemployment: 11.6% (40th highest)

Despite the area’s exceptionally high median household income, the Vallejo-Fairfield metropolitan area’s housing market is suffering on all fronts. Home prices have dropped 10.5% in just 12 months. Just over 14% of homes in the area were built in 2000 or later.

Additionally, 60.57% of total sales in the past 12 months have been distressed sales, the second greatest rate among metro areas on this list.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

6. Modesto, California

6. Modesto, California

Image: Zillow

Pct. homes underwater: 53.30%
12-month home price change: -9.22%
Homes built 2000 or later: 18.3%
Unemployment: 16% (6th highest)

In the past 12 months, home prices in Modesto have dropped more than 9%, one of the contributing causes of the 53.3% of the region’s mortgages to be underwater. As proof of the high level of foreclosures that has occurred in recent years, more than 40% of last year’s home sales were properties that had been foreclosed upon by a lender and resold.

Of the 372 areas considered by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Modesto has the 6th highest unemployment rate in the country. At 16%, it is nearly double the national average.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

5. Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, Florida

5. Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, Florida
Pct. homes underwater: 53.42%
12-month home price change: -3.14%
Homes built 2000 or later: 27.7%
Unemployment: 10.3% (83rd highest)

More than one in four houses in the Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford metropolitan area in Florida was built in 2000 or later. Now, 20.7% of all housing units are vacant. Nearly three-quarters of occupied homes have a mortgage on them, far above the national average of 67%.

At 10.3%, Orlando’s unemployment rate is significantly higher than the national average, and its median household income is about $3,500 less than the national average. These figures will make recovery even more difficult for the region.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

4. Reno-Sparks, Nevada

Pct. homes underwater: 53.74%
12-month home price change: -14.19%
Homes built 2000 or later: 21.8%
Unemployment: 13% (20th highest)

Home prices in the Reno-Sparks area have declined 14.19% in the past 12 months alone, one of the highest rates of decline in the country.

To date, more than 53% of mortgages in the region are underwater, and nearly one out of every five homes sold in the past year have been a short sale, meaning homeowners still owe money to lenders even after selling their property. The unemployment rate in the region is 13%, the 20th highest rate among all metropolitan areas in the country.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

3. Stockton, California

3. Stockton, California

Image: Zillow

Pct. homes underwater: 53.89%
12-month home price change: -6.46%
Homes built 2000 or later: 19.9%
Unemployment: 16.1% (5th highest)

The Stockton area is located in central California. Many of the jobs in this area are on farms. These positions are rarely permanent and employment in the region has dropped dramatically since the recession began.

Currently, the metro area has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country — 16.1%. The percentage of home sales in the past 12 months that have been distressed sales is one of the higher rates in the country — 53.45% — and the rate of short sales is nearly 20%. Nearly one in every five homes in the metropolitan area was built in 2000 or later.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

2. Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, Arizona

Pct. homes underwater: 53.96%
12-month home price change: -9.81%
Homes built 2000 or later: 28%
Unemployment: 8.4% (202nd highest)

Compared to most of the other regions on our list, residents of the Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale metro area are actually doing relatively well. The unemployment rate of 8.4% is historically high for the region but well below the national average. The region also has a higher median income than the U.S. median. Nevertheless, nearly 54% of all mortgages are underwater, owing in part to a nearly 10% decline in home values in the past 12 months. Half of all home sales have been distressed sales, and more than 30% of sales have been of homes that were recently repossessed.

Source: 24/7 Wall St.

1. Las Vegas-Paradise, Nevada

1. Las Vegas-Paradise, Nevada

Image: las.mlxchange.com

Pct. homes underwater: 63.96%
12-month home price change: -12.07%
Homes built 2000 or later: 35%
Unemployment: 14.2% (tied for 11th highest)

Almost two out of every three homes with a mortgage in the Las Vegas-Paradise metropolitan area is underwater. This is, by far, the highest rate in the country, and it is ten percentage points greater than the metro area with the second highest rate.

The past decade brought an exceptional amount of growth to the region’s housing market, with 35% of homes being built in 2000 or later. Currently, 16.9% of housing units are vacant, while 79% of occupied homes have a mortgage. In the past 12 months alone, home prices have dropped over 12% in Las Vegas-Paradise.

Source: 24/7 Wall St