A stunning 187-year-old mansion located in the South of
France may become the most expensive sale of a residential home in history.
Villa Les Cèdres is now listed for €351 million (about $410 million), Bloomberg
reports.
Sitting on 35 acres of land, the 18,000-square-foot home
boasts 14-bedrooms, a pond filled with lily pads, 14,000 different plant
species, a bronze Athena statue draped with a marble tunic and 300-year-old
olive trees. The mansion was built in 1830 along the coast of
Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, and features sweeping views of Villefranche-sur-Mer and
the Alps, according to Bloomberg.
The villa's path is lined with palms and cedar trees (or
cèdres in French), which gives the house its name. Inside, the home features
chandeliers, floor-to-ceiling 19th century portraits, grand rooms, French
doors, and library housing 3,000 books on naturalism and flora. According to
Bloomberg, one of the books in the library is a "1640 edition of a
botanical codex worth several hundred thousand euros."
The mansion has 10 bedrooms, a ballroom and a chapel, a 50m
swimming pool built into the rocks, a winter garden, concierge, 35 acres of
manicured lawns and a stable for 30 horses, according to French media. It was
built around 1830. The estate was purchased in 1850 by the mayor of
Villefranche-sur-Mer when it was an olive tree farm, and in 1904 it became
Belgium King Leopold II's vacation home.
The Marnier-Lapostolle family, the makers of Grand Marnier
Liquer, owned the estate after the king died, and the family used the land to
grow plants and oranges to flavor their products, reports Bloomberg. Campari
acquired Grand Marnier’s parent company Société des Produits Marnier Lapostolle
in 2016, passing the home's ownership over once again—but the company quickly
put the mansion up for sale.
According to Bloomberg, the rumor that the mansion was
originally listed for €1 billion (about $1.2 billion) is false. However, the
home's prime location may earn it the Euro 351 Million ( $410 million) price tag.
Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat is considered to be one of the most sought-after of the
Caps. In addition, Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen and composer Andrew
Lloyd Webber each own villas nearby.
For Euro 351 Million ($410 million), you can truly live like royalty in this
gorgeous historic estate.
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