close
close

Semainede4jours

Real-time news, timeless knowledge

Western White House in California is on the market for  million
bigrus

Western White House in California is on the market for $23 million

There’s a new president in California.

Golden State’s famous White House replica It sold for $23 million on Wednesday.

The 24,400-square-foot Georgian Colonial-era mansion known as the “Western White House” was listed for sale in June 2023 and sold for well below its original asking price of $38.9 million.

The Western White House sold for $23 million on Wednesday. Brian Kitts Images / @BrianKitts

“This sprawling, four-story, Julia Morgan-designed home was created by George Hearst in 1930 as a replica of the White House,” said Alex Buljan of real estate firm Compass. Sacramento Bee.

“We are delighted that this historic Hillisborough property has found the private buyer it deserves.”

The San Francisco Area Bay mansion looks much different than when it was last put up for sale.

Previous owners Mehrdad Elie and his wife, Neda Elie, who bought the property for $15 million in 2022, renovated all nine bathrooms, tore down walls in four rooms to create a large kitchen, installed new hardwood floors and added a movie theater.

Like its DC counterpart, the Western White House has its own “Oval Office.” Brian Kitts Images / @BrianKitts
The previous owners spent $6 million renovating the mansion. Brian Kitts Images / @BrianKitts
The mansion had been on the market for 16 months. Brian Kitts Images / @BrianKitts

The $6 million renovation still adheres to the original architectural details, according to Compass.

The D.C.-inspired West White House features a wood-paneled “Oval Office,” a rose garden, and plenty of impressive columns.

It also has 11 bedrooms, a fitness centre, swimming pool and wine cellar.

The 24,400 square meter Georgian Colonial Building dates back to 1878. Brian Kitts Images / @BrianKitts

The house dates back to 1878, when it was built for a real estate developer and cattle rancher named William Henry Howard, who later sold it to Charles Frederick Crocker, heir to the Central Pacific Railroad fortune.

In 1897, about 10 years after Crocker’s death, the family sold the house without the land underneath it to a developer, who moved the mansion a half-mile away, leaving it on 2.9 acres.

It eventually fell into the hands of George Hearst, son of media mogul William Randolph Hearst; In 1930, Hearst commissioned architect Julia Morgan to rebuild the house and transform it into the Western White House.