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    This $8.2 Million Converted Warehouse in London Once Housed the Pet Shop Boys’ Recording Studio

    Back in the ’80s, it was synths, stardom, and studio sessions for the Pet Shop Boys at this Clerkenwell warehouse that once echoed with the beats of West End Girls. Today, the building is hitting a different kind of high note as a three-story, design-forward live-work space listed for £6 million (about $8.2 million) with Savills.

    It was home to the artist and filmmaker Sam Taylor-Johnson, who rented the ground-floor studio space to the six-time Grammy-nominated duo while she lived upstairs. The keys were eventually shared with her husband, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, the Avengers: Age of Ultron and Kick-Ass star who—drumroll, martinis please—is reportedly the frontrunner to star as Agent 007 in the next James Bond movie.

    RELATED: This $33.2 Million Private Island in the U.K. Has Long Been an Under-the-Radar Creative Haven

    The 60-foot-long great room is framed by exposed wood beams and Crittall steel windows and doors.

    Daisy Powles/Savills

    Following their tenure, the couple sold the home to film director Joe Wright (Pride & Prejudice, Atonement) and Grammy-nominated sitar player Anoushka Shankar. They called in architect Charles Tashima for a top-to-bottom renovation that respected the rustic bones of the Victorian warehouse while adding flourishes that feel very contemporary. Think Moroccan tiles, reclaimed wood, and limestone salvaged from Heathrow Terminal 2, The London Standard reported.

    The overall result is a seriously stylish 4,414-square-foot bohemian sanctuary hidden in plain sight, just minutes from the Barbican and, of course, the West End. Behind the original wagon doors (a nod to its 19th-century life as part of the Whitbread Brewery complex), you’ll find a private courtyard and a nearly 60-foot-long living/dining room framed by exposed beams and floor-to-ceiling Crittall windows. Capping it off is a rooftop terrace.

    RELATED: Sting’s Former Home in London’s Leafy Hampstead Just Hit the Market for $16.4 Million

    Frosted window panes add privacy to the airy primary bedroom.

    Daisy Powles/Savills

    On the ground floor, the Pet Shop Boys’ former studio is still fully soundproofed but is currently used as a commercial space, though you could easily turn it back into a creative suite if the musical mood strikes. Upstairs, there are three bedrooms, four bathrooms, and plenty of tucked-away surprises, including a laundry space hidden behind oak paneling and a reading nook that could be converted to a fourth bedroom.

    The current owners, a tech entrepreneur and a publisher, have added their own twists, including deep orange rubber flooring in the entry hall and a bespoke kitchen built for entertaining. The property is freehold (meaning the land beneath the structure is owned) and zoned for mixed use, giving you flexibility whether you’re composing synth-pop bangers, plotting the next indie film, prepping for a screen test as Britain’s favorite spy, or just relaxing with friends and family. And while it may no longer double as a recording studio, rest assured—it’s still Bond-level discreet.

    Click here to see more photos of the boho London loft.

    Daisy Powles/Savills

    Authors

    Abby Montanez

    Abigail Montanez is a staff writer at Robb Report. She has worked in both print and digital publishing for over half a decade, covering everything from real estate, entertainment, dining, travel to…

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    Tom Petty’s Longtime Malibu Estate Could Now Be Yours for $15.5 Million

    If you were hoping to run down that dream of owning a musically pedigreed SoCal home last year and the $19 million price tag was just a little too hefty at the time, don’t back down now. Tom Petty’s longtime main digs nestled within a gated enclave high above Malibu’s Pacific Coast Highway just popped back up for sale with a new ask, and it’s $3.5 million less than before.

    All you need is a cool $15.5 million, and you can happily claim the coveted keys to the legendary musician’s Mediterranean-style estate. Myra Nourmand and Levi Freeman of Nourmand & Associates hold the listing.

    The creamy stucco and terracotta-roof home is accessed via a portico entryway.

    Pierre Galant

    RELATED: David Duchovny’s Malibu Home and Train Caboose Guest Cottage Sell for $11 Million

    Petty, who passed away in 2017 at age 66, purchased the property in spring 1998 for $3.75 million. Tucked away on nearly three acres near Escondido Beach and Paradise Cove, off a private lane that’s shared with three other homes, the updated 1940s spread includes a main home, a separate guesthouse, and another structure that served as a recording studio—for a total of seven bedrooms and 10 baths in roughly 10,000 square feet.

    The living room’s vaulted wood-beam ceiling is dotted with skylights donning hand-carved covers.

    Pierre Galant

    Standing out within the single-level primary dwelling is a sunken fireside living room, which features skylights embellished with hand-carved covers and French doors opening out to a trellised patio. Other highlights include a 16-seat dining room sequestered behind archways accented with wrought-iron detailing, plus a kitchen outfitted with an eat-in island, a Wolf range, a butler’s pantry, and a breakfast nook.

    Elsewhere is a music room where the rocker liked to perfect his tunes, as well as a bookshelf-lined library, a gym, and a massage room. An inviting primary suite has a fireplace, a private fountain-clad patio, a huge walk-in closet, and a luxe bath equipped with a soaking tub and a Moroccan-tiled steam shower.

    The sports court on the property is ideal for basketball and pickleball.

    Pierre Galant

    RELATED: Reality TV Titan Mark Burnett Is Asking $350,000 Per Month for His Blufftop Estate in Malibu

    Three more en suite guest bedrooms open to a brick courtyard with a sitting area, while the garden-laced grounds host a pool and spillover spa, an alfresco dining terrace with a built-in barbecue, an in-ground fire pit, a lighted sports court, koi ponds, and cascading waterfalls. There’s also a gated parking area out front that can accommodate at least 15 vehicles.

    Petty’s estate also still lays claim to a small bungalow in Pacific Palisades. His oceanfront Malibu cottage quickly sold to Canadian hotel mogul Salim Sayanin in early 2023 for nearly $10.3 million, which was $400,000 over the asking price; and in late 2023, the musician’s widow, Dana York, paid $6.6 million for a revamped 1920s Spanish Colonial Revival-style home in the Holmby Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles.

    Click here for more photos of the SoCal residence.

    Pierre Galant

    Authors

    Wendy Bowman

    Wendy Bowman is a real estate writer at Robb Report. Before that, she was a freelancer for Modern Luxury and several other media outlets, where she primarily covered luxury properties for…

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    A Dr. Seuss Collaborator’s Former N.Y.C. Townhouse Can Be Yours for $13.5 Million

    Ever wish walls could talk? If the ones within this Upper East Side townhouse long owned by the late Phyllis Cerf Wagner could indeed speak, they most assuredly would have their share of fascinating tales to spin. Think stories of all the famous guests from Judy Garland to Frank Sinatra who visited the historic premises at some point during a 60-plus-year tenure that saw the Manhattan socialite, onetime movie actress, and collaborator with Dr. Seuss on a series of landmark children’s books outlive not just one but two prominent spouses.

    Records show Wagner purchased the Italianate-style property in 1941 with her first husband Bennett Cerf, co-founder of the Random House publishing company. After he died in 1971, she went on to wed former New York City mayor Robert Wagner Jr., who passed away in in 1991, and then remained in the home until her death in 2006 at age 90. The residence subsequently sold for $8.5 million to jewelry designer Suzanne Sheik, the mother of Barely Breathing singer Duncan Sheik, before going to the current unnamed owner in 2010 for $14 million.

    Now the towering 16-room spread between Lexington and Park avenues in the Lenox Hill neighborhood is being offered for $13.5 million, with the listing shared by James Weiss, Andrew Schwartz, and Ty Mabry of The Corcoran Group.

    Phyllis at work in the 1950s with her first husband Bennett Cerf, the co-founder of Random House.

    Graphic House/Archive Photos/Getty Images

    RELATED: Art Dealer Barbara Gladstone’s Elegant Manhattan Row House Lists for $12 Million

    Designed and built in the 1870s by architect Robert Sexton, the recently renovated brick structure clocks in at 20 feet wide with five bedrooms and seven baths in 7,200 square feet of art deco-inspired living space boasting high ceilings, several wood-burning fireplaces, and a hydraulic elevator to all five levels. A security system and air-conditioning have also been added to the mix.

    Upon entry, a marble-clad foyer flows to an eat-in kitchen flaunting a pricey La Cornue range. From there, a coffered-ceiling sitting and dining area opens to a private trellis-covered garden featuring a water wall, mature plantings, and custom lighting. The parlor level, meanwhile, hosts a reception lounge with a black-and-white-striped living room on one side and a library/dining room on the other.

    A fireside sitting and dining area flows out to a trellis-covered garden with a water wall.

    Lifestyle Production Group

    RELATED: Abraham Lincoln’s Granddaughter Lived in This N.Y.C. Townhouse. Now It Can Be Yours for $10.5 Million.

    The third level lends way to a bay-windowed primary suite outfitted with a morning bar and a pass-through wardrobe that connects to a bath sporting dual vanities, a large glass-encased shower, and a soaking tub alongside window coverings embellished with glass orbs. More bedrooms and a sky-lit den/office can be found on the top two floors, while a wine cellar and laundry room are situated down in the basement.

    When the townhouse was last sold, it came complete with artwork by Andy Warhol, Anish Kapoor, and Roy Lichtenstein; books signed by William Faulkner and Joan Didion; and an oil painting by Frank Sinatra. Those items are currently on display but are not, unfortunately, included in the sale this time around.

    Click here for more photos of the Upper East Side residence.

    Lifestyle Production Group

    Authors

    Wendy Bowman

    Wendy Bowman is a real estate writer at Robb Report. Before that, she was a freelancer for Modern Luxury and several other media outlets, where she primarily covered luxury properties for…

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    Landmark Homes by Frank Lloyd Wright and Other Famous Architects Are the Latest Status Symbol

    Call it the new celebrity arms race—not for Birkins or Labubus, but for architectural trophies signed by the likes of Frank Lloyd Wright, Richard Neutra, and John Lautner. For today’s ultra-wealthy, owning a name-brand house is the ultimate flex. From Malibu to Montecito, these homes aren’t just places to live—they’re cultural capital, conversation starters, and investment-grade icons.

    The limited number of well-preserved homes by A-list architects does make them a needle in a haystack when hunting for a home, but due to the care and resources required to restore and update these types of structures, their pool of potential buyers can be somewhat limited to those with a dedicated penchant and a deep pocketbook for one-of-a-kind labors of love and frequent maintenance. And in a market where scarcity drives desire, architectural provenance is becoming just as valuable as ocean views or square footage.

    Look at Beyoncé and Jay-Z, who shattered California’s real estate record in 2023 with their $200 million all-cash throwdown for a minimalist fortress in Malibu by the Japanese master Tadao Ando, originally built for art collectors William and Maria Bell. Floating above the Pacific, the concrete house cemented Ando’s status as architecture-world royalty. Rapper Kanye West grabbed another Ando home in Malibu back in 2021 for $57.3 million. Much to the surprise of many, he gutted it, then listed the unfinished shell for $53 million. It eventually sold for just $21 million to a crowdfunding real estate development concern, who quickly flipped it to property developer Andrew Mazzella for more than $30 million.

    Kanye West bought a Tadao Ando home in Malibu, gutted it, then sold the unfinished property at a huge loss.

    Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

    West’s ex-wife, Kim Kardashian—whose Axel Vervoordt–designed home in the L.A. suburb of Hidden Hills helped launch the creamy, monastic minimalism movement in interior design—is said to be building her own Ando–designed escape near Palm Springs. Designer and filmmaker Tom Ford, meanwhile, commissioned Ando to build an austere, geometric masterpiece on his sprawling Cerro Pelon Ranch in New Mexico. Ford first listed the property in 2016 for $75 million, later dropping the price to $48 million in 2019 before it quietly sold to an undisclosed buyer in 2021.

    Then there’s Austrian-American innovator Richard Neutra, who draws a cult-like following. His iconic Brown House in L.A.’s Bel Air neighborhood passed from the hands of Ford (who owned it for nearly 20 years) to Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi, and finally, writer-producer Ryan Murphy, who scooped it up for $29 million in 2022. The six-time Emmy-winning TV producer gave it a glow-up, had it showcased on Architectural Digest, and recently relisted it for $34 million. DeGeneres and de Rossi, serial buyers and sellers of pedigreed real estate, have also owned homes by A. Quincy Jones, Wallace Frost, and Hal Levitt.

    Richard Neutra’s Brown House in Bel Air has passed through the hands of Tom Ford, Ellen DeGeneres, and Ryan Murphy.

    Matthew Momberger

    John Lautner homes are another favorite among the entertainment industry elite. After buying the oceanfront Stevens House in the guard-gated Malibu Colony, Edward Norton sold a much more classically beachy bungalow on Las Flores Beach to Benny Blanco. Back when Courteney Cox and David Arquette were still married, they owned a tour-de-force Lautner on Carbon Beach, which was later sold to the one-time owner of the L.A. Dodgers, Frank McCourt, for $33.5 million.

    Four decades after entertainer Bob and Dolores Hope commissioned Lautner to build what would become one of his most iconic and unconventional works, the Bob Hope House in Palm Springs is currently undergoing a meticulous restoration to bring the 24,000-square-foot spaceship-like residence back in line with the architect’s original vision.

    In the ’70s, Bob Hope commissioned John Lautner to build a mountaintop opus in Palm Springs.

    Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

    Few architects have a résumé that spans both A-list ownership and starring roles on screen, but Lautner’s legacy certainly isn’t confined to real life. On Apple TV’s The Studio, Seth Rogen’s character lives in the Foster Carling House in the Hollywood Hills, while Patty Keigh, played by Catherine O’Hara, inhabits the Harvey House, long owned by actress Kelly Lynch and her husband, writer-producer Mitch Glazer, who famously outbid Leonardo DiCaprio for the hilltop spread. 

    And of course, there’s Frank Lloyd Wright—the original starchitect. His 1924 Ennis House in Los Angeles, with its Mayan Revival façade and Blade Runner cameo, was restored by billionaire investor Ron Burkle, who sold it for $18 million in 2019. (Burkle currently owns the aforementioned Bob Hope residence in Palm Springs.) That same year, fashion designer Marc Jacobs scooped up Wright’s Max Hoffman House in Rye, New York, for just over $9 million. The waterfront Usonian-style abode was lovingly restored over four years, in collaboration with the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy.

    Frank Lloyd Wright’s Ennis House still draw major buyers, including billionaire Ron Burkle.

    Kirk McKoy/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

    Long a getaway for elite sun seekers and a proving ground for maverick architects, Palm Springs and the surrounding communities have become a sandbox for provenance collectors. Oscar winner Leonardo DiCaprio owns a 1964 house by midcentury master Donald Wexler that was originally built for singer Dinah Shore; he now rents the restored and updated home as a luxe retreat. 

    Back in L.A., Denzel Washington once lived in a Toluca Lake home designed by the acclaimed Paul R. Williams that had previously been owned by Bill “Bojangles” Robinson. Williams famously counted a slew of high-caliber clients like Frank Sinatra, Cary Grant, and Lucille Ball as clients; Jay Paley, a founder of CBS, commissioned a Williams-designed mansion in Bel Air that was later owned by the late hotelier Barron Hilton and is now owned by former Google exec Eric Schmidt.

    Diane Keaton is also a well-known aficionado of homes by esteemed architects, having restored multiple architecturally significant and historic homes across L.A., including a Spanish Colonial Revival by Lloyd Wright (Frank’s son). And Brad Pitt, forever the design obsessive, once tapped Frank Gehry for a custom build and currently owns a glass-walled pavilion in the Hollywood Hills by Case Study architect and educator Craig Ellwood. 

    The truth is, at the highest levels of wealth and luxury, owning something beautiful isn’t enough. You want something authored. And a signature on the blueprints? That has become one of the world’s ultimate status symbols.

    Authors

    Abby Montanez

    Abigail Montanez is a staff writer at Robb Report. She has worked in both print and digital publishing for over half a decade, covering everything from real estate, entertainment, dining, travel to…

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    Former MLB All-Star Yoenis Céspedes Is Selling His 380-Acre Florida Ranch for $30 Million

    Whether you’re taking part in MLB’s spring training or you just want to be close to the action, a recently listed ranch property on Florida‘s east coast is a true home run.

    The Port St. Lucie manse, about 60 miles north of Palm Beach and 120 miles south of Orlando, was custom-built back in 2018 by baseball player Yoenis Céspedes, an MLB All-Star and a two-time Home Run Derby champ. Known to his fans as “La Potencia,” or “The Power,” Céspedes named the 378-acre estate after himself—La Potencia II. While he enjoyed the rural spread for almost a decade, Céspedes is now bringing it to market for $30 million, with Julian Johnston and Lina Agosto at the Corcoran Group holding the listing.

    An at-home batting cage is a must for any former or aspiring MLB All-Star.

    Immersive Media

    The massive acreage functions as both an equestrian and hunting compound. Among the grounds, you’ll find a 12-stall horse stable with training yards. Wild boar and other game animals are known to frequent the land, and there’s a full game processing facility on site. And while Céspedes may have enjoyed some of these pastimes after his professional playing career, he didn’t give up baseball completely: the home is equipped with a state-of-the-art batting cage for practicing your swing.

    The centerpiece of the property is the 15,785-square-foot main residence, which includes six bedrooms and four full baths. The ranch aesthetic is prevalent inside, with soaring ceilings and a massive stone fireplace anchoring the living room. More modern touches are found in the spacious chef’s kitchen and with an onyx bar.

    The 12-stable barn sits amid training yards and fenced pastures.

    Immersive Media

    Outside, there’s a large resort-style pool, which is both heated and covered. The screened-in patio has plenty of space for laid-back hangs and meals, with a full summer kitchen for easy prep. And while there are classic add-ons like a gym and a game/club room, Céspedes added one more special touch suited to his lifestyle—a private barber shop.

    When it comes to real estate, the former Mets star is in good company, with many former MLBers opting to spend their retirements in sunny locales. For example, Hall of Fame pitcher Greg Maddux spun his home in San Diego on the market for a cool $4 million, and Red Sox legend David Ortiz is parting ways with his custom-built Miami mansion for $11.5 million.

    Click here to see all the photos of the sprawling Port Lucie ranch.

    Immersive Media

    Authors

    Tori Latham

    Tori Latham is a digital staff writer at Robb Report. She was previously a copy editor at The Atlantic, and has written for publications including The Cut and The Hollywood Reporter. When not…

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