Real Estate

Doja Cat Parts With Her L.A. Home, ABBA’s Former Hideaway Hits the Market, and More Real Estate News


Over the course of two years, architect Walter Meyer enlarged and modernized the residence while preserving its original design and character. Updates include state-of-the-art Wolf appliances in the kitchen and a built-in entertainment unit in the upstairs den. 

Doja Cat selling midcentury Beverly Hills hideaway

Barely a year after buying it, social-media star and pop icon Doja Cat is decamping from her L.A. home.

In February 2021, the “Kiss Me More” singer dropped $2.2 million on a three-bedroom house nestled between the Franklin Canyon and Tree People parks in the mountains above Beverly Hills. Now she’s listed it with Tami Pardee and Paige Ogden of Pardee Properties for $2.5 million.

Anchored on a narrow road just off Mulholland Drive, the 2,400-square-foot property defines indoor/outdoor living, according to the listing, with a “backyard oasis” featuring a sparkling heated pool, built-in seating, concrete decks, and mature trees.

The singer-songwriter has already moved out, according to Dirt.com, but fans will definitely still recognize the interiors from many of her TikToks and Instagram posts.

Sales Launch

A rendering of the pool at 96+Broadway

Rendering: We Are Visuals

96+Broadway Opens Sales

JVP Management has just launched sales for 96+Broadway, a new 23-story luxury condo on the Upper West Side. Pricing for the building’s 131 residences, which range from one- to five-bedroom apartments, starts at $1.395 million.

Situated between Riverside Park and Central Park, 96+Broadway comes by way of architect Thomas Juul-Hansen, who previously designed 505 West 19th Street in Chelsea, 210 West 77th Street on the Upper West Side, and 50 West Street in lower Manhattan.

In a nod to the neighborhood’s storied Beaux Arts buildings, Juul-Hansen incorporated Jura gray limestone imported from German stonemaker Franken-Schotter, complemented by spacious windows and staggered terraces to create a dynamic grid pattern.

“This is a building that is meant to last,” Juul-Hansen said in a statement.



Source link