Steve Wynn Still Hasn’t Found a Buyer for Beverly Hills Mansion

Steve Wynn continues to struggle to find a buyer for his Beverly Hills mansion.

Steve Wynn Beverly Hills Los Angeles mansion
The interior of Steve Wynn’s Beverly Hills mansion overlooks the Los Angeles skyline. Wynn has been trying to sell the Los Angeles mansion for more than two years. (Image: Compass)

Wynn had no problems finding buyers for his 11.8% stake in his namesake casino empire when the billionaire departed Wynn Resorts amid shameful allegations that he handled himself improperly around female subordinates during his career. After selling his shares for about $2.1 billion in March 2018, Wynn exited the gaming industry and relocated to South Florida.

Wynn has since taken up the hobby of flipping premier beachfront real estate in Palm Beach County. The Las Vegas visionary has also sought to unload his properties in Nevada and California.

Wynn sold his mansion in Summerlin’s “Billionaire’s Row” west of Las Vegas in April 2022 for $17.5 million. It was a deep discount from the initial $25 million asking price at which Wynn listed the 15,000-square-foot estate in June 2020.

90210 a Buyer’s Market

Though Wynn called Southern Nevada home for decades as the billionaire oversaw his Wynn Las Vegas and Encore resorts on the Strip, the casino magnate purchased marquee properties around the country. The costliest residence he ever bought was his Beverly Hills estate located at 1210 Benedict Canyon Drive.

Wynn bought the mansion in August 2015 for almost $48 million. He then spent many millions more renovating the 27,150-square-foot mansion into a Los Angeles villa that oozes the class, luxury, and opulence that his Las Vegas casinos are known for.

But Wynn hasn’t been able to find a buyer for the home since he decided to sell it in early 2021. Wynn listed the Beverly Hills compound in April 2021 for $125 million.

The price was lowered to $115 million in October 2021 and down to $100 million in March 2022. Wynn’s listing agent announced in January that another $15 million had been slashed, with the asking price down to $85 million.

Wynn hoped to sell the home before Los Angeles’ hefty real estate tax on properties over $5 million went into effect. As of April 1, 2023, sellers of residencies above $5 million pay a 4% tax on the transaction to the city.

On home sales upwards of $10 million, the fee jumps to 5.5%. On an $85 million sale, the city’s cut would be about $4.67 million.

Cash Offer Likely

With interest rates high, Wynn will presumably need to find a cash buyer for his Los Angeles pad. His Nevada realtor says that’s how the billionaire sold his Summerlin mansion last year, as that buyer paid the $17.5 million in cash.

Along with the $85 million asking price, 1210 Benedict Canyon has some of the priciest real estate taxes in the nation. The home’s property taxes last year were about $654K on a property assessment of $54.8 million.

Built in 1994, the Wynn Beverly Hills estate sits on 2.7 acres and has 11 bedrooms, 13 full baths and three half baths, an attached guest house, and an outdoor pool.

The listing claims the property also has the “most exquisite taste showcasing rare and decadent materials with sensational views and stunning light quality throughout.”

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Siegfried & Roy’s Las Vegas Mansion Lists for $3M

The most famous private residence in Las Vegas hit the real-estate market this week. The 8-acre estate at 1639 Valley Drive, listed with Redfin for $3M, is called Jungle Palace. It’s where Roy Horn of Siegfried & Roy lived with the former magic act’s tigers and lions until he died of complications from COVID-19 in May 2020.

Siegfried Fischbacher — who lived a few miles away, on an 80-acre compound called Little Bavaria — died less than a year after his partner of pancreatic cancer at age 81.

Siegfried & Roy's house
The Las Vegas manse where Roy, of Siegfried & Roy, raised his big cats can be yours for $3M. (Image: Redfin)

The Jungle Palace was built in 1954 and purchased by Siegfried & Roy in 1982. According to Redfin, a private party purchased the estate one year ago for $1.87M and is looking to flip it for a tidy profit.

The Moroccan-themed compound features a 8,750 square-foot main house, three guest houses, multiple water features including three pools and a jacuzzi, six electric gates, two detached studios, a bird sanctuary, and multiple animal enclosures. (Animals not included.)

Oddly, though the listing’s main photo shows an entry gate emblazoned with two faux-gold “SR” monograms, it makes no mention of the estate’s biggest selling point: Siegfried & Roy themselves.

Siegfried & Roy
The original tiger kings pose with Mantra the tiger in the library at the Jungle Palace in the ’90s. (Image: S&R Productions)

While Fischbacher was in charge of the illusions, Horn raised the animals at the Jungle Palace. According to a Vanity Fair profile, all of Siegfried & Roy’s cats slept in bed with him here until reaching the age of 1. He also swam with his cats every day in the estate’s largest pool.

“My animals are the love affair of my life,” Horn told People magazine. “They are the first ones I talk to in the morning and the last ones I speak to at night.”

One of several animal enclosures on the Jungle Palace property’s 8 acres. (Image: Redfin)

S&R 101

Fischbacher and Horn met while working on a cruise ship in 1957. They first performed in Las Vegas 10 years later as a featured act in the “Folies Bergere” show at the Tropicana. They then appeared in a show at Bally’s before headlining for the first time at the Frontier.

Siegfried & Roy
Siegfried & Roy post for a 1990 publicity photo with an unidentified tiger. (Image: Facebook)

By 1990, their burgeoning popularity had earned them their own $30 million show in their own theater at the Mirage. Their 13-year run was one of the most lavish and successful in Las Vegas history.

The pair made a few public appearances following Horn’s mauling by his 7-year-old white tiger, Mantecore, but never resumed their full show and retired from show business in 2010.

Horn continued caring for Mantecore until the tiger’s death in 2014. The tiger lived alternately at the Jungle Palace, at Little Bavaria, and at Siegfried & Roy’s Secret Garden and Dolphin Habitat.

“When you see Roy’s face when he is with Mantecore, it brightens,” Fischbacher told the Las Vegas Weekly in 2012. “It’s as if nothing happened, you know?”

Last October, the Neon Museum told tickets for the public to tour the Jungle Palace, though most of the duo’s personal items had already been auctioned off last June in LA.

Last December, Hard Rock International purchased The Mirage, permanently closing the habitat. It relocated three of its six remaining dolphins to Sea World San Diego, and is reportedly working on relocating all of Siegfried & Roy’s surviving former cats.

Last August, the Las Vegas City Council voted 5-1 to demolish 12 of Little Bavaria’s 80 acres to allow a local developer to build a four-story apartment complex on that site.

 

 

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