The former Palm Springs dwelling of late socialite Magda Gabor boasting a glamorous new makeover has hit the marketplace for $3.8 million.
Bursting with shade and authentic materials and wall coverings, the revamped three-bedroom, 3,441-square-foot dwelling with 4 loos is the imaginative and prescient of designer Tracy Turco.
“It’s such a unique property, and then Tracy takes it to a whole other level,” stated Conrad Miller of Avenue 8, the co-listing agent.
Property data present Turco and her actual property developer husband, Jerry, picked up the house on an almost two-third-acre hilltop lot in Little Tuscany in August 2020 for $1.74 million. The couple is understood for purchasing and renovating uncared for mid-century properties like a 1961 dwelling by William Krisel listed for $1.149 million and the retro boutique resorts the Art Hotel, Tiki Hotel, Cheetah Hotel and Deco Palm Hotel.
Turco places her spin on the 1964 abode whereas incorporating furnishings and coverings which are authentic to the eldest and solely redhead of the well-known Gabor sisters.
As Southern California News Group beforehand reported, Gabor purchased the house within the late Sixties on the urging of her countess mom. The property had been the positioning of star-studded events and even vogue shoots throughout her tenure.
County data point out the property remained in her title and that of her sister Zsa Zsa by separate trusts till August 1998, when the property offered for $440,000.
According to the itemizing, the sisters “separately occupied the estate for over 30 years.”
A portray of Magda Gabor, who died in 1997 at 81, hangs on the lobby’s wall.
Her first preliminary is etched on the house’s mirrored partitions, together with the one which runs the size of the mixed residing and eating room with its hidden closet. The mirror displays the veranda.
With its pink overhang and striped black and white valance, the veranda overlooks the mosaic-tiled pool and mountains past.
Views additionally abound from the breakfast room nearest the kitchen, with its custom-trowelled ceiling and authentic Hungarian rotisserie, to the first rest room. It has twin vanities, a bathe and a soaking tub. A curtain closes the toilet from the remainder of the first suite’s bed room, with its sitting room/workplace, dressing room, make-up room and two walk-in closets.
Other Gabor-era originals embrace a grand piano, a eating room desk and crystal chandeliers.
The patio desk belonged to Zsa Zsa Gabor.
Brandon Holland of Avenue 8 shares the itemizing, which is out there turnkey.
Source: www.bostonherald.com”