Pierre Delecto did same in LaJolla.
Tear it down. Unless it’s a Victorian home.
Becoming high rise cinder block affordable housing mixed with shelters for the homeless and illegal aliens. Ground floor for halfway houses and drug rehab centers. Planned Parenthood in back lot.
Yes, I’m kidding.
That house looks like a medical suite. I wouldn’t want either... Miss El Rushbo though. To each his own.
....Demolition has already started at the 1495 N. Ocean Blvd. property
Interesting combination of elements, so I'll just toss them out there:
Timing, of the destruction of the big house.
The Torah begins "with Rush" [..בראש].
The Torah begins with a big bet (the large letter bet, "house").
1495 is the sum of the value of the 22 letters of the alef beit.
155 [קנ"ה] is "the nest" [הקן], idiomatic for a home
[קנ"ה] is קנה, Cana of wedding feast fame, the miracle of turning water into secrets (wine/sod/70)
155 is "the Jewish People" [העם היהודי]
155 = an apsis [אפסיד], which is a 'vault' in the heavens, from the Greek ἁψίς (= 911).
Just a note that hundreds of hours of The Rush Limbaugh Show are free for listening at rushlimbaugh.com
The mansion mentioned in Houston needed to be torn down. It was a dump and health disaster with all the mold and water damage.
Very cool.
Hope he provides lots of jobs for Americans.
Special observation - Governor DeSantis recently signed legislation requiring all Florida employers to use E-Verify. So that is progress.
Who owned the property before Rush?
His widow has been trying to sell it for a while. A giant house can easily become a white elephant when there are too few to live there, and the cleaning/maintenance/landscaping costs never go down.
It does sound like she got a good price for it, which was not guaranteed these days.
It may well be the richest neighborhood on the planet. And eventually every house gets put into a dumpster.
A lot of these custom made mansions are hard to sell. Micheal Jordan’s mansion in Illinois has been on the market for years.
It does amaze me sometimes how people have so much money — and I’m not talking about multimillionaires, but maybe upper middle class — that they can buy a lovely home but feel the need to completely renovate it. In my family, we buy a house to live in as designed and are happy that we can afford a house.