Villa Biscaya is Up For Sale Again - With A $28 Million Asking Price View Gallery — 8 Photos Property Of The Week: 6 Tivoli Ave, Rose Bay, NSW One of Sydney's most exclusive harbourside homes, the Spanish Mission-style Villa Biscaya is something of a socialite in itself. By Kirsten Craze 09/06/2023 Residential NSW residential property Print article Waterhouse lists landmark mansion for $28m Bonnie Campbell Luxury property reporter Oct 21, 2022 - 5.19pm David Waterhouse has put the landmark.
Rose of the Bay Spanish villa in Sydney’s Rose Bay The Australian
Art collector and options trader David Waterhouse has sold Rose Bay's Spanish Mission mansion Villa Biscaya for about $26m. The Tivoli Ave home has appeared in Vogue spreads and feature films such as Mao's Last Dancer and been the setting for TV shows The Bachelor, The Voice and Married At First Sight. David Waterhouse at home in Sydney's Villa Biscaya in Rose Bay. Janie Barrett The deal was inked to an unidentified buyer, and has a strict confidentiality agreement in place. While the. Built in 1929 sparing no expense, 'Villa Biscaya' was designed by architect Alan Edgecliff Stafford. Extensively and meticulously rebuilt in 2001 and refurbished in 2012 the home has been reinvented for luxurious contemporary living, offering a multitude of entertaining spaces and wonderful alfresco areas. Spanish mission mansion Villa Biscaya overlooking Sydney's Rose Bay is often said to look like something out of LA's Beverly Hills or from the Mediterranean coast. Named after the Biscaya.
Spanish Mission architecture still has star power with Sydneysiders
The Waterhouses' new house, Villa Biscaya, last traded in 1998 for $2.14 million when sold by property investor Anne Melkman, who bought it for $1.81 million three years earlier from insurance group C. E. Heath. Known as Villa Biscaya, this Spanish Mission-style home was originally designed by the well-regarded architect Alan Edgecliff Stafford in 1929, and has remained a prominent Rose Bay landmark for the better part of a century. And yet despite its distinct design and lush tropical gardens, the mansion has historically struggled to sell. The landmark 1929 Spanish Mission Rose Bay residence Villa Biscaya has been listed with $10 million-plus hopes.. It was designed by architect Alan Edgecliff Stafford, who, during the 1920s, worked with leading design firms in Los Angeles and Palm Beach (Florida) where glamorous Spanish Mission style houses were popular. The home, surrounded by palm trees, has been listed by the medical. Known as 'Villa Biscaya', the home is immersed within meandering botanical gardens, offering a timeless sanctuary of grand proportions on approximately 1,126sqm. The residence was designed by prominent architect Alan Edgecliff Stafford in 1929, delivering architecture celebrating the rich palette and textures of the area's lush coastal surrounds.
Property 0000467820, Rose Bay
Villa Biscaya, in Tivoli Ave, Rose Bay, has sold to the Waterhouse family. The $12.5m Rose Bay mansion Villa Biscaya — which has appeared in Married At First Sight and The Voice — has sold after five years on the market, and the buyers are the Waterhouse family. $28 Million Sale of David Waterhouse's Villa Biscaya on Tivoli Avenue, Rose Bay's Harbourside. August 1,. Villa Biscaya was designed in 1929 by Alan Edgecliff Stafford in the Spanish Mission architectural style.. David and Janette Waterhouse also own Elizabeth Bay's historic naval residence, the 1864-built Tresco..
The 1929-built, Spanish Mission house Villa Biscaya is on offer with a $28 million guide. Photo: Supplied You can ask: Waterhouse family lists $28 million Rose Bay home By Lucy Macken October 23, 2022 When it comes to pricing Sydney's trophy homes, you can ask, but buyers will also have a say in the sale price. 'Villa Biscaya', located in Sydney 's pristine harbourside suburb Rose Bay, spans across 1126sqm, is surrounded by flourishing gardens and offers privacy and serenity.
Property 0000467820, Rose Bay
12:00AM October 29, 2016 NSW Tivoli Avenue, Rose Bay $12.5m+ Like a faded star from the Golden Age of Hollywood, Villa Biscaya on Sydney Harbour had seen better days when she was last sold in 1998, for $2.14 million. The wiring had gone, the garden was overgrown and there were holes in the roof. Built in 1929 sparing no expense, 'Villa Biscaya' was designed by architect Alan Edgecliff Stafford. Extensively and meticulously rebuilt in 2001 and refurbished in 2012 the home has been reinvented for luxurious contemporary living, offering a multitude of entertaining spaces and wonderful alfresco areas.