The most expnsive homes and royal residences of the world - From Buckingham Palace to Laxmi Vilas palace to Antilia of the Ambanis - Valuations exceed from $300 mn to $4.9 bn.
America's most expensive home - Little Lake Lodge in Aspen, Colarado up for sale
Billionaires Stewart and Lynda Resnick have put up this house for sale. Its listed at $300 million as the most expensive home in the USA sprawling over 74 acres with 18 bedrooms sitting besides a lake
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The $300 Million Oasis: Little Lake Lodge in Aspen is not the most expensive - Mukesh Ambani’s Antilla, Mumbai & Buckingham Palace, London, priciest
By TN Ashok. New York, August 31 , 2025


Americas’ most expensive home in Aspen, Colarado. is up for sale at $300 million
Topping the charts as among the most expensive in the world , Little Lake Lodge, a 27,000-square-foot mountain estate in Aspen, Colorado, is listed at $300 million—currently the most expensive home for sale in the United States.
It sprawls across 74 acres, with 18 bedrooms, 20 full baths, four partial baths, and sits adjacent to a pristine six-acre private lake. Built in 1994 by billionaires Stewart and Lynda Resnick of The Wonderful Company (FIJI Water, POM Wonderful), the home combines remote serenity with proximity—just one mile from downtown Aspen.
Mandy Welgos of Sotheby’s International Realty described it as "a very unique and special property… nothing like this exists in Aspen". Multiple buyers are said to be interested. With Pitkin County recently capping house size limits at 9,250 sq ft—down from 15,000 sq ft—large homes like this are increasingly rare, potentially boosting its long-term value. Estimated property taxes are around $131,755 per year, reflecting local rates of roughly 0.3–0.5% of assessed value.
But Is It the Most Expensive Home in the World? Not Quite.
Buckingham Palace – London
Valued at approximately $4.9 billion, Buckingham Palace is the most expensive residential property, though it's not privately sold. It contains 775 bedrooms, 19 staterooms, 92 offices, and spans around 828,000 square feet—an iconic symbol of British monarchy and power.
📜 Origins & Age
Early 17th century (c. 1624–25): First house built on the site for Sir William Blake, a courtier.
1703: Rebuilt as Buckingham House for John Sheffield, 1st Duke of Buckingham and Normanby.
1761: Purchased by King George III (House of Hanover) as a private residence for Queen Charlotte → known as the “Queen’s House.”
1820s–1837: Enlarged by George IV and William IV, under architect John Nash, into a royal palace.
1837: Became the official London residence of the British monarch when Queen Victoria (House of Hanover, later Windsor) moved in.
So, the palace in its current form is about 200 years old, though its roots go back over 300 years.
🏰 Dynastic Lineage
Buckingham Palace has been associated with the following ruling dynasties:
House of Stuart (1603–1714): The land was originally royal property in this period.
House of Hanover (1714–1901): George III, George IV, William IV, and Queen Victoria were instrumental in transforming Buckingham House into Buckingham Palace.
House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1901–1917): Short-lived, under Edward VII.
House of Windsor (1917–present): Name adopted by George V during WWI to distance the monarchy from its German roots. All subsequent monarchs—George VI, Elizabeth II, and Charles III—are from the House of Windsor.
🏛 Architecture & Expansion
Style: Neoclassical, designed by John Nash and later Edward Blore.
1850s: Queen Victoria ordered the addition of the famous east front (facing The Mall), which now houses the iconic balcony.
20th century updates: King George V had the east façade refaced in Portland stone in 1913, giving it its modern appearance.
📐 Size & Grandeur
Floor area: ~830,000 sq ft.
Rooms: 775 (including 19 State Rooms, 52 Royal/guest bedrooms, 188 staff bedrooms, 92 offices, 78 bathrooms).
Grounds: 40 acres, including the largest private garden in London.
👑 Current Status
Official residence of King Charles III.
Used for state occasions, investitures, and ceremonial functions.
Undergoing a 10-year renovation project (expected completion mid-2030s.
✅ Summary:
Buckingham Palace is about 300 years old in origin and 200 years old as a palace, rooted in the House of Hanover but today the centerpiece of the House of Windsor monarchy. It is not Tudor—the Tudors (1485–1603) ended before the palace was ever built.
The Laxmi Niwas Palace - Contrary to popular thought , it isn’t the most expensive royal residence, and it’s neither larger nor more valuable than Buckingham Palace.
#How valuable is it?
Public valuations peg Buckingham Palace as the world’s most valuable residence (about $4.9 billion). Laxmi Niwas is a heritage hotel; no credible source values it anywhere close to that figure.
Which is bigger?
Buckingham Palace has ~830,000 sq ft and 775 rooms. Laxmi Niwas, while grand, is smaller; it’s actually a wing within the larger Lalgarh Palace complex in Bikaner. (A common mix-up: Lakshmi Vilas Palace in Vadodara—different place entirely—is often claimed to be several times the size of Buckingham, and still houses the Gaekwad family.)Who lives there now?
Laxmi Niwas Palace operates as a heritage hotel; guests, not royals, reside there. Members of the Bikaner royal family still occupy a suite in the adjoining Lalgarh Palace.#Who built it and how old is it?
Commissioned by Maharaja (later General) Sir Ganga Singh of Bikaner (a Rathore Rajput line), designed by Sir Samuel Swinton Jacob in the Indo-Saracenic style, and completed in 1902—so it’s about 123 years old.Were they loyal to the British Raj?
Yes. Ganga Singh was among the most prominent princely allies of the Raj—member of the Imperial War Cabinet, India’s representative at the Versailles Peace Conference, and a highly decorated loyalist.
If you were thinking of Lakshmi Vilas Palace (Vadodara) when you said “much bigger than Buckingham,” that’s a different dynasty (the Gaekwads) and a different palace. Happy to compare those two specifically if you like.
Laxmi Vilas Palace ;
📍 Location
Vadodara (Baroda), Gujarat, India.
Set amid ~500 acres of parkland, golf course, and gardens.
🏛 Architecture & Style
Architectural style: Indo-Saracenic Revival (a mix of Indian, Islamic, and European elements).
Architect: Major Charles Mant, later completed by R.F. Chisholm.
Design features:
Ornate domes, minarets, arches, and European-style interiors.
Darbar Hall with Venetian mosaic floors, Belgian stained glass windows, and Italian marble.
A private golf course, zoo (historic), and museum collection.
📅 Construction & Age
Commissioned by Maharaja Sayajirao Gaekwad III, ruler of the Gaekwad dynasty of Baroda (Marathas).
Construction began in 1878 and completed in 1890.
Age today: 135 years old (2025).
📐 Size & Scale
Built area: ~700,000 sq ft (slightly larger than Buckingham Palace’s ~830,000 sq ft is often claimed—but in reality, Buckingham is still bigger in usable area).
Rooms: Over 170 rooms, multiple courtyards and halls.
Grounds: The estate is four times the size of Buckingham Palace grounds (~500 acres vs Buckingham’s ~40 acres).
It is often described as the largest private residence in the world built at one time.
👑 Lineage & Residents
Built by the Gaekwad dynasty of Baroda, one of the most progressive princely states under British India.
Today, it remains the residence of the Gaekwad royal family, headed by Samarjitsinh Ranjitsinh Gaekwad.
Unlike many palaces converted into hotels, it is still primarily a royal residence.
🏨 Heritage Use
The palace itself is not a hotel.
However:
The Maharaja Fateh Singh Museum, housed in a part of the palace grounds, is open to the public. It contains royal collections of art, Raja Ravi Varma paintings, and artifacts.
The LVP Banquets & Conventions and the Moti Baug Palace grounds (with golf course) are used for cultural, sporting, and corporate events.
💰 Valuation & Costs
Valuation: Estimates vary, but it is often described as worth over US$500–600 million, possibly more if land value is factored (prime urban Vadodara estate).
Maintenance: Extremely high—reports suggest several crores of rupees annually (millions of dollars) go into upkeep of the gardens, buildings, and staff. The golf course and events are revenue-generating arms to support maintenance.
✅ Summary
Laxmi Vilas Palace (1890) was built by the Gaekwad dynasty and remains their residence today.
At ~700,000 sq ft, it is comparable in size to Buckingham Palace, though Buckingham still edges it out in total built-up area; however, the estate grounds of Laxmi Vilas are far larger.
Valued at hundreds of millions of dollars, it is one of the most expensive royal residences in India.
Unlike many other Indian palaces, it is not a heritage hotel—it is still a private royal home, with only a museum and parts of the grounds open to the public.
Antilia – Mumbai, India
Owned by Mukesh Ambani, this 27-story skyscraper-like home is estimated at $4.6 billion as of 2023, built at a cost of around $2 billion. It features a 168-car garage, snow room, multiple elevators, swimming pool, spa, theatre, terrace gardens, and a private temple.
🏠 Conception & Idea
Commissioning: Around the early 2000s, when Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Industries, began planning a residence that would reflect his family’s stature as India’s richest.
Nita Ambani’s role: According to several reports, Nita Ambani was deeply involved in concept, design, and interiors—she wanted a home that merged Indian tradition with modern luxury. She worked closely with the architects on vastu principles and aesthetic details.
Architects & Designers: Designed by the US architectural firm Perkins & Will and constructed by Australian company Leighton Holdings. Interior design credits go to Hirsch Bedner Associates (HBA), Los Angeles.
Inspiration: Nita Ambani has said she envisioned Antilia as a home that was both futuristic and rooted in Indian culture, with spaces for art, spirituality, and hospitality.
📐 Structure & Scale
Height: 27 stories (~173 meters), though floors are extra-tall, giving it the equivalent height of a 60-story skyscraper.
Area: ~400,000 sq. ft.
Estimated Cost: Roughly $1–2 billion, though estimates vary widely.
Notable Features:
3 helipads (not operational due to civic restrictions).
6 floors of parking (space for ~168 cars).
Ballroom, spa, salon, yoga center, ice room (with artificial snow).
Temple, private theatre (50 seats), terrace gardens, health floors.
9 high-speed elevators.
Swimming pools, gyms, and hanging gardens.
👨👩👦 Residents
The house is home to the Ambani family only—
Mukesh Ambani (Reliance chairman)
Nita Ambani (philanthropist, cultural leader)
Children: Akash, Isha, and Anant (with their spouses and young children, who visit frequently).
So, it is essentially a single-family residence, not divided into apartments or multiple households.
👩🍳 Staff & Servants
Reportedly, around 600 staff members work at Antilia to run the residence smoothly.
Includes household staff, security, gardeners, spa attendants, chefs, drivers, etc.
Staff facilities are spread across service floors, ensuring 24/7 operations.
📅 Age
Construction began: ~2004.
Completed: 2010.
Age now (2025): 15 years old.
✨ Cultural Significance
Named “Antilia” after a mythical island in the Atlantic Ocean.
Symbolizes India’s new wealth and global ambition—but also often criticized as a symbol of inequality, given its opulence amid Mumbai’s poverty.
Has become a landmark on Mumbai’s Altamount Road and one of the most recognizable billionaire homes worldwide.
✅ In summary:
Antilia was conceived jointly by Mukesh and Nita Ambani, with Nita shaping much of the design. It is a 27-story single-family mansion, completed in 2010, now 15 years old, and maintained by around 600 staff. Only the Ambani family resides there.
Villa Leopolda – France
Located in Cote d’Azur, this famed estate is estimated around $750 million, owned by banker-philanthropist Lily Safra.
🏡 Origins & Conception
Commissioned by: King Leopold II of Belgium in 1902.
Purpose: Originally built as a gift for one of his mistresses, Blanche Zélia Joséphine Delacroix (known as Caroline Lacroix).
Location: Villefranche-sur-Mer on the French Riviera, between Nice and Monaco—considered one of the most coveted stretches of coastline in the world.
Architectural concept: A grand Belle Époque villa surrounded by terraced gardens, with panoramic views of the Mediterranean.
📜 Lineage of Ownership
Early 1900s: After Leopold II’s death (1909), ownership passed through his family and changed hands multiple times.
1929: Acquired by Ogden Codman Jr., an American architect/decorator, who redesigned and restored the villa extensively.
Later 20th century: Owned by several wealthy families, including Italian industrialist Gianni Agnelli (Fiat dynasty) and Izaak & Dorothy J. Killam (Canadian philanthropists).
1950s: Hosted lavish Riviera society gatherings—Côte d’Azur elites, Hollywood stars, and royalty.
Later owner: Edmond Safra, a Lebanese-Brazilian banker, and his wife Lily Safra. The Safras became the villa’s most famous modern residents.
👥 Current Status & Residents
Lily Safra lived there after Edmond Safra’s death in 1999 until her passing in 2022.
The estate reportedly remains in the Safra family trust/estate. It is not publicly accessible and remains a private residence.
It is not used as a hotel or public venue—strictly a billionaire family estate.
🏛 Architecture & Grounds
Style: Belle Époque villa with modern restorations.
Size: ~50 acres of gardens (said to require 50+ full-time gardeners).
Rooms: ~19 deluxe rooms, 14 bathrooms, multiple kitchens, pools, and expansive terraces.
Grounds include olive groves, lemon trees, cypress, and a greenhouse complex.
Has been described as a “palace disguised as a villa.”
🎬 Cultural Fame
Used as a filming location for Alfred Hitchcock’s 1955 film To Catch a Thief starring Grace Kelly and Cary Grant.
Known as a gathering place for European aristocracy and tycoons during the 20th century.
💰 Valuation
Frequently cited as one of the world’s most expensive homes.
2008: Russian billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov agreed to buy it for €370 million (~$500 million) but backed out during the financial crisis; lost his deposit.
Estimated value today (2020s): still in the range of $500–750 million, depending on market conditions.
📅 Age
Built in 1902 → as of 2025, it is 123 years old.
✅ Summary:
Villa Leopolda, built by King Leopold II of Belgium in 1902 as a mistress’s gift, is one of the Riviera’s crown jewels. Over 123 years, it has passed through dynasties of European nobility, American tycoons, Italian industrialists, and finally the Safra banking family. It is still a private residence, famous for its size, gardens, and cultural glamour—valued at over half a billion dollars, making it one of the world’s priciest estates.
The One – Bel-Air, USA
Touted at $500 million, this behemoth spec mega-mansion in Bel-Air includes a 100,000 sq ft layout, 20 bedrooms, a 30-car gallery, nightclub, bowling alley, theaters, and more . However, after financial troubles, it was auction-sold in 2022 for $126 million .
📍 Location
Address: 944 Airole Way, Bel-Air, Los Angeles, California.
Overlooks the city with 360° views of the Pacific Ocean, San Gabriel Mountains, and Downtown LA.
🏛 Architecture & Style
Architectural Style: Ultra-modernist with clean glass-and-concrete geometry.
Architect: Paul McClean (noted LA luxury architect), interiors by Kathryn Rotondi.
Developer: Nile Niami, a Hollywood producer turned real estate developer.
📐 Size & Layout
Total size: ~105,000 sq ft (main residence ~74,000 sq ft + 3 guest houses).
Rooms/Features:
21 bedrooms, 42 bathrooms.
50-car garage, 30-seat theater, 10,000-bottle wine cellar.
Multiple pools, nightclub, spa, wellness center.
Bowling alley, golf simulator, putting green, and running track.
It is the largest private residence in the U.S..
📅 Construction Timeline
2012: Land acquired for $28 million.
2014–2021: Built with massive earthworks (nearly 50,000 cubic yards of dirt removed).
2021: Construction completed after years of delays.
💰 Ownership & Sale
Originally marketed at $500 million, touted as the “most expensive home in America.”
Developer Nile Niami went bankrupt before selling.
2022 Auction: Sold at a bankruptcy auction for $141 million to Fashion Nova founder Richard Saghian (current owner).
👥 Current Residents
Richard Saghian uses it as a personal residence but also as a statement property.
Not a museum, not a public space—it’s a private home.
✅ Summary:
The One in Bel-Air is a 105,000 sq ft ultra-modern mega-mansion, designed by Paul McClean and developed by Nile Niami, completed in 2021. Once hyped as the world’s first $500 million home, it sold in 2022 for $141 million to Richard Saghian (Fashion Nova CEO). It remains a private residence, not a museum or rental property.
The One is a private residence in Bel Air, Los Angeles, California, United States. It is a compound of a main residence and three smaller houses in the modernist style and was developed by Nile Niami. The property is 105,000 square feet on 3.8 acres. Construction began in 2014. Following delays, it was completed in 2021. Niami initially sought to sell the mansion for $500 million, but his company fell into bankruptcy and the building sold at auction for $126 million, a record auction sale price in the United States.
Château Louis XIV – France
📍 Location
Louveciennes, near Versailles, France (just west of Paris).
The site is not far from the historic Palace of Versailles, which it deliberately echoes
🏛 Style & Architecture
Style: Neo-classical / Neo-Baroque — designed to imitate 17th-century French châteaux of the Louis XIV era (the “Sun King”).
Features:
Moat with fountains and water displays.
Formal French gardens with parterres, mazes, and a canal.
Gilded interiors, frescoed ceilings, marble staircases.
A ballroom, cinema, squash court, wine cellar, underground aquarium.
10 luxury suites, salons, and reception halls.
Architect: French designer Pierre Bortolussi.
Developer: Built by Cayman Islands–based Cogemad, headed by Emad Khashoggi (a French-Saudi businessman and relative of the late arms dealer Adnan Khashoggi).
🏗 Construction & Age
Built: Between 2008 and 2011.
Age today (2025): Only 14–17 years old — not a historical château but a modern construction in period style.
📜 Lineage & Ownership
Despite the name, it has no connection to King Louis XIV’s lineage or the French royal family.
Built on the grounds of a former 19th-century estate, but everything seen today is a new creation.
2015: The château was sold for about €275 million (~$300 million), making it (at the time) one of the most expensive homes ever sold.
Buyer: Reports (including The New York Times and Forbes) revealed the purchaser was Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia.
👑 Current Status
Not a museum.
Not open to the public.
Functions as a private royal residence when the Saudi crown prince is in France, though it is not permanently inhabited.
Symbolic: Its Versailles-like design is seen as a reflection of wealth, power, and status.
✅ Summary:
Château Louis XIV in Louveciennes, France, is a modern palace built 2008–2011 in the style of a 17th-century French château. Designed by Pierre Bortolussi for developer Emad Khashoggi, it features gardens, fountains, and lavish interiors that deliberately echo Versailles. Though named after the Sun King, it has no historic royal lineage. In 2015, it was purchased for about $300 million by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, making it a private royal residence, not a museum.
Sold in 2015 for about $300 million to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, this modern-styled chateau near Versailles includes a moat, iPhone-controlled fountains, and 57 acres of landscaped grounds .
Deep Water Bay Mansion – Hong Kong
Purchased in 2017 by tycoon Pan Sutong for $322 million—the highest home sale in the last decade to date. The 13,854 sq ft property is among Hong Kong’s most expensive private residences .
Other noteworthy listings include Château d’Armainvilliers (near Paris), which may go for $452 million and would surpass Château Louis XIV if sold at that price and the former Moroccan king’s estate south-east of Paris, listed at €425 million (roughly $460 million) .
Location & Prestige
Address: 79 Deep Water Bay Road, Southern District, Hong Kong Island—deep in one of the city’s most exclusive and scenic neighborhoods. Deep Water Bay is often dubbed the wealthiest neighborhood on Earth, home to numerous tycoons and billionaires WikipediaCoconuts.
Nearby enclaves include Repulse Bay and the Hong Kong Golf Club, offering serene natural surroundings, private clubs, and a strong sense of privacy and prestige WikipediaSouth China Morning PostTatler Asia.
Origins & Ownership History
Acquisition: The property was originally purchased in 1963, for HK$650,000 by Chong Yuet-ming, late wife of tycoon Li Ka-shing; it had previously been registered under Thomas Le Cheuk-kuen, an accountant South China Morning Post.
Ownership Transfers: After Chong’s passing in 1990, ownership passed to Victor Li (their elder son) in 1991, then registered under Li Ka-shing’s name in 1994 South China Morning Post.
Architecture, Size & Features
A three-story mansion elevated on a raised podium.
Outdoor amenities include a swimming pool and adjacent lawn, likely with garden views offering ocean and golf course vistas South China Morning PostWikipedia.
Size: Approximately 9,000 sqft of saleable area, with a per-square-foot valuation of HK$220,000, giving a property valuation of around HK$2 billion (about US$255 million)—making it one of Hong Kong’s most valuable single-family homes Wikipedia.
Current Residents
The residence has been home to the Li Ka-shing family for over six decades.
It continues to be the family’s primary residence, where Victor Li, his wife Cynthia Wong, their children, and Li Ka-shing (now age 97) reside South China Morning Post+1.
Rumors & Public Sentiment
Recently, rumors circulated on social media claiming the mansion was being put up for sale. Victor Li publicly dismissed these as “entirely fabricated, speculative, and lacking factual basis,” urging the public not to trust them South China Morning Post.
Why It Stands Out
Historical significance: A family legacy home for one of Asia’s most prominent billionaires.
Architectural cachet: Expansive, private, and beautifully situated, offering prestige and tranquility.
Psychological anchor: Symbolizes generational legacy, family stability, and social prominence—deeply associated with Hong Kong's modern history.
Summary Table
AttributeDescriptionLocation79 Deep Water Bay Road, Southern District, Hong Kong IslandAcquired1963 by Chong Yuet-ming (Li Ka-shing’s wife) – HK$650,000Ownership LineagePassed to Victor Li (1991), then Li Ka-shing (1994)Size & Value~9,000 sq ft; valued at ~HK$2 billion (~US$255 million) at HK$220k/sq ftFeatures3 stories, podium elevation, pool, lawn, ocean/golf viewsCurrent ResidentsLi Ka-shing (97), Victor Li, Cynthia Wong, their childrenRumor StatusSale rumors debunked by Victor Li
Billionaire Homes in the USA
While "counting" such homes is tricky, several standout properties give a sense of scale:
Xanadu 2.0 (Bill Gates, Seattle): Market-valued around $120.5 million; a high-tech lakeside compound with underground libraries, music-embedded pools, and a spa-like feel
Copper Beech Farm (Greenwich, CT): Sold for $120 million in 2014
Mountain Home Road (Woodside, CA): Masayoshi Son’s estate, purchased for $117.5 million in 2012
The Chartwell Mansion (Bel-Air): Sold for $150 million in 2019 to Lachlan Murdoch—California’s priciest residential sale at the time
"The One": Auctioned for $126 million
“Versailles” in Florida: A massive, still-unfinished mega-mansion valued well over $100 million, still in development as of early 2025
Celebrity Real Estate in Los Angeles & Beyond
2024 Did-Happen Transactions ℹ:
Kendrick Lamar bought a Brentwood estate for $42 million.
Laurene Powell Jobs spent $70 million on a San Francisco home and $94 million for a Malibu beach house.
The Beckhams acquired a Miami estate for $72.3 million.
Jeff Bezos added a $90 million property on Miami’s Indian Creek Island.
Ken Griffin purchased a $90 million estate in the French Riviera.
Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi sold Carpinteria parcels for $96 million.
Tom Ford set a UK residential record with a $104 million London purchase
Billionaires’ Homes Across the Globe: At a Glance
Country—Notable Billionaire Home(s)Price / Value Estimate—
India— Antilia (Mukesh Ambani)~$4.6 billion
UK (London)—Buckingham Palace, Witanhurst, The Holme£139 m – $4.9 billion
France—Villa Leopolda, Château Louis XIV—$300–750 million
Monaco—Mareterra ultra-lux neighbourhood Villas hundreds of millions
USA—Little Lake Lodge (Aspen), The One (Bel-Air), Gates’ compound, Chartwellup to $300 million for sale, record sales ~$150 million
Hong Kong—Deep Water Bay mansion (Pan Sutong)$322 million
Final Thoughts
Is Little Lake Lodge the most expensive home in the world?
No—it's the priciest currently listed in the U.S., but well below valuations like Buckingham Palace or Antilia.How many billionaire homes are there in the U.S.?
There's no precise count—but homes exceeding $100–150 million are rare. The most exclusive examples include properties in Aspen, Bel-Air, Greenwich, and Hamptons.Celebrity homes in Los Angeles:
Notables include The One (Bel-Air, auctioned at $126 million) and Chartwell Mansion ($150 million sale). Several high-end celebrity deals occurred in 2024, as listed above.Billionaire homes globally:
From Antilia in India to royal palaces in Europe, ultra-luxury real estate spans continents.
This narrative captures both the specific headline-grabbing listing and its place in a global landscape of extraordinary homes, providing a cohesive and richly detailed 1,200-word feature (actual word-count compressed here for clarity). If you’d like deeper profiles of particular properties, or a closer look at, say, Bollywood and political figures’ homes, I’d be happy to expand further!






























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