How to Buy Real Estate In Palm Springs:
A burgeoning cultural scene, new hotels, and a fresh crowd are signaling a revival. Here’s how to secure your own sun-drenched, modernist retreat.
By
Melissa Feldman
on
October 11, 2017
A burgeoning cultural scene, new hotels, and a fresh crowd are signaling a revival. Here’s how to secure your own sun-drenched, modernist retreat.
No
longer considered a resting place for retirees, Palm Springs is
undergoing a desert revival distinctly its own. Established in the 1930s
as a Hollywood getaway, the area now spans nine distinct cities,
including Desert Hot Springs, Palm Desert, and Rancho Mirage, which
encompasses the exclusive Thunderbird Heights community, where the
Obamas recently vacationed. Today, more and more Angelenos are flocking
to the area, much like New Yorkers to the Hamptons.
This year’s events calendar
featured the inaugural DesertX, an art biennial emphasizing
site-specific installations by 16 internationally known artists like
Doug Aitken and Lita Albuquerque. Modernism Week (February 15–25), a
citywide design celebration with lectures, tours, films, and a modernism
show and sale, is heading into its 13th year. Music festivals in nearby
Indio and Coachella bring in a star-studded crowd. (Look out for the
remake of A Star Is Born, with Bradley Cooper and Lady Gaga,
shot this spring at Coachella.) Add to that the annual BNP Paribas Open
tennis tournament in close-by Indian Wells and the ongoing Palm Springs
International Film Festival, and it’s no wonder the valley is fast
evolving into a western cultural hub.
L’Horizon, an oil tycoon’s 1952
compound by architect William F. Cody, was refurbished and is now the
only hotel in the Coachella valley to join the Leading Hotels of the
World collection. New hotel projects under development include those for
Virgin, Andaz, and Kimpton brands, and the Parker was recently
renovated by Jonathan Adler.
According to local Realtor
Patrick Jordan, the region is brimming with available “grande dame
estates,” like actor Cary Grant’s former home, which sold for $3.4
million in 2016. Jordan’s firm, Patrick Stewart Properties, which specializes in luxury homes, sold the John Lautner–designed,
23,366-square-foot Bob and Dolores Hope estate to investor Ron Burkle
for $13 million last November. Another Lautner gem, featured in Diamonds
Are Forever, was sold to Los Angeles fashion designer Jeremy Scott for
$7.7 million.
If midcentury modern
architecture or a golf resort is what you’re after, specialized Realtors
include John Nelson and Cat Moe of Coldwell Banker Residential or Keith Markowitz.
According to Nelson, “We’re getting a much younger crowd. It’s no
longer a place where your grandparents have a condo.” Nelson recommends
homes built in the ’50s in the Vista Las Palmas district by architecture
firm Palmer & Krisel, which is known for modular post-and-beam
construction with a butterfly roof. The neighborhood, he says, is
overflowing with midcentury three-bedrooms with mountain views and
proximity to downtown that run $900,000 for a fixer-upper and $2.9
million for a renovated 2,400-square-foot open plan with a pool. Nelson
adds, “We’re seeing more people from the East Coast because of direct
flights from New York. Our midcentury modern houses and affordability
are a big draw.”
No comments:
Post a Comment