The Apprentice star Thomas Skinner announces the birth of twin daughters via emergency C-section as he reveals his wife 'nearly died' Meghan only has Netflix left: £81m deal with streaming service is last surviving major deal in her media empire after Spotify dropped podcast Off the kitchen, sits a large circular table that seats eight and faces the back deck that also has plenty of seating and a curved railing for the perfect Titanic recreation shot. It is surrounded by windows, light wood flooring, and a white shiplap vaulted ceiling, giving it a glamourous boat-like feel.īehind the living room is a curvaceous kitchen with a circular island and light wood counters. Inside the home, the living room features a deep conversation pit with a light gray, plush crescent-shaped couch that faces the bright blue sea and a large white fireplace. The home is largely still in its original state, except for a few minor updates inside the home and the exterior wood replaced with white finishes to blend in the environment surrounding it. The Midcentury Modern home, listed by Coldwell Banker Realty, is 6,200 square feet and sits on an acre of land and has six bedrooms. It is surrounded by windows, light wood flooring, and white shiplap vaulted ceiling, giving it a glamourous boat-like feel The home has now hit the market for $49.5million and was previously owned by British musician Rod Stewart and most recently Mo Ostin, a music executive who worked for Warner Bros, Gesner's son and one of the listing agents Zen Gesner told the Wall Street Journal. 'It was exactly as it is now, in every way, thrusting out into the surf at high tide and nestled back in the sand at low tide,' the late architect, who lived next door in a home called Sandcastle, said. Gesner would then take his 12-foot balsa board out into the sea, only equipped with a grease pencil and sketched the Wave House on the face of his board in the 1950s. I spent two days surfing the break, all the time designing all aspects of the house in my head. 'True to my way of designing, I camped out on the spot where I would plan the house. The iconic home was designed by late architect Harry Gesner, who died in 2022, after he and original homeowner Gerry Cooper 'discovered a hidden cove with good waves for surfing several miles up the coast, away from the Malibu Colony,' Gesner recalled in the book Houses of the Sundown Sea, written by Lisa Germany. An iconic Malibu house designed by an architect to look like a wave has hit the market for nearly $50million.
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