2019-10-16 The Hollywood Reporter

(Sean Pound) #1

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 88 OCTOBER 16, 2019


Illustration by Steve Scott

HOLLYWOOD DESIGN


n residential
design, where
sprawling gyms
and cryochambers once
lured health-obsessed
homebuyers, a new ame-
nity list includes escape
tunnels, biometric access
and museum-grade laser
systems that promise
safety. “The world has
changed, particularly in
California, where there has
been a huge increase in
robberies and burglaries,”
says Mauricio Umansky,
founder and CEO of luxury
real estate brokerage The
Agency, who sees those

changes reflected in every
aspect of the high-end
real estate market in L.A.
“Fingerprints and retinas
now open doors instead of
keys, safes are bullet-
proof, as are entire rooms.
We just sold a home with
a bulletproof master
bedroom.” (Umansky
himself upgraded to two
full-time armed guards
after thieves stole more
than $1 million in hand-
bags, jewelry and watches
from his 10,000-square-
foot Colonial in Encino,
formerly owned by
Smokey Robinson.)

Enter Katy Perry more than 40 years later.
In 2014, the pop star struck a deal with the
L.A. Archdiocese to buy the 8.5-acre prop-
erty for $14.5 million. But shortly thereafter,
Silver Lake businesswoman Dana Hollister
engaged several of the sisters to make a
separate deal. A drawn-out, bitter legal battle
ensued (one of the nuns actually died in court
during a hearing).
The dispute hinged
on whether the court
thought the Archdiocese
or the three nuns had the
authority to sell the prop-
erty. In 2017, Perry and
the Archdiocese prevailed
over Hollister, who was
forced to pay $6.5 mil-
lion in damages for
attempting to sabotage
Perry’s deal.
But the saga still isn’t
over. The pop star’s
agreement with the Archdiocese requires
that she find a replacement for the convent’s
House of Prayer, which still is in use by local
clergy. So far, a replacement has eluded Perry.
At one point, a solution presented itself in the
3-acre Chateau Emanuel in Eagle Rock, but
that deal fell apart. Now it’s an open ques-
tion whether Perry can pull off finalizing the
transaction. In August, Perry’s option to pay
the $14.5 million for the Waverly property
expired. But a spokesman for the church says
they’re still open to a deal. A lawyer repre-
senting Perry declined to comment.


L.A. HOME SECURITY: ‘LASER SYSTEMS IN EVERY SINGLE PROJECT’
But escape tunnels and biometric access won’t protect you from smart appliances BY ALEXANDRIA ABRAMIAN

1
The original
spiral staircase as
designed by iconic
architect Bernard
Maybeck for
Anthony in 1927.
2
Another view of
the staircase as
it was used by the
sisters in 2015.

I


NOW

1

2

Security booths, guards
and laser systems have
become expected ele-
ments in the $40 million to
$50 million homes devel-
oper Ramtin Ray Nosrati
builds for buyers like the
NBA’s DeAndre Jordan.
“We’re installing laser sys-
tems in every single one of
our projects,” says Nosrati,
adding that buyers pay
$35,000 to $50,000 and
often are “celebrities, ath-
letes and musicians who
aren’t home much. Lasers
surround the property so
intruders can’t get to the
home to disable the alarm
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