An ‘unbelievable deal’? The $200m mansion reportedly bought by Beyoncé and Jay Z

40,000 sq ft manor overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Malibu is thought to be California’s most expensive home ever

With its steep green cliffs overlooking the Pacific Ocean, Malibu is a top contender in America’s ultra-luxury real estate market. Its rise in the rankings of the favorite spots of the super-rich was solidified again in past weeks, with reports that Beyoncé and Jay-Z purchased a 40,000 sq ft oceanfront mansion in the coastal enclave.

TMZ first reported that the star couple had snapped up a modernist mansion designed by the celebrity Japanese architect Tadao Ando. With a sale tag of $200m, the acquisition appears to break the record for the most expensive home in California.

The mansion been described as “massive”, “minimalist” and “echoey”, and reportedly includes both a pool and a “water feature”, as well as an award-winning concrete driveway.Mansion madness: Los Angeles realtors in sell-off frenzy as wealth tax loomsRead more

Ando, the architect, is a Pritzker prize winner, whose exposed concrete and glass homes have become status symbols for American superstars. Kim Kardashian announced earlier this spring that she was working on a “dream project” with Ando, and in 2021 Kanye West reportedly purchased a comparatively modest beachfront Malibu home designed by Ando for $57.3m.

The Mansion in Malibu, California, designed by Tadao Ando. Photograph: Florian Holzherr

The home originally was commissioned by William and Maria Bell, art collectors and members of the family soap opera dynasty that created The Young and the Restless and The Bold and the Beautiful. Maria Bell described the construction as “dazzling” and “spectacular”, but told the Wall Street Journal: “It’s also a daunting idea to live in something that can seem to many people like a Brutalist structure.”

The original asking price for the property was $295m, TMZ said, characterizing the final $200m sale price as an “unbelievable deal”.

New York City still holds the record for the most expensive home in the United States, a $238m penthouse apartment overlooking Central Park. But California has been repeatedly breaking its own records in recent years.

Malibu’s rise as a mecca for luxury real estate was driven by decades of investment by the tech magnate Larry Ellison, according to the Wall Street Journal. Ellison, the fifth wealthiest person in the world, owns an estimated 10 homes on what is now known as Malibu’s Billionaire’s Beach, according to the newspaper, in addition to a series of commercial holdings. (Ellison also owns most of the Hawaiian island of Lanai.)

Beyoncé and Jay-Z attend the 65th Grammy Awards in February 2023 in Los Angeles, California. Photograph: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

Billionaire tech executives and celebrity artists are continuing to push up real estate prices in the city, undaunted by multiple deadly wildfires that have hit the region in recent years, including a 2018 blaze that razed multimillion-dollar mansions and left three people dead. The median price for a single-family home in the city has more than doubled since 2016, to nearly $7m. Some of Malibu’s new elite homeowners are now cobbling together multiple properties to build mega-luxury compounds, according to the Journal. The WhatsApp CEO, Jan Koum, bought two adjoining properties for a combined $187m, while Marc Andreessen owns three different Malibu homes with a total value of $255.5m.

A representative for Beyoncé did not immediately comment on the reports about the mansion purchase. Kurt Rappaport, the Malibu “alpha agent” who reportedly arranged the record-breaking $200m sale, has previously worked with Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt and Ellen DeGeneres. He did not respond to requests for comment.

Meanwhile, social media commentators have weighed in on the stars’ acquisition, with the New York Post, a publication known for its skepticism of California “cheeseball” real estate aesthetics, highlighting comments comparing the mansion to a “WWII bunker” or “an empty Costco distribution center”. On Reddit, a thread about the mysterious property concluded that “every Malibu mansion looks like a supervillain lair”.

Hello to you, dear reader!

When the former Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha delivered his New Year message back in 1967, he pulled the cord marked “truth bomb”. “This year will be harder than last year,” he declared. “It will, however, be easier than next year.” I mean … on the one hand: thanks for not sugar-coating it, Enver. On the other: way to kill the party buzz, you monster!

 

I don’t want to murder the atmosphere (or indeed any dissidents) by reminding you of the news year you’ve just lived through – or by warning you of the news year you’re about to live through. It’s not big, it’s not clever, and it’s sure as heck not seasonal.

 

But I will say, pointedly, that our reporting feels particularly necessary in dark times. If you can, please help support the Guardian on a monthly basis from just $2, so as to keep it open for everyone. I can’t tell you how much it would be appreciated. A free press is needed now as much as it has ever been – and on some days, more than it has ever been.

In return for this support, I am formally* bestowing upon you the right to refer to yourself – in conversation, in the pub, and on any business cards you may care to have printed up – as “a newspaper baron”. Face it: if you pay to support a news organisation, then you ARE to all intents and purposes a newspaper baron. Just enjoy it! All the others do.

 

With that, it simply remains is for me to wish you a very happy holidays, and a splendid new year. Goodness knows you’ve earned it.