Bless this home indeed.
In the posh Brentwood Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, an approximately 1.4-acre property with its own Mission Revival-style chapel has hit the market, the Wall Street Journal first reported.
The listing, which went live last week, is seeking $38.5 million — and is shared by mother-son Douglas Elliman team David and Anna Solomon, and Evan and Laura Pozarny of Muselli Commercial Realtors.
In addition to “Camino con Cristo,” the historic main residence, there is also a standalone guest house, a potting shed, a swimming pool, a fireplace-equipped loggia and a garage on the grounds.
The magnitude of the residence, while holding enormous appeal, is also the reason it’s up for sale.
“It is a lot of property for one person,” Craig McDonald, the son of the home’s seller, Helen Price, explained to the Journal as the reason why his mother is parting with the estate.
Inside the chapel, which the sellers constructed some 20 years ago. Christopher Amitrano
In all, the property is listed as a six-bedroom. Christopher Amitrano
The estate is reportedly one of the largest in the area. Christopher Amitrano
Inside the potting shed. Christopher Amitrano
The main residence is named “Camino con Cristo.” Christopher Amitrano
Price, 78, and her late husband, David Price, the founder of golf course management company American Golf Corp, paid $5.5 million in 1999 for the first of what would become the three combined parcels of land that compose the offering.
Today, the property features some 8,200 square feet of living space across its multiple buildings.
In regards to its most divine feature, the couple had the chapel constructed around 20 years ago after finding faith as older adults, and used it as a space “to go and have time and quiet and to study,” according to McDonald.
And they adorned it elegantly. Images show a colorful altar beneath beamed ceilings, along with white and earth tones that offer an inspiring touch.
David passed away last year, and Helen now plans to move closer to McDonald and his sister, who live in the Dallas area.
In addition to the main residence, there is also a standalone guest house. Christopher Amitrano
There are seven bathrooms. Christopher Amitrano
The main house was reportedly designed in 1928. Christopher Amitrano
An aerial view of the property. Christopher Amitrano
“The real value here is in the size of the land,” Elliman’s David Solomon told the Journal, calling the six-bedroom, seven-bathroom homestead one of the largest in the area.
Indeed, “At nearly 62,000 sf of mostly flat land this property is almost impossible to duplicate,” says the listing.