Dr. Dre lists longtime Woodland Hills manor for $5.25 million

Dr. Dre at his home in Woodland Hills in 1999. The hip-hop mogul is now selling the 16,200-square-foot residence for $5.25 million.
(Ken Hively / Los Angeles Occasions)

Music producer and mogul Dr. Dre has put his longtime residence in Woodland Hills in the marketplace for $5.25 million.

Set on greater than half an acre in a guard-gated neighborhood, the French country-style manor is entered via a two-story lobby. A grand staircase extends upward, connecting the three tales of residing house.

The 16,200-square-foot home, in-built 1987 and extensively up to date, options two kitchens, a 250-bottle wine cellar, an workplace, a red-clad movie show, a paneled eating room and an elevator. A customized 150-gallon fish tank anchors the household room. Pocketing partitions of glass border a grand lanai, which holds a moist bar and an indoor spa.

A sitting space, twin closets and a dressing room with a dry sauna comprise the master bedroom. In all, there are eight bedrooms, 13 loos and two powder rooms.

Outdoors, landscaped grounds maintain a saltwater swimming pool, patios and fireplace pit. A flat-screen tv constructed right into a stone sits close to the pool space.

Dr. Dre purchased the house in 1999 for $2.35 million, actual property information present.

The 54-year-old is the founder and chief govt of Aftermath Leisure and Beats Electronics. The Grammy winner has labored with Snoop Dogg, Eminem and 50 Cent, amongst others.

He owns quite a few properties in Los Angeles County, together with an enormous Brentwood compound that he bought 5 years in the past from NFL star Tom Brady and his spouse, supermodel Gisele Bundchen, for $40 million.

Extra just lately, he purchased a Calabasas property with a recording studio final 12 months for $4.9 million. Earlier this 12 months, he paid $2.25 million for a house in a gated Pacific Palisades neighborhood.

David Smith of Keller Williams Realty holds the itemizing. Christina Kretschmer with Marshall Design Group staged the house.

neal.leitereg@latimes.com | Twitter: @LATHotProperty

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