SOLD for $41.5million! Gianni Versace's former Miami mansion to be turned into a hotel by New York family behind Jordache denim label
- Casa Casuarina in Miami was put up for auction with a starting bid of $16million. The property had originally been on the market for $125million
- The winning bidder was VM South Beach LLC, whose principals include the Nakash family of New York, who control Jordache Enterprises
The family hopes to use the Versace name when the property is rebranded as a hotel.
The new owners of the South Beach mansion where Gianni Versace lived and died said Tuesday that they hope to use the Italian fashion designer's name and legacy in rebranding the property as a hotel.
The company's principals include the Nakash family of New York, which controls Jordache Enterprises.
Joe Nakash, chairman of Jordache
Enterprises, said he expects to retain all the vestiges of Versace's
time in South Beach in the 1990s - the snake-haired Medusa heads, a
swimming pool inlaid with 24-karat gold tiles, gold-plated bathroom
fixtures, custom-made mosaic floorings and frescos and the throngs of
tourists who still routinely stop to have their picture taken on the
front steps where the designer was slain.
We're going to keep it the way it is,' Nakash said.
Jordache Enterprises owns five hotels in Miami Beach, including the Hotel Victor next door to the mansion.
History: Though the
Versace family hasn't owned the oceanfront mansion since 2000,
auctioneers hoped the designer's legacy would attract potential buyers.
'We'd like the public to use it, so we're going to create a hotel that will be consolidated with the Victor,' Nakash said. 'We're going to use the name Versace after we receive OK from the family.'
'We'd
like the public to use it, so we're going to create a hotel... We're
going to use the name Versace after we receive OK from the family'
Though the Versace family hasn't owned the oceanfront mansion since 2000, auctioneers hoped the designer's legacy would attract potential buyers.
Celebrities and investors worldwide expressed interest, but in the end, only three bidders emerged, said Lamar Fisher, president and CEO of Fisher Auction Company, which was appointed by a bankruptcy court.
VM South Beach outbid Donald Trump, whose other South Florida real estate holdings include the Mar-a-Lago estate in Palm Beach and Trump National Doral. It also outbid Wellington developer Glenn Straub, who owns the Palm Beach Polo and Country Club.
Trump's son Eric left the mansion without speaking to reporters.
'It's a cash transaction. There are no contingencies on the property,' Fisher said. A bankruptcy judge is expected to approve the deal Wednesday.
Even if the Versace family declines to license their name, Nakash said he planned to honor the designer with a plaque marking where he died.
'The whole thing has its own
persona that obviously still speaks well for what Versace did in
renovating it and bringing that prominence to Miami Beach,' Gorlinksy
said.
The designer bought a neglected three-story, Mediterranean-style home, originally built in 1930 by Standard Oil heir Alden Freeman, and a dilapidated hotel next door in 1992 and spent $33 million on renovations. The 23,000-square-foot mansion has 10 bedrooms, 11 bathrooms and an open-air courtyard.
Versace was fatally shot in 1997 by serial killer Andrew Cunanan, who later shot himself as a police search closed in on him.
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