sprite-times-solid

2022-07-26 11:13:58 By : Mr. Charles Chen

Now that’s a pretty ‘housesome’ deal if you could even call that. For triple the value of the original price, Mark Zuckerberg has sold his San Francisco residence for $31 million. This also marks the most expensive sale of the year in town. He purchased the house in 2012 for about $10 million.

The $31 million price tag appears to be the most expensive home sale in San Francisco this year. https://t.co/9cQ3jLXLtQ

The house was apparently built in 1928. The hundred year ol’ princely property sits in quaint Liberty Hills at Dolores Heights neighborhood. The house has 4 bedrooms with 4 bathrooms attached. The property spans over 7,300 square feet and is closer to San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center. Post the purchase of the house, Mark Zuckerberg and wife Priscilla Chan did a multi million dollar restoration in 2013 to renovate the home. They modified the laundry room, wine room and extended greenhouse in the property. Apparently their neighbors were quite disgruntled due to the couple’s security details occupying most of the parking most of the time! Sigh of relief for the neighbors. Good riddance!

The Meta cofounder has a robust real estate portfolio with properties across Silicon Valley, Hawaii and Lake Tahoe, where he owns a number of residences. Another house of the Meta cofounder seems still on sale. The one which he shared with Dustin Moskovitz and Sean Parker in Silicon Valley. The Los Altos property is called Casa De Facebook! Any takers?

See Also: Silicon Valley House Where Mark Zuckerberg Created Facebook On Sale For $5.3 Million

Even as billionaires have lost trillions in wealth this year alone, Mark Zuckerberg of all the technocrats has suffered a colossal loss. Losing nearly $63.5 billion in 2022, his current net worth stands at $61.9 billion. That’s over 50% of his fortune down the drain. Quite haunting for the world’s 17th richest billionaire.

Speaking of haunting, Check this out: ‘Conjuring House’ Bought For $1.5 Million But The New Owner Cannot Stay There Just Yet; Here's Why