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Jeffrey Jonathon Hyland (c. 1946 – February 16, 2022) was an American real estate businessman, president of Hilton and Hyland, [1] a real estate firm in Beverly Hills, California, and author. He had personally handled several billion dollars in real estate sales.
The Beverly Estate is a property built in 1926 [1] [2] at 1011 North Beverly Drive in Beverly Hills, California. [ 3 ] The estate was designed by architect Gordon Kaufmann for banker Milton Getz [ 4 ] and was the residence of actress Marion Davies and her partner William Randolph Hearst after his infirmity forced them to leave San Simeon . [ 5 ]
[6] [10] The corporation known as 1261 Angelo Drive, LLC was created on June 3, 2002, a common tactic for high-profile individuals to anonymously purchase real estate. [11] Later that year the Pritzker family acquired the home at 1261 Angelo Drive and the house was quickly demolished, despite efforts by the Los Angeles Conservancy to prevent ...
Heather and Terry Dubrow are putting down more roots in Los Angeles.A source tells ET that the reality TV couple closed a deal to purchase late filmmaker Dino De Laurentiis' 9,000 sq. foot Beverly ...
Although properties in the estate have a 90210 ZIP code and thus a Beverly Hills address, it is actually part of the Beverly Hills Post Office area in the city of Los Angeles, with much of the land located inside the Sherman Oaks district. [1]
Following the purchase of the estate by the City of Beverly Hills in 1965, it became a city park in 1971, and was subsequently added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1976 as Doheny Estate/Greystone. The house and grounds are often used as locations for film and television shows.
Many classic TV shows have been made into reboots or revivals, but Beverly Hills, 90210 stands a cut above. The iconic Fox hit was reimagined not once, but twice. The show focused on twins Brandon ...
The architectural historian and real estate executive Jeffrey Hyland, writing in The Legendary Estates of Beverly Hills describes the price paid by Weber for the site as being an "astonishing sum" to have been paid in the midst of the Great Depression as comparable large estates had remained unsold for many years at similar prices. [2]