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  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_003.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A bedroom in the property, complete with original corner fireplace. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_008.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A view of the garden, complete with terracotta paving. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_003.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The property is located on 5th Helena Drive, Brentwood. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_002.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A close up view of the fireplace. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_005.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The property is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_006.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A view of the kitchen and central island. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_007.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The front room with original features including beamed ceiling and a tiled fireplace. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_004.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: Monroe bought the property for $75,000 shortly before her death. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_010.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: An aerial view of Marilyn Monroe's former home. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_001.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: A view of the peanut-shaped swimming pool. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_009.jpg
  • Movie icon Marilyn Monroe’s last home is on the market for $6.9 million. The four-bedroom, three-bathroom house is set in the luxurious Brentwood neighborhood of LA and is described as an “authentic 1929 Hacienda”. With its swimming pool, citrus grove and guest home, the 2,624-square-foot property is steeped in Hollywood glamour. Listing agent Lisa Optican of Mercer Vine said of the estate, which is located on 5th Helena Drive: “When you walk the house and grounds, you’re immediately struck by its serenity and warmth. “It’s an absolute oasis in the heart of one of the best neighborhoods in Los Angeles.” Monroe bought the home for $75,000, shortly before her death in 1962 aged 36. According to a report in The Los Angeles Times at the time, the starlet was found dead in a bedroom of the home lying face down with a telephone receiver in her hand. The Some Like It Hot star talked about the home - which last sold for $5.1 million in November 2012 - in a 1962 with Life Magazine, which was accompanied by a photoshoot inside. "Anybody who likes my house, I’m sure I’ll get along with," she told the publication’s then-associate editor Richard Meryman. In Meryman’s essay about the interview, published just months before Monroe’s death, he described the house as “a small, three-bedroom house built in Mexican style,” adding that it was “the first home entirely her own she had ever had." "She exulted in it,” he went on. “On a special trip to Mexico she had carefully searched in roadside stands and shops and even factories to find just the right things to put in it. The large items had not arrived - nor was she ever to see them installed.”. 25 Apr 2017 Pictured: The manicured garden has a citrus grove and is well maintained. Photo credit: Lisa Optican/Mercer Vine / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA31564_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_013.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Lobby. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_014.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Penthouse. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_008.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Outdoor pool. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_005.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Facilities. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_013.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Apartment. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_011.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Rooftop garden. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_004.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Penthouse. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_001.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Penthouse. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA144640_009.jpg
  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Apartment. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Indoor pool. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Charley the robot butler. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Penthouse. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Charley the robot butler. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • Meet Charley — a dancing robot ‘butler’ who delivers mini-bar item directly to your door at a new super luxury apartment tower in Los Angeles. Charley, who is based in the lobby at the opulent 40-storey Ten Thousand complex, can deliver anything from a bottle of water to champagne and chocolates to residents’ doors. A spokesman for Ten Thousand explained: “The resident makes a request and Charley enters the elevator and brings it to your door.  “Once the item is retrieved, Charley does a little dance and proceeds back down to the lobby.” Charley is one of a host of super high-end service on offer at Ten Thousand, which is located on the border of Beverly Hills and Century City and opened last year. The property, designed by Handel Architects, is being billed as the future of LA’s real estate market as the city looks to build more high-rise residences, much like the New York aesthetic. The residential tower features 75,000 sq ft of amenities and hospitality services overseen by a house staff of 80, from a leading-edge fitness and wellness center, indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor theaters, performance coaches, nutritionists and in-house car service, Residents can even book a room with an exam table to have facials and massages, or even call in their own medical technician — so if you need a few botox jabs or your fillers updating, you have the luxury of being able to do so on the site of your residence. Such luxury comes with a hefty price tag of course — two and three-bedroom apartments, complete with 10ft-high ceilings and panoramic views through floor-to-ceiling glass windows range anywhere from $9,000 to $25,000 per month while the jewel in the crown is the penthouse at $65,000 per month. 14 Jan 2018 Pictured: Ten Thousand is a new high-rise, luxury development in Los Angeles, California. Local caption: Apartment. Photo credit: Ten Thousand/ MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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