Guest guest Posted February 15, 2006 Report Share Posted February 15, 2006 > > Housing Search Is Expensive for Getty > > A $3.5-million home the trust bought for use of an official had mold > that left it uninhabitable. Sharon: I'm waiting for Alan Funt or a predecessor to come from behind the cameras. How can a house for $3.5 mil be good for the public? Trust, at least to me, is only relative, to the amount per gallon we're paying for gas and oil. I hope the amount of remediation process is moderate, fair and just on all levels! Peace, Tom Bowles > > http://ktla.trb.com/news/la-me-house15feb15,0,5972583.story? > coll=ktla-news-1 > > By Ralph Frammolino and Felch, Times Staff Writers > > February 15, 2006 > ktla 5 - Los Angeles,CA > > Already under investigation for questionable executive spending, the > J. Getty Trust recently purchased a $3.5-million official > residence for its new museum director's use only to find that the > house was contaminated with mold and uninhabitable. > > Getty officials bought the house in Beverly Glen near UCLA in > October after Director Brand decided not to live in a home > the trust already owned next to the Getty Villa near Malibu. > > But shortly before he and his family were to move into the Beverly > Glen residence, inspectors opened the walls and found so much mold > that the house was considered unsafe to live in. > > The Getty then made an offer on a $5.5-million house near Santa > . Spokesman Ron Hartwig said the trust pulled out of the deal > Tuesday after inspectors found structural problems with the roof. > > Meanwhile, the Getty is paying $15,000 a month to rent Brand a > Holmby Hills home with five bathrooms and a swimming pool on a two- > acre lot. > > Nothing prohibits the Getty from buying an official residence for > its museum director to use. In fact, many leading museums do so. > > But under the tax code, nonprofit organizations must use their > resources for the public good and provide " reasonable " compensation > for employees. In Brand's case, the use of the house would be > considered additional compensation beyond his annual base salary of > more than $480,000. > > The state attorney general is investigating spending by former Getty > Chief Executive Barry Munitz †" and at least one land transaction he > was involved with †" to determine whether any of it jeopardizes the > trust's nonprofit status. Munitz resigned last week under pressure > from the board. > > At least one authority on nonprofit governance, U.S. Sen. > Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said > Monday that the Getty's spending on a home for its museum director > seemed excessive. > > " Apparently Getty officials didn't get the word that 'Lifestyles of > the Rich and Famous' went off the air in 1995, " said Grassley, whose > committee oversees the IRS, which regulates tax-exempt > organizations. > > " Champagne wishes and caviar dreams still seem to rule the day > there, " he said. " It's hard to see how a nonprofit museum can > justify spending millions of dollars for its director's house. " > > While acknowledging that they face a " short-term " loss over the mold- > contaminated house, Getty officials say they are determined to get a > refund and have consulted attorneys about a possible lawsuit. > > " We're desperately trying to get our money back, " said Getty board > Chairman Biggs. " That house is not going to work out, and I > think we're going to essentially come out even. " > > Getty officials said they didn't order a mold report before closing > escrow on the house, relying instead on a 2004 report that the > previous owner supplied showing there was no fungus in the walls. > The former owner's real estate agent, who spoke on condition that he > not be identified, said that along with the report, his client > provided a standard written notice urging the Getty to conduct its > own mold investigation. > > Los Angeles attorney B. Castro, who has represented wealthy > home-buyers as well as won multimillion-dollar court awards over > construction defects, said the Getty has only itself to blame. > > " If someone had come to me and said, 'Gee, Mr. Castro, we had a mold > inspection a year and a half ago,' my answer would have been: Are > you out of your mind? Do you know how fast mold grows? " he said. > > The costly saga over finding a museum director's residence started > with the talks to lure Brand from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. > With the blessings of the Getty board, Munitz offered to buy a home > for the 47-year-old administrator's use. > > Hartwig said the board set a spending limit of $5 million to $6 > million but asked Getty staff to try to keep the purchase to $4 > million. He said the intent was to buy a Westside home close to the > Brentwood museum and big enough to host community meetings, > fundraising events and other museum functions. > > Providing such homes is not unusual for major museums. Until last > year, the Metropolitan Museum of Art provided a Manhattan residence > for Director Philippe de Montebello. The Los Angeles County Museum > of Art's new director, Govan, will live in a home owned by a > museum-related foundation. > > In Virginia, Brand, his wife and their two children lived in a two- > story house owned by a foundation associated with the museum he led. > The director said that after accepting the Getty job in August, he > took a house-hunting trip during which he looked at 30 homes, with > specific requirements in mind. > > " This is not a house being bought for me, " he said in an interview > last week. " This is a house being bought for the museum. " > > Among the properties he toured was one the Getty already owned: a > two-story, four-bedroom stucco home on Surfview Drive, next to the > Getty Villa, with a swimming pool and a view of the Pacific. > > Records show that the trust bought the house five years ago for $2.6 > million to settle a neighbor's lawsuit over the Villa renovation. > The purchase price was about $1.1 million more than what comparable > nearby homes sold for in 2001, records show. > > Brand said he decided not to live in that home because it was > isolated and didn't have the floor plan or backyard space needed for > entertaining. Getty officials said that they realized the home was > too small to host museum-related functions and that they did not > consider it an ideal fit for their new director. > > With the $4-million limit in mind, officials eventually made an > offer on the 70-year-old, 4,900-square-foot Spanish-style home at > 711 S. Beverly Glen Drive. It was owned by a trust on behalf of an > unnamed female celebrity. > > A source close to the transaction said the Getty jumped at the four- > bedroom house with open-beam ceilings and custom stained-glass > windows after the seller dropped the price from $4.4 million to $3.5 > million in September. > > During the routine inspections, nothing indicated a problem with > mold, Getty spokesman Hartwig said. > > He added that the trust would have looked closer if there had been > indications of mold. > > " The people responsible for getting the house ready were very > comfortable using the year-old report, since there was no indication > of mold in the general inspection, " Hartwig said. > > Several Westside real estate agents and mold experts said it was a > mistake for the Getty to rely on the report, especially after last > year's record rains. > > With enough space and nutrients, mold can spread throughout a house > in three to six months, a prospect that motivates many high-end home > buyers and agents to routinely lay out the $300 to $500 for a basic > mold inspection. > > Their hope: to avoid the kind of nightmare that befell Ed McMahon, > the former ny Carson sidekick who won a $7.2-million insurance > settlement after claiming that mold in his Beverly Hills house > killed his dog Muffin and sickened him and his wife. > > The 90210 ZIP Code " has been a hotbed for mold issues, primarily > because the people who can afford " mold testing have it done, said > Dennis Butcher, vice president and general manager of Environmental > Management Solutions, a mold remediation company in Chino. > > That the Getty didn't do its own mold test " makes no sense to me, " > said Fitzgerald, a leading Coldwell Banker agent in Beverly > Hills who added that she would have one done even if the owner > didn't " just for peace of mind. " > > " We do a mold inspection with every single sale we do, " said > Fitzgerald, who called such precautions " de rigueur … even in condos > built in 2001. " > > Hartwig said the Getty discovered its mold problem around Christmas > during renovation to ready the house for the Brands. While preparing > the living room for painting, crews found moisture on a wall. An > expert was called in, the wall was opened and mold was discovered. > > That's when the Getty ordered air testing, which revealed mold > spores throughout the house. " Destructive " tests, which punched > holes throughout the walls, showed that fungus was " rampant, " > Hartwig said. > > The smell was so bad that one Getty employee who walked through the > house after the testing felt sick, went home and woke up the next > morning with her eyes sealed shut because of irritation. > > " The people we relied on believe that mold as extensive as [was] > ultimately found in the house would not have grown in a year's > time, " Hartwig said. " We're at a loss to explain how that could be > the case if mold was not present and not made known to us. " > > He said that even if the Getty doesn't get a refund, it considers > the Beverly Glen property a " liquid asset " on which a new home can > be built and sold for a profit. > > After the trust determined that the house was unsuitable, it > scrambled to find a rental for Brand and started looking for a > replacement home. > > Hartwig said the Getty made its offer on the $5.5-million house near > Santa on Feb. 1 and last week opened escrow, only to find the > defects that led to the trust's decision Tuesday to withdraw its > offer. > > Frances Hill, a professor at the University of Miami School of Law, > said the IRS' standard in determining the appropriateness of homes > provided for nonprofit executives is " reasonableness. " > > " Shock and awe is the right response, even in Los Angeles, " she said > when told the Getty was considering the purchase of a $5.5-million > home for Brand. But she acknowledged that real estate is expensive > in Southern California and added: " There is no number that someone > says, 'That's too much.' " > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 15, 2006 Report Share Posted February 15, 2006 Tom, I know this sounds weird, but in parts of LA, a $3.5M house is not necessarily stupendous. I am process of negotiating a purchase for a client in San Obispo. The house is 625 sf, on a 6000 sf lot. It has no view and it is 75 years old. The asking price is $695K. But it is really cute. lol Sharon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.