![]() ![]() There’s also a detached two-car garage with an attached studio.Ĭompleted in 1953, the home was remodeled and updated. Separate breakfast and dining rooms, a living room with a floating stone hearth and a built-in clock, and floor-to-ceiling windows bring the outdoors in to add to the offerings. The patio opens to the large open kitchen, where a center island provides counter seating. Japanese-style landscaping surrounds the house, which wraps around a courtyard and what the listing describes as a “zen patio completed by a red floating Japanese roof and a tranquil pond.” But unlike that snazzy new mansion previewed last summer in Robb Report, this 4,361-square-foot, five-bedroom, five-bathroom house at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains is “highlighted by its simplicity and attention to detail and contemplative atmosphere,” the listing reads. His other big-ticket buy is a $25.5 million Hollywood Hills mansion perched over the Chateau Marmont. ![]() It s the second luxury home Castro has purchased since coming forward in February as the winner of November’s record-breaking $2.04 billion Powerball jackpot. The property is on a corner two-third-acre lot, slightly over three miles from Joe’s Service Center, the Mobil gas station on Woodbury Road and Fair Oaks Avenue, where Edwin Castro purchased his winning ticket. California’s first lottery billionaire has dropped $3.983 million on a Japanese-inspired home in Altadena. ![]()
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