Samantha’s beach front property from Sex and the City


Do you happen to be able to spare $55.000 a month? Or $75.000 if you are not in town for long? In both cases, you can rent the magnificent beach front property Samantha lived in in the first Sex and the City movie. It’s in the Californian town of Malibu, a short drive from Los Angeles. Malibu is known for a LOT of famous inhabitants. And for Malibu Barbie off course.

 

Samantha's Malibu home in 'Sex and the City'

Lot of glass and a lot of sticky sand. I'd go mad

Do you recognize it from the movie?

 

If the house comes with Samantha’s hunky neighbour it might be worth your money.

Thanks for Hookedonhouses for sharing the story on Facebook. Images courtesy of come2malibu

Oops, I’m moving again


What a little rehab and time on the couch can do for you huh? Well, it might not immediately revamp your career but it does make you want to start fresh. Thus proves pop sensation has-been Britney Spears. She reportedly paid $12,900.000 for this ultra-luxurious pad in Hidden Hills California.

La Spears' new home

Her house is huge! A staggering 9,107 square feet, which roughly translates to 850 m2. It has 10 bedrooms and 13 bathrooms, a ball room, two staff apartments, guest quarters, a wine cellar, chef’s kitchen and a games room. The landscaped garden boasts a tennis court, a pool and several hot tubs.

Landscaped garden

Hidden hills is a private, gated community for the über rich and wealthy. Britney will be hooding it up with the Kardashians, the Osbournes and Melissa Etheridge to name a few. As it is gated, paparazzi won’t be following her every move or shave.

Sitting room

Ballroom

Source Homebunch.com

Delft Blue in the Red Light District



Have you ever flown business class with KLM? If you have, you most likely received a small Delft Blue Porcelain house on board. KLM has been handing these out to Business Class passengers since 1953. Law dictated that Air companies were not allowed to give presents to their customers because of unfair competition. So, KLM had some Blue Delft houses made, and filled them with Dutch genever. The airline snickered at complaints from the competition. “May we decide how we serve our drinks please? Does the law dictate drinks have to be served in a glass?”. Very clever, as the miniature homes have been collectors items since. They enjoy an almost iconic status with fan sites and trading communities online all over the world. KLM has even launched an App for those collecting the houses so they can complete their collection.

KLM huisjes App

For the true die-hard fans it is now possible to live in a house modelled on the KLM houses. In 2009, Stadsherstel Amsterdam, an organisation involved in urban restoration in Amsterdam, wanted to spruce up ‘Oudezijds Armsteeg’, a badly run-down narrow street in the city’s red-light district. The plan was to make the street attractive to tourists again by introducing business activities and giving it a real Amsterdam feeling. Jaap Hulscher, deputy director of Stadsherstel, was once handed a miniature house on board of a KLM flight, and started wondering if this is what people from around the world thought the Dutch houses looked like.

Out of the Blue, Stadsherstel Amsterdam

Architect Kees Doornenbal was given the assignment to design 6 houses inspired by the iconic KLM houses. The project is called Out of the Blue. The outside walls are painted in a shiny white to make them look like they are porcelain. The window frames and eaves are painted in royal blue to mimic the blue used in Delftware. The first habitants have been given their keys.

Oudezijds Armsteeg today

Air France-KLM, as the company if officialy called, hasn’t been involved in the project, but was thrilled ‘their’ houses inspired this project. The company was however involved in another project where Delft Blue houses were the inspiration. In Caloocan City in the Philippines the airliner built family homes as part of its corporate social responsibility program. Each unit cost Php93,500 (USD2,100/EUR 1,600) and measures 20 square metres with one bedroom, toilet, bath, kitchen sink and a laundry area.

Air France-KLM village Caloocan City

Sack the realtor


In keep with the Dutch blog Foutehuizen.nl, who were featured in an earlier post here, I thought it would be fun to post a few more pictures taken by realtors that need to be sacked; today.

Realtor rake in hefty bucks on the buying and selling of homes of others. For this they are supposed to advice you on how to best buy and sell a home. In my humble opinion, selling a home starts with an attractive presentation. Yet it is shocking to see how often realtors seem to be blindfolded when they take pictures of properties they are about to put on the market.

A recent example I stumbled upon.

Sack the realtor exhibit 1

A nice enough home in a leafy suburb of Amsterdam. Nice sized rooms, big kitchen, back yard bordering a park, it has a lot going for it. Yet this is the picture they decide to use as the main image to present it. A picture my dog could have taken! This is the first impression they want people to have? A weird angle of a cluttered kitchen with cloths hanging in clear view? Bizarre. Especially considering that the realtor in this example usually takes better care. Maybe a momentary lapse of sanity, let’s call it that.

Can you find other examples where the realtor needs to be sacked? Let me know!