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Featuring Lee Iacocca’s Los Angeles Mansion

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Featuring Lee Iacocca’s Los Angeles Mansion

One of the many things Lee Iacocca — America’s favorite business leader, from the 1960s to the ‘90s — was known for, were his famous quotes, including: “In times of great stress or adversity, it’s always best to keep busy, to plow your anger and your energy into something positive”; and “If you can find a better car, buy it.”

Iacocca, the long-time president of Ford Motor Company and Chairman of Chrysler Corporation, could switch from engineering to sales, marketing, CEO, charity fundraising and politics, with little effort.

After introducing the Ford Mustang, Iacocca jumped over to Chrysler where he launched the minivan concept, convinced the U.S. government to loan Chrysler $1.5 billion, and saved the company from collapse.

Lee Iacocca (left) meets with US President Bill Clinton in 1993. Photo credit: Ralph Answang for the White House; photo archived in Clinton Presidential Library.

Lee Iacocca (left) meets with US President Bill Clinton in 1993. Photo credit: Ralph Answang for the White House; photo archived in Clinton Presidential Library.

He was well paid for his talent, and by the time he died, in 2019, Iacocca was worth $150 million. His beautiful home in Los Angeles, where he lived out his retirement, before succumbing to Parkinson’s disease, is for sale, listed at $29.9 million.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Iacocca was born to Italian immigrant parents, who moved to Pennsylvania for work in the steel industry, and the extended-family hot dog business. He proved himself to be a super achiever, early on, graduating with honors from high school, Lehigh, for college and then winning a fellowship to Princeton.

Lee’s genius was in connecting the dots in the roadmap to the future. His celebrity status was cemented with the development of the Ford Mustang in 1964, the most successful new car, ever introduced in the U.S., earning a profit over $1 billion, in just its first two years; and saving Chrysler from the brink of disaster, in 1979.

He did his own Chrysler commercials and was a frequent guest on television talk shows. In addition to the auto industry, Lee wrote several best-selling books; was successful in the restaurant, food and gaming businesses; and was well known for heading the 1980’s Statue of Liberty restoration. He was a serious and popular candidate for U.S. president in 1988, but decided not to run.

Iacocca’s Tuscan-style mansion includes 10,682 square feet, with five bedrooms and eight baths, on over an acre, near the Bel Air Country Club.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

There are four ensuited guest rooms, a staff apartment, formal living and dining rooms, paneled library and five fireplaces.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Huge open-plan rooms that spill out onto lovely terraces are perfect for large-scale entertaining, while other spaces invite intimate gatherings. Constructed of luscious materials and craftsmanship, the home is bright and cheerful, while retaining an elegant vibe.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Immaculate grounds contain mature landscaping, with outdoor living areas, accented with topiary. Outdoor recreation includes a swimming pool, spa and tennis courts to be enjoyed year-round in Southern California’s mild climate.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

A chef’s kitchen is ready for enjoying family or guests. The master suite has a living area larger than many mansions’ formal living rooms, on a scale reminiscent of historical times when the aristocracy entertained guests in their private chambers.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

Photo credit: Hilton & Hyland.

After his death in 2019, Lee Iococca’s estate, where he entertained Bob and Dolores Hope, Frank and Barbara Sinatra, Priscilla Presley and Betty White, is now for sale at $29.9 million. The listing agents are David Kramer and Rick Hilton of Hilton & Hyland, Beverly Hills.

Courtesy of TopTenRealEstateDeals.com

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