Here's how well '70s supermodel Cheryl Tiegs has done for herself

Here's how well '70s supermodel Cheryl Tiegs has done for herself, In the 1970s, Cheryl Tiegs broke profit records for supermodels. Later, she added to her fortune as a big name representative and agent. Presently, she's wanting to make another fortune by offering her rich Bali-style home in Bel Air.

The previous Sports Illustrated glamor girl is posting her 4,770-square-foot, five-room, four-restroom home in the tony Los Angeles neighborhood at $15 million — around six times the $2.49 million that the Los Angeles Times says Tiegs paid for the property in 1996. It's additionally 25 percent more than the $12 million sticker that Tiegs put on it only three years prior before taking it off the business sector.

"It's an extremely spectacular house done in greatly great taste," posting specialists Joe Babajian tells Yahoo Homes. "Yet, its rational and warm and exceptionally welcoming and benevolent. What's more, that portrays her."Asked about the cost expand, Babajian refers to soaring property estimations ("The costs have acknowledged significantly," he says) and the broad redesigns Tiegs has done on the house, which was assembled in 1951. She enrolled architect Martyn Lawrence Bullard, who showed up on Bravo's "Million Dollar Decorator," to make over the home into a Bali-enlivened asylum.

Notwithstanding the $15 million ask, Babajian says Tiegs' house is a relative deal. He tells Yahoo Homes huge numbers of the encompassing properties — which he says incorporate homes claimed by Salma Hayek, Nancy Reagan and Univision organizer Jerry Perenchio — are in the $50 million territory. "It's in East Gate, the most prime piece of Bel Air," Babajian says.

The house sits on around a section of land and a half. Babajian's posting says it has "all encompassing city sees," "private and lavishly arranged grounds" and "wandering pathways," alongside a pool and visitor house.Tiegs purchased the home well after her supermodeling prime, in which she purportedly instructed a then-unbelievable $2,000 a day. That is not including the millions she earned for her Cover Girl underwriting gig, her form line with Sears, a TV manage ABC, and different book and business wanders. She's still a popular representative; lately, she supported Cambria characteristic stone ledges (which, coincidentally, decorate the house Tiegs simply put available).

So why is Tiegs separating with the spot she's called home for almost 20 years? "She truly simply needs to have a spot in New York," where one of her three children as of late moved on from NYU, says Babajian. "He's staying in New York, so she needs to be there low maintenance and she needn't bother with this enormous of a property in Los Ang
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