Shockingly expensive abandoned mansions
Viola Aragon / Flickr [CC BY-ND 2.0]
Fabulous forgone houses worth millions
Empty and unloved, some of the world's priciest properties have been forsaken by their owners, including royal residences, grand country houses and luxurious ranches. Left to languish, we take a look at eight of the most expensive abandoned mansions, from a sprawling 'calendar house' with 365 rooms to the haunted Pink Floyd manor. Click or scroll on to uncover their secrets...
Blanchard & Calhoun Real Estate / Luxury Portfolio International
Thomas-Clay House, Georgia, USA
Built in 1890, this empty stately mansion in Augusta, Georgia comes with a pretty amazing history. Offering eight bedrooms and six bathrooms, the sprawling home may be somewhat faded from its illustrious heyday when it was at the heart of high-society life, but its prestige is still evident.
Blanchard & Calhoun Real Estate / Luxury Portfolio International
Thomas-Clay House, Georgia, USA
The palatial property is said to have regularly hosted the 27th President of the United States, William Howard Taft, in the early 20th century. Even with dusty floors and graying woodwork, it's not hard to imagine the mansion's former grandeur. This reception space is nothing short of spectacular, from the Art Nouveau-style glass light fixtures to the magnificent leaded windows and detailed paneling.
Blanchard & Calhoun Real Estate / Luxury Portfolio International
Thomas-Clay House, Georgia, USA
At the heart of the Queen Anne-style house, this grand carved staircase takes center stage – talk about making an entrance! Commissioned in the late 19th century by businessman Landon Addison Thomas Jr, the property has been in the same family for over a century, however, it's now listed with Blanchard & Calhoun Real Estate for a cool $1.5 million.
Blanchard & Calhoun Real Estate / Luxury Portfolio International
Thomas-Clay House, Georgia, USA
Original hardwood floors extend throughout the interior, and some, like this beautiful parquet flooring, look to be in extremely good condition still. Brimming with a treasure trove of stunning period features, it wouldn't take a lot to make the Thomas-Clay House a beautiful, bustling family home once more.
Blanchard & Calhoun Real Estate / Luxury Portfolio International
Thomas-Clay House, Georgia, USA
In addition to the striking living spaces, the home is surrounded by over three acres of land. While somewhat overgrown and time-worn, signs of the once-manicured landscaping are still visible and certainly aren't beyond the point of rescue.
Blanchard & Calhoun Real Estate / Luxury Portfolio International
Thomas-Clay House, Georgia, USA
Peeking out from behind the overgrowth, the decades certainly haven't diminished the architectural charm of the Thomas-Clay House. If this grand estate achieves a million-dollar price tag in its current neglected state, who knows how much this empty beauty could be worth once restored.
Oddharmonic / Wikimedia Commons [Public domain]
Swannanoa, Virginia, USA
This imposing Italian Renaissance Revival mansion in Virginia was built in 1912 for business leader and philanthropist Major James H Dooley at a cost of $2 million, a hefty $51 million in today's money. No expense was spared on the ultra-luxurious property, which took 300 artisans eight years to finish.
Fopseh / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Swannanoa, Virginia, USA
A romantic escape for Major Dooley and his beloved wife Sarah, Swannanoa was kitted out with furnishings worthy of a billionaire, including exquisite Carrara marble flooring and wall panels, along with gold plumbing fixtures. The home's wow-factor feature is a stunning 4,000-piece Tiffany stained glass window featuring a depiction of Mrs Dooley that cost the equivalent of $64,000 when adjusted for inflation.
Fopseh / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Swannanoa, Virginia, USA
The envy of the neighborhood, the mansion featured all the latest mod cons. As well as being the first property in the area to have electricity installed, Swannanoa had a cutting-edge elevator and dumb waiter, and upon entering the property, guests were wowed by the paneled entryway and splendid marble staircase.
Colchicine / Wikimedia Commons [Public domain]
Swannanoa, Virginia, USA
The Dooleys summered at the property until Major Dooley's death in 1924. Mrs Dooley died in 1926 and Swannanoa passed to her late husband's two sisters, who didn't waste any time getting rid of it. The mansion was sold for the knockdown price of $300,000 and converted into a country club, which opened in 1929 but closed in 1932 on account of the Great Depression.
Fopseh / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Swannanoa, Virginia, USA
The mansion was left empty for years. During the Second World War, the US Navy floated plans to purchase the property but was put off by the cost. Swannanoa finally found a buyer in 1944 when local businessman A. T. Dulaney acquired the dilapidated house for $60,100. He leased it to polymath Walter Russell and his sculptor wife Lao, who established a New Age university on the estate.
Fopseh / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Swannanoa, Virginia, USA
Russell died in 1963 and his wife continued to lease the property until her death in 1988, when it was repurposed as the Russell Museum. Owners the Delaney family shut the museum in 1998 and partly renovated the property, but the vacant Gilded Age mansion, which they describe as a 'money pit', still requires extensive work, though it does manage to function as a venue for weddings and other events.
Aleksandr Andreiko / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Mezhyhirya Residence, Novi Petrivtsi, Ukraine
A monument to shameless corruption, the Mezhyhirya Residence in the Ukraine was the official summer house or dacha for the Soviet leadership, and passed to the Ukrainian government following the dissolution of the USSR in 1991. Viktor Yanukovych moved into the property in 2002 shortly after his election as prime minister and went on to spend millions of dollars of ill-gotten cash on it.
Mezhyhirya Residence, Novi Petrivtsi, Ukraine
Yanukovych was evicted from the residence following the Orange Revolution in 2005 but returned as prime minister in 2006. The politician had the property privatized the following year. The estate's Soviet-era buildings were demolished and work began on a five-story stone and timber palace designed by Finnish firm Honka, which is thought to have cost at least $10 million.
Mezhyhirya Residence, Novi Petrivtsi, Ukraine
Yanukovych, who was elected president in 2010, splurged millions of dollars of taxpayers' money on the blingy interiors, purportedly ordering scores of gilt and crystal chandeliers at $100,000 a pop, $64,000 doors, a staircase clad in fine marble priced at an eye-watering $430,000, and more.
Mezhyhirya Residence, Novi Petrivtsi, Ukraine
The no holds barred spending extended to the opulent bathrooms, which were fitted with the most expensive gold fixtures money could buy. Yanukovych installed an underground shooting range and dropped $3 million on a golf course. A pricey bowling alley and tennis courts were also constructed.
Mezhyhirya Residence, Novi Petrivtsi, Ukraine
Unbelievably, Yanukovych built a private zoo on the property, importing kangaroos and ostriches, and other exotic animals. Unhappy with the state of the road connecting his palace with the Ukrainian capital, the pro-Russian president even went as far as to have a new highway constructed linking Mezhyhirya with Kiev.
Yuriy Dyachyshyn / AFP / Getty
Mezhyhirya Residence, Novi Petrivtsi, Ukraine
Yanukovych also had a garage complex built to house his vast collection of classic cars. Karma eventually caught up with the president, who was ousted by the Ukrainian Revolution in 2014 and fled the country. Wanted for high treason, Yanukovych is currently hiding out in Russia. His abandoned palace, a testament to the man's extravagance, is now a museum.
John Wessels / AFP / Getty
Bamboo Palace, Gbadolite, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Staying with corrupt leaders, Mobutu Sese Seko, the former president of Zaire, now the Democratic Republic of Congo, was just as free and easy with other people's money, lavishing $100 million on his 'Versailles in the Jungle', a luxe palace complex that was built in his home town of Gbadolite during the 1970s.
John Wessels / AFP / Getty
Bamboo Palace, Gbadolite, Democratic Republic of the Congo
The complex boasted three sumptuous residences, including the glitzy Bamboo Palace. Mobutu packed the interiors with paintings by Monet and Renoir, ornate Louis XVI furnishings, Carrara marble and copious gilding. Ridiculously expensive Murano chandeliers hung in almost every room.
Dans / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0]
Bamboo Palace, Gbadolite, Democratic Republic of the Congo
The palace in Gbadolite had a staff of 700 to cater to the president and his family's every whim, which were legendary. Mobutu even had an international airport built nearby just so he could charter Concorde and fly to Paris together with his aptly named first wife Marie-Antionette for full-on designer shopping sprees.
John Wessels / AFP / Getty
Bamboo Palace, Gbadolite, Democratic Republic of the Congo
There was a swanky red-walled nightclub in the complex, which had a bar stocked with the best vintage champagnes, fine wines and spirits. The Gbadolite complex also had several huge swimming pools, a five-star hotel for visiting dignitaries and a number of plush guesthouses to boot.
Warren Long / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY 2.0]
Bamboo Palace, Gbadolite, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Clearing out the state's coffers, the president even splashed out on a mini replica of Beijing's Forbidden Palace. The so-called Peking Palace was completed in the early 1970s. It was used by Mobutu and his family as a retreat and doubled up as a pavilion for welcoming foreign dignities and other VIPs.
John Wessels / AFP / Getty
Bamboo Palace, Gbadolite, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Mobutu was deposed in May 1997, having embezzled up to $15 billion. The ex-president fled to Morocco, where he died later that year. Gbadolite was looted and all its valuables were removed or destroyed. The jungle has since reclaimed the complex, which lies ruined and abandoned.
John Ingleby / Wikimedia Commons [Public domain]
Kinmel Hall, Abergele, UK
Like Africa's Versailles in the Jungle, Kinmel Hall, which is nicknamed the 'Welsh Versailles', has been left to decay, though it isn't in quite as bad shape as Mobutu's former palace. The splendid château-style mansion dates from the 1870s. A 'calendar house', it had 365 rooms at its height, one for every day of the year. A room was even dedicated to ironing newspapers at one time.
Kinmel Hall, Abergele, UK
The sprawling country house was built for copper tycoon Hugh Robert Hughes, who became known as HRH due to his suitably regal lifestyle. The mansion passed through several families and was last used as a private home in 1929, when it was sold to the highest bidder and converted into a boy's school.
Kinmel Hall, Abergele, UK
Kinmel Hall became a spa for rheumatoid suffers in the 1930s and a military convalescent home during the Second World War. The mansion changed hands again after the war when it reopened as the Clarendon School for Girls. A fire in 1975 forced the school to relocate and Kinmel Hall was acquired and restored by businessman Eddie Vince, who used it as a Christian conference center.
Northernhenge / Wikimedia Commons [Public domain]
Kinmel Hall, Abergele, UK
There were plans to transform Kinmel Hall into a luxury hotel, but the project never came to fruition. In 2011, a mystery buyer bought the mansion for a bargain $1.9 million with the intention of developing the elusive hotel.
Kinmel Hall, Abergele, UK
Ambitious plans were unveiled in 2012, but work on the new hotel failed to commence. Kinmel Hall went even more downhill. Looters descended on the abandoned property in 2013 and made off with a set of carved wooden panels gifted to Hughes by Queen Victoria, who is believed to have stayed at the house in the 1870s.
Kinmel Hall, Abergele, UK
Kinmel Hall was added to the Victorian Society's Top 10 Most Endangered Buildings list in 2015 due to its worsening state. The current owner, who resides in the Cayman Islands, has pretty much left the grand mansion to wrack and ruin, and the restoration bill is now likely to cost in the region of $25 million.
Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, USA
Back in 1983, before his epic downfall, Michael Jackson teamed up with Paul McCartney to record 'Say Say Say', and the former Beatle stayed at Sycamore Valley Ranch in California while the pair were recording the video. After visiting McCartney there, Jackson promised he would buy it someday and he acquired the ranch in 1988 for a purported $19.5 million.
Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, USA
Jackson renamed the property Neverland after the magical island in Peter Pan, and set about creating his very own amusement park. Jackson had two railways and a station (pictured) built to complement the Tudor-style six-bedroom mansion that came with the property and installed a petting zoo and numerous amusement rides.
Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, USA
Neverland had everything from a Ferris wheel and pirate ship ride to a carousel and bumper cars. While Jackson was still universally adored, if thought to be a little odd, he hosted many events at the ranch, including the 1991 wedding of his close friends Elizabeth Taylor and Larry Fortensky.
Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, USA
In 2003, Jackson was charged with child abuse and Neverland Ranch was turned upside down by police searching for evidence, but the singer was eventually acquitted on all charges. Jackson complained of feeling “violated” following the search and vowed never to live at the ranch again.
John Wiley User: Jw4nvc / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY 3.0]
Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, USA
In 2006, Neverland shut down and most of the staff were sent packing. Up to his eyeballs in debt by this point, Jackson struggled to hold onto the property. Investment firm Colony Capital bought a majority stake in 2008 for $22.5 million, and the ranch's amusement rides were removed. After Jackson's death in 2009, the ranch fell into disrepair and the property was put up for sale in 2015 with an asking price of $100 million.
Suzanne Perkins / Berkshire Hathaway Home Services
Neverland Ranch, Los Olivos, USA
Despite lowering the price to $67 million, the house remained unsold. In 2019, the harrowing documentary Leaving Neverland told the stories of two men, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who allege they were sexually abused as children by the singer. Billionaire Ron Burkle finally snapped up the notorious property in December 2020 for a reported $22 million, with a view to developing the land.
Des Blenkinsopp / Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 2.0]
Hook End Manor, Checkendon, UK
Destined to later be the home of Pink Floyd's David Gilmour, this storied Elizabethan mansion in Oxfordshire was built in 1580 for the Bishop of Reading, and is thought to have served as a psychiatric asylum during its long history. Selfridges owner Sir Charles Clore acquired the 11-bedroom manor house during the 1950s and sold it on in 1972 to Alvin Lee, lead singer for the band Ten Years After, who built a recording studio in the barn.
Trevor Bishenden / TrevBish Photography
Hook End Manor, Checkendon, UK
Lee put down several albums at the studio but let go of the property, which was snapped up by David Gilmour from Pink Floyd in 1980. The band's giant inflatable pig was stored on the premises and two Pink Floyd LPs were recorded in the studio. Gilmour sold up in 1986, and the manor house and recording studio eventually passed to Frankie Goes to Hollywood producer Trevor Horn.
Trevor Bishenden / TrevBish Photography
Hook End Manor, Checkendon, UK
Horn transformed the property into Hookend Productions, which was the UK's most luxurious recording venue from the late 1980s to the 2000s. An impressive line-up of musicians recorded singles and albums there, including Rod Stewart, the Manic Street Preachers, Seal and the Smiths.
Trevor Bishenden / TrevBish Photography
Hook End Manor, Checkendon, UK
During his stay at the manor, Morrissey claimed to have been visited by the ghost of a monk. The phantom would appear during the wee hours of the morning as if to wake people to pray. In fact, rumor has it that David Gilmour gave up the property because his wife Ginger was so freaked out by the paranormal activity, she refused to stay there.
Trevor Bishenden / TrevBish Photography
Hook End Manor, Checkendon, UK
Tragedy struck at the manor in 2006 when Horn's wife Jill Sinclair was shot accidentally by their son Aaron, who was practicing with his air rifle and had no idea his mother was nearby. Sinclair fell into a deep coma and never fully recovered. Horn decided to sell up following the accident, and the property was bought by producer Mark White in 2009 for $15 million.
Trevor Bishenden / TrevBish Photography
Hook End Manor, Checkendon, UK
White invested in the studio but the house lay neglected for years. Trevor Bishenden aka TrevBish Photography captured the dilapidated interiors last year when the manor appeared to be completely abandoned with rising damp and wallpaper peeling off the walls. Fortunately, Hook End has since been given a new lease of life and is in the process of being brought back from the brink.
Viola Aragon / Flickr [CC BY-ND 2.0]
Selma Mansion, Leesburg, USA
This venerable historic plantation house in Leesburg, Virginia sits on 212 acres and dates back to 1700. The mansion was rebuilt in 1902 in a Colonial Revival style by its then-owner Elijah Brokenborough White, who hired the most prestigious artisans he could find to deck out the rooms, which are notable for their fine paneling.
Jack Parrott / Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
Selma Mansion, Leesburg, USA
The 20-room house also featured one of America's first intercom systems. White bred champion racehorses at the estate and was wealthy enough to maintain the elegant neo-classical property to a T. During its heyday in the 1920s, the mansion hosted grand balls and dinner parties that were attended by local politicians and other VIPs.
Jack Parrott / Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
Selma Mansion, Leesburg, USA
After White's death, the house was inherited by his daughter Jane Elizabeth. She died at the property in 1970. Selma Mansion passed to the Epperson family, who rented out the property as a wedding venue. The house changed owners again in 1999 when it was acquired by Dutch businessman Peter J ter Maaten.
Jack Parrott / Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
Selma Mansion, Leesburg, USA
Maaten effectively abandoned the property in the early 2000s. Left to the elements, Selma Mansion began to fall apart. The crumbling house was slowly reclaimed by nature and the interiors were targeted by vandals. Period features were smashed up or stolen, and parts of the roof caved in, as these photos from that time show.
Jack Parrott / Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
Selma Mansion, Leesburg, USA
By 2009, Selma Mansion was on its last legs. In dire need of restoration or basic remedial works at the very least to preserve the structure and save the leaky roof, the house was designated one of the state's most at-risk historic sites by Preservation Virginia. Selma Mansion languished on the endangered list for the next seven years.
Jack Parrott / Flickr [CC BY-NC-ND 2.0]
Selma Mansion, Leesburg, USA
In 2016, local resident Sharon Virts spotted the house on the list and vowed to buy and restore it. Delighting conservationists, Virts and her husband Scott Miller persuaded Maaten to sell and succeeded in acquiring the property for $1.2 million. Rescued from ruin, Selma Mansion is currently being restored to its former glory.
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