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The Lynnewood Hall estate

Decrepit historic Philadelphia estate on market for US$20m

A dilapidated 110-room, 70,000 sqft estate is back on the market in Philadelphia, but an architect says the US$20 million price tag does not include the tens of millions more it needs in repairs.

AP

A dilapidated 110-room, 70,000 sqft estate is back on the market in Philadelphia, but an architect says the US$20 million price tag does not include the tens of millions more it needs in repairs.

The 14-hectare Lynnewood Hall estate in the Elkins Park neighbourhood had been in decline since the original heirs sold it in 1944, reported.

The home, completed around 1900, once held one of the country's largest private art collections. In its heyday, the house was dripping with silk, velvet and gilded moldings, the rooms furnished with chairs from King Louis XV's palace, Persian rugs and Chinese pottery and the halls crammed with art by Raphael, Rembrandt and Donatello.

But members of the Widener family who owned the property died or moved away. The estate was first sold to an association that wanted to build a Protestant university. Then it was sold to a housing developer, followed by a seminary and another church. The property went through decades of bankruptcy proceedings and was repossessed, auctioned and sold for pennies to creditors - all while descending further into disrepair.

However, those who have seen the interior in recent years said most of the house's fine, historic fixtures were still there, even though some of the rooms were destroyed by water damage and broken windows.

Mary DeNadai, an architect who specialises in historic restoration, said it would take about US$50 million to restore the home to its former glory, but time was running out.

"If it continues to be neglected as it is, it will be beyond salvage" within five to 10 years, she said.

David Rowland, president of the Old York Road Historical Society, said he had seen possible buyers come and go over the years.

"It was always loved more by the people who'd never been inside it than by the people who actually lived there," Rowland said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Rundown historic estate on market for US$20m
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