ReportWire

Tag: Auction

  • Dodgers historic postseason homers by Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith and Miguel Rojas fetch big bucks at auction

    Talk about easing the blow. The Canadian father-son duo that secured not one, but both home run balls that doomed the Toronto Blue Jays team they rooted for in Game 7 of the World Series turned the evidence into some serious U.S. currency Saturday night.

    Dodgers fans will never forget those baseballs hit by Miguel Rojas in the ninth inning and Will Smith in the 11th flying over the left-field wall and into the first row of seats beyond the Blue Jays’ bullpen.

    John and Matthew Bains — sitting side-by-side — will never forget the balls ending up in their hands. John, 61, caught Rojas’ 387-foot home run in his glove on the fly. Two innings later, Matthew, seated next to his dad, saw Smith’s blast land in the bullpen and bounce directly into his hands.

    Novices they were not. John has been a Blue Jays fan since the team’s inception in 1977 and purposely sits where he does for proximity to home runs. In fact, he caught one during the American League Division Series against the New York Yankees a few weeks earlier.

    Both men brought baseballs into the stadium that they threw back onto the field, giving the Blue Jays faithful the impression the Bains did the honorable thing when, in fact, they did the smart thing for their bank accounts.

    On Saturday night, the balls were sold at auction. Smith’s homer, which provided the Dodgers with the winning run, sold for $168,000 while Rojas’ blast that sent the game into extra innings fetched $156,000.

    A third unforgettable Dodgers home run ball from the 2025 postseason eclipsed the Game 7 balls. The second of Shohei Ohtani’s three home runs against the Milwaukee Brewers in Game 4 of the National League Championship Series sold for $270,000 in the same SCP Auction.

    It was the longest of his three, landing on the Dodger Stadium right-field roof 469 feet from home plate. And it was a key element in what is considered perhaps the greatest performance in baseball history. Ohtani struck out 10 in six innings on the mound in addition to his offensive exploits, sending the Dodgers to the World Series.

    Carlo Mendoza’s story of how he ended up with Ohtani’s ball is no less head-shaking than that of the Bains boys. The 26-year-old Los Angeles man said he was eating nachos in a food court behind the right-field pavilion and saw Ohtani hit the home run on a television monitor. He heard the ball hit the roof, dashed toward the sound and retrieved the ball from under a bush.

    All three balls were authenticated by SCP Auctions through notarized affidavits and lie detector tests. SCP owner David Kohler said Mendoza was so apprehensive about handing over the ball that he insisted meeting Kohler in the parking lot of the Long Beach Police Dept.

    “We authenticated through polygraph and eyewitnesses due diligence,” Kohler said. “From the time we announced we had these baseballs until now, no one else has come forward and said they have the balls. There’s been no contention.”

    Steve Henson

    Source link

  • Video: How Auctions Are Evolving for New Generations

    new video loaded: How Auctions Are Evolving for New Generations

    As millennials and Gen Z-ers inherit wealth, their preferences are reshaping auctions. Less interested in antique furniture and art, these generations have made fashion a new focal point.

    By Yola Mzizi, Edward Vega and Laura Salaberry

    November 8, 2025

    Yola Mzizi, Edward Vega and Laura Salaberry

    Source link

  • Bob Ross Paintings To Be Auctioned To Support Public TV Stations After Federal Funding Cuts – KXL

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Thirty paintings created by the bushy-haired, soft-spoken Bob Ross will soon be up for auction to defray the costs of programming for public television stations suffering from cuts in federal funding.

    Ross, a public television stalwart in the 1980s and ’90s, “dedicated his life to making art accessible to everyone,” said Joan Kowalski, president of Bob Ross Inc. “This auction ensures his legacy continues to support the very medium that brought his joy and creativity into American homes for decades.”

    Bonhams in Los Angeles will auction three of Ross’ paintings on Nov. 11. Other auctions will follow in London, New York, Boston and online. All profits are pledged to stations that use content from distributor American Public Television.

    The idea is to help stations in need with licensing fees that allow them to show popular programs that include “The Best of Joy of Painting,” based on Ross’ show, “America’s Test Kitchen,” “Julia Child’s French Chef Classics” and “This Old House.” Small and rural stations are particularly challenged.

    As desired by President Donald Trump, Congress has eliminated $1.1 billion allocated to public broadcasting, leaving about 330 PBS and 246 NPR stations to find alternative funding sources. Many launched emergency fund drives. Some have been forced to lay off staff and make programming cuts.

    The beloved Ross died in 1995 of complications from cancer after 11 years in production with “The Joy of Painting.” His how-to program was shown on stations around the U.S. and around the world. The former Air Force drill sergeant known for his calm demeanor and encouraging words enjoyed a resurgence in popularity during the lockdowns of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Ross spoke often as he worked on air about painting happy little clouds and trees, and making no mistakes, only “happy accidents.”

    The thirty paintings to be auctioned span Ross’ career and include landscapes depicting serene mountain vistas and lake scenes, his signature aesthetic. He created most of the 30 on-air, each in under 30 minutes, which was the span of a single episode.

    Bonhams sold two early 1990s mountain-and-lake scenes of Ross in August for $114,800 and $95,750. The auctions of the 30 paintings soon to be sold have an estimated total value of $850,000 to $1.4 million, Bonhams said.

    More about:


    Jordan Vawter

    Source link

  • Frida Kahlo Portrait Could Sell For $60 Million And Shatter Records At Sotheby’s – KXL

    LONDON (AP) — Frida Kahlo’s face is one of the best known in art, thanks to her bold and challenging self-portraits.

    A lesser-seen self-depiction by the Mexican artist is going up for auction at Sotheby’s in what could be a record-setting sale.

    With an estimated price of $40 million to $60 million, “El sueño (La cama)” – in English, “The Dream (The Bed)” — may surpass the top price for a work by any female artist when it goes under the hammer on Nov. 8. That record currently stands at $44.4 million, paid at Sotheby’s in 2014 for Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1.”

    The highest price at auction for a Kahlo work is $34.9 million, paid in 2021 for “Diego and I,” depicting the artist and her husband, muralist Diego Rivera. Her paintings are reported to have sold privately for even more.

    “It’s not just one of the more important works by Kahlo, but one of a few that exists outside of Mexico and not in a museum collection,” said Julian Dawes, vice chairman and head of impressionist and modern art for Sotheby’s Americas. “So as both a work of art and as an opportunity in the market, it could not be more rare and special.”

    Kahlo vibrantly and unsparingly depicted herself and events from her life, which was upended by a bus accident at 18. She started to paint while bedridden, underwent a series of painful surgeries on her damaged spine and pelvis, then wore casts until her death in 1954 at age 47.

    Painted in 1940, “El sueño (La cama)” shows the artist, wreathed in vines, lying in a four-poster bed floating in a pale blue sky. A skeleton wired with dynamite and clutching a bouquet of flowers lies atop the canopy.

    The image is exploding with symbolism and feels like an allegory – but the artist really did have a papier-mâché skeleton on top of her bed.

    Dawes said it’s a psychological self-portrait by an artist at her peak.

    “Her greatest works derive from this moment between the late 1930s and the early 1940s,” he said. “She has had a variety of tribulations in her romantic life with Diego, in her own life with her health, but at the same time she’s really at the height of her powers.”

    Last exhibited publicly in the late 1990s, the painting is the star of a sale of more than 100 surrealist works by artists including Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Max Ernst and Dorothea Tanning. They are from a private collection whose owner has not been disclosed.

    A century after Andre Breton’s “Surrealist Manifesto” defined a revolutionary artistic movement characterized by unsettling juxtapositions and paradoxical statements, interest in – and prices for – surrealist art are booming. Surrealism’s share of the art market rose from 9.3% to 16.8% between 2018 and 2024, according to Sotheby’s. Magritte’s “L’empire des lumières” sold last year for $121.2 million, a record for a surrealist work.

    Kahlo resisted being labeled a surrealist, but Dawes said her “fascination with the subconscious” and use of otherworldly imagery place her squarely in that tradition.

    He said it’s no surprise the genre is undergoing a resurgence.

    “There are so many interesting parallels between the 1920s and the 2020s,” Dawes said. “Coming out of a crippling global pandemic, a world that has to confront war on a more graphic and intimate level that had ever been experienced before — and economic and political and social forces swirling in the background that are eerily similar.”

    The Kahlo painting is on show at Sotheby’s in London until Tuesday, and then tours to Abu Dhabi, Hong Kong and Paris before the sale in New York.

    More about:


    Grant McHill

    Source link

  • Darth Vader’s Lightsaber Sells for $3.6M at Auction

    The iconic red lightsaber broke records at auction on Thursday.

    Credit: nnerto via Adobe Stock

    An original Darth Vader lightsaber used in the “Empire Strikes Back” and “Return of the Jedi” sold at auction Thursday for over $3.6 million. Breaking the record for the highest-priced item to come from the Star Wars franchise. 

    The bidding for the iconic red lightsaber began yesterday at 10 a.m. PST from propstoreauction.com, and was expected to sell from anywhere between $1 million to $3 million. The starting bid was set at $500,000, and with 31 bids, the prop sold for $3,645,000. 

    Wielded by David Prose and stunt performer Bob Anderson, the prop was constructed from a 1950s English camera flash attachment. Complete with scrapes and imperfections, the prop was used extensively during the filming for both movies of the original trilogy, and used in the iconic “I am your father” scene from “The Empire Strikes Back.”

    This broke the record for the highest-priced Star Wars item to sell at auction. Followed by the original X-wing model, “Red Leader,” which sold for $3 million last year, and Han Solo’s blaster, used by Harrison Ford, which sold for $1 million in 2022. 

    The lightsaber was a part of a large auction in Los Angeles, with over 1,000 items up for auction from various films and tv shows. Including memorabilia like costumes from Harry Potter, and swords from HBO’s Game of Thrones. 

    The auction first took place in person on Sept. 4 at the Petersen Automotive museum, and is going to continue online until Sept. 6, beginning at 10 a.m. PST each day.

    Tara Nguyen

    Source link

  • Darth Vader’s Lightsaber Auction Sale Sets Record for ‘Star Wars’ Item

    A lucky Star Wars fan is embracing the dark side, as Darth Vader’s lightsaber from the franchise’s initial trilogy has sold at auction for an astronomical sum.

    The iconic character’s screen-matched primary dueling lightsaber that was used in the films The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi sold for $3,654,000 when it hit the block from Propstore in Los Angeles on Thursday, becoming the highest-valued piece from the Star Wars franchise ever up for auction. The winning bid came in at a franchise record of $2,900,000 and reached the final total with the additional buyer’s premium that is paid to the auction house.

    Star Wars actor David Prowse and stunt double Bob Anderson both held the item onscreen. It carried a presale value estimate ranging from $1 million to $3 million.

    This is said to be the only hero lightsaber from the original Star Wars trilogy to ever hit an auction. The Entertainment Memorabilia Live Auction coincides with this year marking the 45th anniversary of the release of The Empire Strikes Back.

    Darth Vader’s lightsaber was sold at auction from Propstore.

    Courtesy of Propstore

    The Star Wars buying force was strong with the auction, as Anakin Skywalker’s stunt dueling lightsaber for Hayden Christensen’s character from the prequels went for $126,000, with the buyer’s premium. This was nearly twice the presale estimate.

    Among the other items sold during the auction included Indiana Jones’ bullwhip and belt that Harrison Ford used in Steven Spielberg’s Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, with the pair selling for $475,650. Also, Jean-Luc Picard’s Ressikan flute, which belonged to Patrick Stewart’s Star Trek: The Next Generation character, went for $403,200.

    Additionally, Rick Dalton’s flamethrower tank and backpack, as Leonardo DiCaprio wore in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, sold for $346,500.

    Earlier this summer, The Hollywood Reporter reported exclusively that Darth Vader’s lightsaber would be hitting the auction block.

    “Surviving genuine lightsaber props from the original trilogy of films are exceedingly rare, and Propstore is honored to present this historic artifact in our September sale,” Propstore COO Brandon Alinger said in a previous statement. “It is a grail-level piece, worthy of the finest collections in the world.”

    In-person bidding took place at L.A.’s Petersen Automotive Museum on Thursday. Items will continue to be sold via online, telephone and absentee bidding as the auction continues through Saturday.

    Back in 2022, Propstore sold a screen-matched model miniature X-wing fighter that is 22 inches long and was created for director George Lucas‘ original Star Wars film. The item went for more than $2.3 million.

    Ryan Gajewski

    Source link

  • Hard Rock Auctions Las Vegas Relics from Mirage – Casino.org

    Posted on: August 20, 2025, 05:52h. 

    Last updated on: August 20, 2025, 06:58h.

    • More than 300 sculptures and paintings from the former Mirage are now up for bidding in an online auction
    • The items include the famous bronze mermaid and brass dolphins sculptures
    • The online online runs from now until Sept. 19 

    Hard Rock International is auctioning off relics from the Mirage, which it is in the midst of transforming into Hard Rock Hotel & Casino and Guitar Hotel Las Vegas.

    The Mirage’s atrium and volcano were both destroyed by the property’s new owners to make room for the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino and Guitar Hotel. (Image: tripadvisor.com)

    The 30-day online auction, hosted by LA-based Prime Auctioneers on liveauctioneers.com, spans decades of history from the game-changing hotel opened by Steve Wynn in November 1989. It includes more than 300 pieces of artwork and memorabilia once displayed front-of-house and behind the scenes.

    The auction includes two of these bronze mermaid statues, which famously welcomed guests at The Mirage’s check-in area in front of the large aquarium. According to multiple sources, they were designed by Arlin Robins. (Hard Rock)

    Going to the highest bidder will be the famous bronze mermaid and brass dolphin statues (two each), 50 pieces from glass artist Dale Chihuly, and numerous items tied to the defunct resort’s volcano attraction and Siegfried & Roy show. (No, not, the Siegfried & Roy statue. That was donated to the Neon Museum!)

    “The Mirage stood as an iconic destination that featured an extensive collection of artwork that helped define the resort’s unique atmosphere throughout the years,” Joe Lupo, president of Hard Rock Las Vegas, said in a statement. “This auction gives collectors, Las Vegas enthusiasts, past guests who adored The Mirage and historians the chance to acquire authentic pieces from this storied resort.”

    Florida-based Hard Rock International purchased the operations of the Mirage for $1.076 billion from MGM Resorts in 2022. It shuttered the iconic resort on July 17, 2024 and immediately began demolishing some of its features and gutting the contents of the tri-tower main structure.

    The beloved artificial volcano was demolished in August, followed by the domed atrium in January.

    The second Hard Rock Las Vegas (the first is now Virgin Hotels Las Vegas) is expected to open, complete with a guitar-shaped tower where the volcano once stood, in the second half of 2027.

    To register and see the Mirage Collection auction items, click here. Online bidding is open now through Sept. 19. Live bidding begins Sept. 20 at 10 a.m. PT.

    Corey Levitan

    Source link

  • Russian superyacht, with helideck and marble fireplace, was seized. Now you can bid on it

    The Russian oligarch billionaire lifestyle can be yours for the potentially low, low price of tens of millions of dollars, courtesy of the U.S. government.

    The National Maritime Services, working on behalf of the U.S. Marshals Service, is auctioning off a superyacht, the $300-million-plus Amadea, which currently sits in a San Diego harbor, with a bid deposit starting at $10 million.

    Florida-based Fraser Yachts, the auction’s promotional agents, described the prize “as one of the most comprehensively equipped yachts in her class.”

    The luxury yacht Amadea, which officials say was seized from a Russian oligarch, is set to be auctioned.

    (U.S. Marshals Service and National Maritime Services)

    The 348-foot-long ship was built in 2017 and can comfortably host 16 guests in eight luxurious staterooms.

    An additional 21 cabins can house a professional crew of up to 36 workers.

    One of the ship’s jewels is a glass elevator that serves all decks, while a second lift is available for crew.

    The yacht includes a glass-edged mosaic pool with submerged barstools, and an outdoor bar area surrounded by sun pads (cushioned areas for perfecting your tan).

    The ship’s main salon showcases a piano and marble fireplace.

    A huge yacht with a city skyline behind it.

    The superyacht Amadea sails into San Diego Bay on June 27.

    (Gregory Bull / Associated Press)

    The yacht was designed by Espen Øino, the acclaimed Norwegian designer and naval architect, while its decadent interiors were created by designer François Zuretti.

    The ship has an ocean-crossing range of 8,000 nautical miles at a speed of 13 knots.

    For late-arriving quests, the Amadea also boasts a helideck.

    The U.S. Justice Department maintained in a 2023 civil forfeiture complaint that Russian oligarch Suleiman Kerimov was the ship’s owner. Kerimov took possession of the vessel sometime around 2021, though his transactions were cloaked through shell companies, according to the complaint.

    A small boat is seen beneath the bow of a large boat.

    The Amadea is escorted by the Coast Guard in the ocean off San Diego. The vessel was seized from a sanctioned Russian oligarch, officials say.

    (Gregory Bull / Associated Press)

    Kerimov was sanctioned by the U.S. in 2018 and labeled a “specially designated national” for his alleged role in money laundering related to the purchase of French villas.

    The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control determined Kerimov was a direct beneficiary of Russian President Vladimir Putin and “played a key role in advancing Russia’s malign activities,” which includes the invasion of Ukraine.

    The U.S. has said it’s working with allies to put pressure on Russian oligarchs, some of whom are close to Putin and have had their yachts seized, to try to compel him to stop the war, the Associated Press reports.

    The Amadea was seized in Fiji in April 2022 and arrived in San Diego in June that year.

    The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York ruled in March that the Amadea was to be forfeited to the federal government. That decision is being appealed by the man who claims to own the sumptuous vessel — Eduard Khudainatov, the nonsanctioned former chairman of Russian state-controlled oil giant Rosneft, according to the Associated Press. U.S. prosecutors maintain that Khudainatov is a straw owner of the yacht.

    On July 1, the Marshals Service authorized Fraser Yachts as the promotional agent for the sealed bid auction.

    The auction is being conducted in U.S. dollars and is running until 11 a.m. on Sept. 10 at amadeaauction.com/.

    The initial deposit necessary to make a bid is $10 million. All bids will remain sealed, with the highest bidder winning the yacht.

    Should multiple participants tie with the top price, each bidder will be given a chance to increase their offering until a winner is determined.

    Andrew J. Campa

    Source link

  • ‘Bidder #2’ gets  Ziggurat in Laguna Niguel for $177M

    ‘Bidder #2’ gets  Ziggurat in Laguna Niguel for $177M

    The gavel has finally fallen on the Chet Holifield Federal Office Building in Laguna Niguel, the distinctive complex better known as the Ziggurat for its pyramid-like tiers.

    An investor identified only as “Bidder #2” paid a hammer price of $177 million for the seven-story building at 24000 Avila Road, the Orange County Register reported. 

    The auction of the 1 million–square-foot building by the U.S. General Services Administration came to $177 per square foot, although the 91 acres of land that’s part of the deal likely accounts for much of the value.

    The winning bid was $106.7 million more than the price set on the auction’s opening day. Uncle Sam opened bidding at $70 million on June 5.  Bidding was supposed to close on July 31, if bidding slowed

    The building was sold as part of a soft auction, meaning bidding reset every day as new bids were placed. The winning bid had to go unmatched for 24 hours to bring the auction to a close, with minimum increments of $300,000 required.

    Two undisclosed bidders went back-and-forth, keeping the auction alive for more than four months.

    The government put the property up for sale to avoid spending $300 million on long-term repairs and upgrades.

    The competition for the Ziggurat was viewed as a rare opportunity for large-scale redevelopment in  South OC.

    It was the second auction for the nearly vacant campus. The first auction was held in 2022, with conditions that would have required a buyer to preserve the distinctive beige structure. The initial auction drew no takers

    The intense investor competition at the latest auction — without the preservation restriction — suggests the buyer will likely bulldoze the 53-year-old building and seek new zoning for the site.

    A study by the Urban Land Institute last year recommended the City of Laguna Niguel allow a developer to build between 2,000 and 4,000 homes, with a density of 60 to 80 units per acre.

    The Brutalistic building, designed by William Pereira and completed in 1971 for North American Aviation, has historic importance in its resemblance to “the ancient ziggurats,” according to the GSA. Uncle Sam bought the building three years later.

    For decades, the building housed thousands of federal employees from up to 12 agencies, including 2,000 from the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. 

    — Dana Bartholomew

    Read more

    Bidders ratchet up price of Ziggurat building in Laguna Niguel to $164M


    Bids Drive Price of Ziggurat in Laguna Niguel to $152M

    Bidders drive price of Ziggurat building in Laguna Niguel to $152M


    William Pereira and the Chet Holifield Federal Building at 24000 Avila Road (Getty)

    Architecture And Design

    Los Angeles

    “Ziggurat” auction in Laguna Niguel to start bids at $70M


    TRD Staff

    Source link

  • Former Allen properties to be auctioned

    Former Allen properties to be auctioned

    ESSEX — The town of Essex will auction off this month four Southern Avenue properties formerly owned by the estate of William Allen.

    The auction is scheduled for noon Thursday, Oct. 24, at noon at Town Hall, 30 Martin St. Bidder registration will be held before the event, from 11:30 a.m. to noon.

    Zekos Group Auctioneers of Shrewsbury will conduct the auction.

    The properties represent four contiguous land parcels from 5-10 Southern Ave., adjacent to Eastern Avenue and Main Street in Essex. The offering stipulates the four parcels will be sold together and make up nearly 1 acre.

    “The site offers extensive frontage, public water and sewer and is ideally located for a multitude of uses near the intersection of Main Street and Eastern Avenue,” reads the listing on the Zekos Group website.

    “The parcels are improved with a single-family home, what appears to be a mixed-use dwelling and a barn-style warehouse, all in disrepair.”

    Essex is involved in the sale because of the years of taxes that were not paid, Town Administrator Brendhan Zubricki said.

    “The town got the properties through a tax taking since the estate of William Allen was in arrears for many years on property taxes,” Zubricki said. “It is a very complex and lengthy process and it has taken years to get to the auction stage with the Allen property.

    “The town will receive the proceeds of the auction and the property will hopefully be redeveloped to eliminate a blighted area. Also, the new owner will hopefully pay taxes on a regular basis and improve the property which will actually increase overall taxation in the town as new growth.”

    Regarding the anticipated earnings to be made by Essex from the auction, Zubricki said that “remains to be seen on auction day.”

    Participation in the auction includes making a $10,000 certified bank check deposit, with an additional $10,000 deposit required from the high bidder within 24 hours. Checks are payable to the “Town of Essex.”

    The bidding process requires a 30-day closing period, according to the Zekos Group website.

    The properties to be auctioned are parcel 136-113.1, 136-113, 136-112 and 136-111. According to Patriot Properties Inc., the appraisal value for three of the parcels range from $361,500 to $389,800

    The three largest parcels to be auctioned are located in the town’s Mixed-Use Zoning District, which permits commercial and residential uses, according to the listing.

    “(This is) an excellent development opportunity for (an) investor or builder,” the website reads.

    According to Allen’s obituary in the Times, the Essex native died May 11, 2015, in Gloucester after a long battle with melanoma.

    He was born in Essex in 1929 at the family farm on Choate Street. He started Bill’s Trucking Co. on Southern Avenue and worked and lived there until he died in 2015.

    Allen, the son of the late James G. and Edith (Perkins) Allen, left 11 children, along with many nieces, nephews, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. He was the last surviving member of his siblings, which included George, John, Frank, Arthur “Al” and a sister, Jean (Jenkins).

    Stephen Hagan may be contacted at 978-675-2708, or shagan@gloucestertimes.com.

    By Stephen Hagan | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • 555.55 Carat Black Diamond – Wicked Gadgetry

    555.55 Carat Black Diamond – Wicked Gadgetry











    The Enigma 555.55 Carat Black Diamond is perhaps the most expensive diamond on the face of the Earth. This exquisite and ultra-rare diamond has 55 facets and weighs 555.55 carats. It’s the largest cut diamond in the world as of 2006 (as per the Guinness World Record Book) Surpassing the weight of both the Great Star of Africa 530.2 carats and the Golden Jubilee, 545.67 carats.

    Kyle

    Source link

  • Pink House auction starts Wednesday

    Pink House auction starts Wednesday

    NEWBURY — If you are interested in saving – by purchasing – the Pink House, you can begin bidding at 10 a.m. Wednesday on a website run by GSA Auctions. The opening bid is $3,000.

    The only catch? The house has to be removed from the federally owned Plum Island Turnpike location it has called home since its construction nearly 100 years ago. According to one estimate, moving the house to another piece of land could cost as much as $150,000.

    The auction is for the iconic structure alone and not for the acre-sized parcel owned by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on which the property rests. The federal agency purchased the property and 9.2 acres for $375,000 in 2011.

    Well before that, the house became a mecca for artists and photographers over the years. They flocked to the site, enchanted by the house’s distinct color and sweeping backdrops afforded by its unique location.

    A local nonprofit organization, Support The Pink House, has been working with the federal government since 2015 to reach a potential land-swap agreement – or an individual occupancy option – to save the building. A pair of land-swap deals fell apart in 2020 and 2022.

    In March, officials announced that time had run out for any potential land swaps and the house would be listed for auction.

    “It’s wrong that it’s happening, but it’s happening,” Support The Pink House President Rochelle Joseph said Friday.

    While owned by the Wildlife Service, the property is part of the Parker River National Wildlife Refuge and managed by Director Matt Hillman.

    On Friday, Hillman said the auction doesn’t have a hard stop date and can be suspended or canceled “as needed.”

    “The auction is not an absolute auction, meaning a definitive end date is not set. It depends on how the bids are entered. GSA expects it to be open anywhere between 30 (at minimum) to 60 days,” Hillman said in a statement.

    Once the property is sold at auction, the winner has until Dec. 31 to find a new parcel for the house.

    State Sen. Bruce Tarr, R-Gloucester, who has long been an advocate for finding a way to save the structure, called the news “sad and frustrating,” especially after supporters have spent countless hours and substantial resources trying to reach a common goal.

    “Yet, despite the availability of private funds,” Tarr said, “a wide array of properties that have been presented for a land exchange, and the active engagement of officials from the Parker River National Wildlife Refuge and local, federal and state officials, our inability to effectively overcome the barriers presented by a set of federal rules is thwarting an outcome that would not only bring benefits to the stakeholders that would be part of an agreement, but which also has broadly demonstrated public support.”

    Should the auction prove unsuccessful, the house would likely be demolished, according to Support The Pink House members.

    Joseph said her group could write a check for the house “today,” but because it would have to be moved at a price tag of up to $150,000, they have no plans to bid.

    “No we are not going to buy it,” Joseph said.

    After years of raising money and public support, Joseph conceded there is very little her group can do.

    Asked if that meant her group had lost all its power, Joseph pushed back.

    “Oh, I don’t think so, the power is in the people,” she said.

    Joseph said Pink House supporters have the power to continue letting elected officials know how displeased they are by the federal government’s stance and to hold those leaders accountable at the ballot box.

    “This absolutely doesn’t have to be the outcome,” she said.

    The long-unoccupied Pink House is a 1,514-square-foot, two-story residence with an unfinished basement and walk-up attic, according to the auction site.

    It is made of wood, pressboard, shingles and has an asphalt roof. Interior walls are constructed of plaster and Sheetrock. The floors have carpet and linoleum. The basement is approximately 638 square feet and covered with standing water.

    “Due to the age and condition of the structure, there is lead-based paint, asbestos and mold; no abatement has been conducted. No land is included in the sale,” the listing reads.

    For more information on the property and to place a bid, visit realestatesales.gov/gsaauctions/aucdsclnk?sl=BOSTN124003001.

    Daily News reporter Jim Sullivan contributed to this story.

    Dave Rogers is the editor of The Daily News of Newburyport. Email him at: drogers@newburyportnews.com. Follow him on Twitter @drogers41008.

    Dave Rogers is the editor of the Daily News of Newburyport. Email him at: drogers@newburyportnews.com. Follow him on Twitter @drogers41008.

    By Dave Rogers | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • Banks park less than notified amount at VRRR auction for 3 days on the trot

    Banks park less than notified amount at VRRR auction for 3 days on the trot

    Banks have parked much lower than the notified amount at the Reserve Bank of India for three days on the trot since the beginning of July 2024.

    This indicates that while RBI is trying to ensure that surplus liquidity is absorbed from the banking system in keeping with its “withdrawal of accommodation” monetary policy stance, banks do not have a great amount of surplus to park.

    At the two-day VRRR auction of ₹50,000 crore on Wednesday, Banks’ deploying ₹25,145 crore. The Central Bank accepted the funds at a weighted average rate (WAR) of 6.49 per cent.

    At the three-day VRRR auction of ₹75,000 crore conducted on July 2nd, Banks placed funds amounting to ₹38,227 crore. The Central Bank accepted the funds at a WAR of 6.49 per cent.

    At the four-day VRRR auction of ₹75,000 crore conducted on July 1st, RBI received and accepted funds from Banks amounting to ₹4,200 crore at a WAR of 6.49 per cent.

    Monetary policy stance

    “Overall system liquidity is a bit positive as government spending is happening. So, the RBI is conducting VRRR auction. This is also in keeping with the monetary policy stance.

    “By doing so, it is trying to ensure that the weighted average call rate (WACR) stays at or above 6.50 per cent,” said Gopal Tripathi, President and Head, Treasury and Capital Markets at Jana Small Finance Bank.

    Source link

  • NBA Star Ben Simmons Sells Hidden Hills Estate for $12M

    NBA Star Ben Simmons Sells Hidden Hills Estate for $12M

    NBA star Ben Simmons shot wide of the hoop by selling his Hidden Hills mansion at auction for $12.1 million, excluding fees — $5.4 million less than he paid for it three years ago.

    Simmons, a point guard for the Brooklyn Nets, sold the 12,000-square foot home inside the gated city popular with celebrities at 24350 Bridle Trail Road, Realtor.com and Global Mansion reported. The buyer was undisclosed.

    The farmhouse-style estate gavelled for $13.55 million, including a 12 percent buyer’s premium, or $12.1 million without fees.

    An affiliate of the Australia-born dribbler bought the newly built home in 2021 for $17.5 million. 

    Simmons initially listed it in May 2022 for $23 million, dropped it to $21.5 million, then yanked it off the market. He then relisted it at $18.5 million last spring before ratcheting it down to $17.5 million before setting it on the auction block with no reserve.

    Bidding began on April 18, and the estate sold before the auction closed, with Simmons accepting an appealing bid, a representative of Concierge Auctions, which handled the sale alongside the Beverly Hills Estates, told Global Mansion. The deal closed on May 16.

    The seven-bedroom, eight-bathroom estate, designed by Nobel LA, includes a modern farmhouse and guest house on 1.5 acres.

    The mansion, made of reclaimed wood and charcoal-colored brick, has doubled-vaulted wood ceilings, walls of glass and a floating brass fireplace that divides a living room with marble floors and a formal dining room.

    The house has two kitchens: a marble and wood showcase and a professional chef’s kitchen.

    The master bedroom has a fireplace, sitting area and a spa bath with stone vanities, soaking tub and steam shower. There’s also a home theater and a large gym.

    Outside, there’s a pool and spa, fire pit and barbecue station, cabana with a game room, dining area and the one-bedroom guest house with a plunge pool. 

    Simmons, 27, was the No. 1 draft pick in the first round in 2016, but has struggled with injuries throughout his career. He played for the Philadelphia 76ers until his trade to the Nets in 2022. 

    In 2021, the then Sixer listed his 10,500-square-foot mansion in Moorestown, New Jersey, for nearly $5 million. He had purchased the property two years earlier for $2.3 million.

    In 2022, the beleaguered superstar bought two side-by-side condominiums with 5,000 square feet in Brooklyn, which had an asking price of $13 million. 

    — Dana Bartholomew

    Read more

    TRD Staff

    Source link

  • Real estate developers buy former Cobleskill Pizza Hut

    Real estate developers buy former Cobleskill Pizza Hut

    COBLESKILL, N.Y. (NEWS10) — The Pizza Hut location at 109 Barnerville Road in Cobleskill closed its doors in June 2023. The site then went up for auction and was recently bought by Double Diamond Companies in partnership with The Mohawk Companies.

    Double Diamond and Mohawk focus on real estate development and management and are both based in the Capital Region, in Schoharie and Scotia, respectively. Together, the companies launched DiamondHawk Holdings, LLC for the former Pizza Hut site.

    Benjamin Oevering with Diamond Double Companies said they bought the property at auction for $190,000. Oevering said they don’t have a specific plan about what they are going to do with the property at this point, but they’ll be talking to their partners at The Mohawk Companies and decide on the best use.

    “We love the community,” said Oevering. “It was a great opportunity and a great property.”

    Several Pizza Huts in the Capital Region have closed over the past year. In addition to the Cobleskill location, the Ballston Spa, Amsterdam, Johnstown and Gloversville locations closed in June 2023. The Glens Falls location closed in March.

    The former Johnstown Pizza Hut site was turned into a 7 Brew Coffee, which opened in October. The former Ballston Spa Pizza Hut will be another location for Ted’s Fish Fry, which is looking to open in the fall.

    As for a timeline, Oevering wants to start working on the Cobleskill site as soon as possible. “We want to do what’s best the community, but we don’t want to rush it,” said Oevering.

    Sara Rizzo

    Source link

  • Gold watch worn by richest passenger aboard Titanic sells for record-breaking $1.5 million

    Gold watch worn by richest passenger aboard Titanic sells for record-breaking $1.5 million

    A gold watch worn by John Jacob Astor IV, a member of the wealthy Astor family and the richest man aboard the Titanic, sold for a record-breaking £1.175 million ($1.485 million) at auction on Saturday.The timepiece sold for ten times its expected auction price of between £100,000 and £150,000.Its high selling point has set a “new world record for Titanic memorabilia,” Andrew Aldridge, the managing director of auction house Henry Aldridge and Son, told CNN on Sunday.Astor was one of around 1,500 people who died when the Titanic sank on April 15, 1912, after hitting an iceberg. His pregnant wife, Madeleine, survived.The watch was among a number of notable items on offer at Henry Aldridge and Son in Wiltshire, England, on Saturday, including the valise that held the violin famously played by the band leader as the ship sank, and a pocketbook that documents the Titanic’s scheduled voyages.The valise was sold for £360,000, while the violin itself was sold for £1.1 million (nearly $1.7 million at the time) via the same auction house in 2013. It was, until Astor’s pocket watch claimed the title, the highest-selling item from the Titanic.”These prices for these unique pieces of history reflect not only their importance but also the ongoing interest into the Titanic story and the memory of her passengers and crew,” Aldridge told CNN.The watch was among the personal effects found with Astor’s body after the Titanic sank, according to the auction house. He also had gold cufflinks, a diamond ring, money and a pocketbook on him, among other items.After the recovery of Astor’s body, those possessions were sent to his son, Vincent Astor, who completely restored the watch so that it worked.In 1935, Vincent gave the watch as a christening gift to the infant son of William Dobbyn IV, John Jacob Astor’s executive secretary, according to the auction house.Aldridge told CNN that the Dobbyn family kept the item until the late 1990s when it went to auction.An unnamed collector in the United States bought the watch at that time. Since then, it has been displayed in several museums.”So, you know, over the course of its time, quite literally millions of people have viewed it, which is fabulous,” Aldridge said.

    A gold watch worn by John Jacob Astor IV, a member of the wealthy Astor family and the richest man aboard the Titanic, sold for a record-breaking £1.175 million ($1.485 million) at auction on Saturday.

    The timepiece sold for ten times its expected auction price of between £100,000 and £150,000.

    Its high selling point has set a “new world record for Titanic memorabilia,” Andrew Aldridge, the managing director of auction house Henry Aldridge and Son, told CNN on Sunday.

    Astor was one of around 1,500 people who died when the Titanic sank on April 15, 1912, after hitting an iceberg. His pregnant wife, Madeleine, survived.

    The watch was among a number of notable items on offer at Henry Aldridge and Son in Wiltshire, England, on Saturday, including the valise that held the violin famously played by the band leader as the ship sank, and a pocketbook that documents the Titanic’s scheduled voyages.

    The valise was sold for £360,000, while the violin itself was sold for £1.1 million (nearly $1.7 million at the time) via the same auction house in 2013. It was, until Astor’s pocket watch claimed the title, the highest-selling item from the Titanic.

    “These prices for these unique pieces of history reflect not only their importance but also the ongoing interest into the Titanic story and the memory of her passengers and crew,” Aldridge told CNN.

    The watch was among the personal effects found with Astor’s body after the Titanic sank, according to the auction house. He also had gold cufflinks, a diamond ring, money and a pocketbook on him, among other items.

    After the recovery of Astor’s body, those possessions were sent to his son, Vincent Astor, who completely restored the watch so that it worked.

    In 1935, Vincent gave the watch as a christening gift to the infant son of William Dobbyn IV, John Jacob Astor’s executive secretary, according to the auction house.

    Aldridge told CNN that the Dobbyn family kept the item until the late 1990s when it went to auction.

    An unnamed collector in the United States bought the watch at that time. Since then, it has been displayed in several museums.

    “So, you know, over the course of its time, quite literally millions of people have viewed it, which is fabulous,” Aldridge said.

    Source link

  • Etta’s Assets Are Scheduled for Auction

    Etta’s Assets Are Scheduled for Auction

    Etta founder David Pisor is no longer in charge of operations at his Bucktown restaurant, according to bankruptcy-related court documents. The news comes nearly two months after Pisor’s Etta Collective filed for bankruptcy in multiple states and as the once nationally recognized restaurant group’s assets head to auction next week.

    The court’s order only pertains to Etta Bucktown, meaning Pisor remains at Aya Pastry. Pisor did not respond to a request for comment.

    In the interim, the court has appointed Rafael Gaspar as manager of the Bucktown restaurant. The court has ordered that a sale must be finalized by Monday, April 15. Gaspar, who represents the debtors, owns a few Chicago-area restaurants including Fireside Restaurant in Ravenswood, and has no prior relationship with Pisor, according to court documents. Etta’s debtors made a motion to appoint Gaspar on March 1. His role is to “use his reasonable best efforts during the term to improve and maximize the financial performance of the restaurants and to keep them operational and maximize their value through the closing of the sale.”

    In January and February, Pisor made five Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings covering his two Ettas in Chicago; Etta Scottsdale, Arizona; Aya Pastry in West Town; and his parent company, Etta Collective. He closed Etta River North in January after closing an Etta in Culver City, California, in December. He’s been involved in restaurants in Chicago, California, and Texas, and is a co-founder Gold Coast steakhouse Maple & Ash, though he is no longer affiliated with that restaurant group. Pisor’s relationship with Maple & Ash co-founder Jim Lasky deteriorated and the partners eventually reached an agreement to settle competing lawsuits against each other, and in January 2023 severed ties, with Pisor taking control of Etta properties, Aya Pastry, and Cafe Sophie under a new company, Etta Collective. Etta struggled after the split from the highly profitable Maple & Ash brand. Workers for Etta Collective in Chicago accused management of taking dental insurance premiums from their paychecks without paying for coverage in addition to other internal issues. Projects in Evanston, Downtown Chicago, and Texas have also been canceled or postponed due to the bankruptcy filings.

    The order to appoint Gaspar was issued on March 12, according to a filing through the United States Bankruptcy Court of Delaware. The auction, scheduled for Monday, March 25, isn’t open to the public; parties had until the morning of Wednesday, March 20, to declare their interest in participating in the auction to undergo the appropriate financial background checks.

    Two Etta locations, in Bucktown and Scottsdale, Arizona, remain, In late February, he filed notice of an agreement with John Leahy, a “stalking horse bidder.” The stalking horse — a bankruptcy term — who reaches an agreement with the bankrupt party to put in the initial auction bid and establishing a minimum bid for the party’s assets at auction. Leahy, who owns Lulu’s in Waikiki, Hawai’i, started the bidding at $675,000, according to court documents. The winning bid would also have to assume Etta’s debt, which includes $2.5 million owed to Wintrust. Other local vendors, from Rare Tea Cellar to Closed Loop Farms, are listed among Etta’s debts.

    Pisor in February described Leahy as “a long-time colleague who is interested in helping us restructure and emerge stronger from this bankruptcy.” That means that Pisor could retain control over Etta if his colleague’s bid wins. Any deal, whether it’s involving Leahy, Gaspar, or another party, must close by the aforementioned April 15 date, according to court documents. Former Etta workers and those who have worked with Etta have told Eater there’s hope that a new owner could move Etta past its current financial crisis while reopening the River North location.

    Aya Fukai, the founder of Aya Pastry, is owed $500,000 from Pisor after she left the business in October and sold her stakes in the West Town bakery for $700,000. She says she received $200,000 but has told Eater she’s not banking on seeing the rest. Pisor waited until February to mention Fukai’s departure and promoted a bakery worker to replace her. That replacement has since left Aya Pastry, a month after Pisor announced she’d taken the job.

    Sources who have worked at Etta say that the news of the bankruptcy, and how the company handled employer dental insurance coverage has hurt business in Bucktown. The workers who remain are frustrated that their jobs are more difficult in the aftermath. They’re also dealing with low staffing levels, which hurt morale and created a rift between current employees and the former workers who were outspoken about their treatment. Meanwhile, vendors aren’t looking forward to working with Etta, given the company’s bankruptcy status.

    In the wake of the bankruptcies and claims of mismanagement, Etta has launched a social media campaign leaning into normalcy and stability. An Instagram ad proudly announces, “the classics are back.” The phrasing was seemingly a response to former employees who claimed that popular items were removed off Etta’s menu because Pisor didn’t want to be reminded of former chef Danny Grant who had departed when Etta’s parent company was split in January 2023. In February, Pisor denied that claim.

    The restaurant is even riding the success of The Bear, and involved in a gift card giveaway with other restaurants as part of a promotion benefitting radio station WBEZ offering a tour of the restaurants featured in the TV show.

    Ashok Selvam

    Source link

  • 2024 Grand Champion steer ‘Leadfoot’ auctions for six-figures at Fort Worth Stock Show

    2024 Grand Champion steer ‘Leadfoot’ auctions for six-figures at Fort Worth Stock Show


    The 2024 Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo’s auctioning of the Grand Champion steer at Watt Arena on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024.

    The 2024 Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo’s auctioning of the Grand Champion steer at Watt Arena on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2024.

    nacala@star-telegram.com

    The Fort Worth Stock Show’s 2024 Grand Champion steer sold at auction Saturday morning for an impressive $340,000.

    Higginbotham & Associates, the Fort Worth-based insurance and financial broker group, had the winning bid on “Leadfoot,” a European cross breed steer belonging to 17-year-old Ellie Bezner of Dalhart in Dallam County.

    The money from the sale will go toward Ellie’s education.

    This is the second year in a row that Higginbotham claimed a Grand Champion steer at the auction. In 2023, the company paid a whopping $440,000 for “Snoop Dog,” shown by Sadie Wampler of Canyon.

    This story is developing.



    Noah Alcala Bach

    Source link

  • The 2024 Movie Auction. Plus: Jake Johnson!

    The 2024 Movie Auction. Plus: Jake Johnson!

    Sean, Amanda, and Chris gather to auction draft the movies they’re most excited for in 2024, including both Zendaya vehicles, Dune Part 2 and Challengers; Bong Joon-ho’s Mickey 17; Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis; and more (1:00). Then, Sean is joined by first-time feature director Jake Johnson to talk about his movie Self Reliance (1:17:00) and how he views it as fitting in the larger arc of his career on and off the screen.

    Hosts: Sean Fennessey and Amanda Dobbins
    Guests: Chris Ryan and Jake Johnson
    Senior Producer: Bobby Wagner

    Subscribe: Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Stitcher / RSS

    Sean Fennessey

    Source link