Worlds first billion dollar house Vol. step aside tom brady

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[h1]Inside The World's First Billion-Dollar Home[/h1]

While visiting New York in 2005, Nita Ambani was in the spa at the Mandarin Oriental New York, overlooking Central Park. The contemporary Asian interiors struck her just so, and prompted her to inquire about the designer.

Nita Ambani was no ordinary tourist. She is married to Mukesh Ambani, head of Mumbai, India-based petrochemical giant Reliance Industries, and the fifthrichest man in the world. (Lakshmi Mittal, ranked fourth, is an Indian citizen, but a resident of the U.K.)
[h4]In Pictures: Tour The World’s First Billion-Dollar Home[/h4]
Forbes estimated Ambani’s net worth at $43 billion in March. Reliance Industries was founded by Mukesh’s father, Dhirubhai Ambani, in 1966, and is India’s most valuable firm by market capitalization. The couple, who have three children, currently live in a 22-story Mumbai tower that the family has spent years remodeling to meet its needs.

Like many families with the means to do so, the Ambanis wanted to build a custom home. They consulted with architecture firms Perkins + Will and Hirsch Bedner Associates, the designers behind the Mandarin Oriental, based in Dallas and Los Angeles, respectively. Plans were then drawn up for what will be the world’s largest and most expensive home: a 27-story skyscraper in downtown Mumbai with a cost nearing $2 billion, says Thomas Johnson, director of marketing at Hirsch Bedner Associates. The architects and designers are creating as they go, altering floor plans, design elements and concepts as the building is constructed.
[h4]Video: World’s Most Expensive Home[/h4]
The only remotely comparable high-rise property currently on the market is the $70 million triplex penthouse  at the Pierre Hotel in New York, designed to resemble a French chateau, and climbing 525 feet in the air. When the Ambani residence is finished in January, completing a four-year process, it will be 550 feet high with 400,000 square feet of interior space.
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The home will cost more than a hotel or high-rise of similar size because of its custom measurements and fittings: A hotel or condominium has a common layout, replicated on every floor, and uses the same materials throughout the building (such as door handles, floors, lamps and window treatments).

The Ambani home, called Antilla, differs in that no two floors are alike in either plans or materials used. At the request of Nita Ambani, say the designers, if a metal, wood or crystal is part of the ninth-floor design, it shouldn’t be used on the eleventh floor, for example. The idea is to blend styles and architectural elements so spaces give the feel of consistency, but without repetition.

Antilla’s shape is based on Vaastu, an Indian tradition much like Feng Shui that is said to move energy beneficially through the building by strategically placing materials, rooms and objects.

Pricey Pad

Atop six stories of parking lots, Antilla’s living quarters begin at a lobby  with nine elevators, as well as several storage rooms and lounges. Down dual stairways with silver-covered railings is a large ballroom  with 80% of its ceiling covered in crystal chandeliers. It features a retractable showcase for pieces of art, a mount of LCD monitors and embedded speakers, as well as stages for entertainment. The hall opens to an indoor/outdoor bar, green rooms, powder rooms and allows access to a nearby “entourage room” for security guards and assistants to relax.

Ambani plans to occasionally use the residence for corporate entertainment, and the family wants the look and feel of the home’s interior to be distinctly Indian; 85% of the materials and labor will come from outside the U.S., most of it from India.

What do you think of Ambami’s home? Weigh in. Add your thoughts in the Reader Comments section below.

Where possible, the designers say, whether it’s for the silver railings, crystal chandeliers, woven area rugs or steel support beams, the Ambanis are using Indian companies, contractors, craftsmen and materials firms. Elements of Indian culture juxtapose newer designs. For example, the sinks in a lounge extending off the entertainment level, which features a movie theater and wine room, are shaped like ginkgo leaves (native to India) with the stem extending to the faucet to guide the water into the basin.

On the health level, local plants decorate the outdoor patio near the swimming pool and yoga studio. The floor also features an ice room where residents and guests can escape the Mumbai heat to a small, cooled chamber dusted by man-made snow flurries.

For more temperate days, the family will enjoy a four-story open garden. In profile, the rebar-enforced beams form a “W” shape that supports the upper two-thirds of the building while creating an open-air atrium of gardens, flowers and lawns. Gardens, whether hanging hydroponic plants, or fixed trees, are a critical part of the building’s exterior adornment but also serve a purpose: The plants act as an energy-saving device by absorbing sunlight, thus deflecting it from the living spaces and making it easier to keep the interior cool in summer and warm in winter. An internal core space on the garden level contains entertaining rooms and balconies that clear the tree line and offer views of downtown Mumbai.

The top floors of entertaining space, where Ambani plans to host business guests (or just relax) offer panoramic views of the Arabian Sea.

this dude makes tom brady look like malcolm in the middle's dad
 
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I feel like I saw this 5 years ago, :lol:.

Still cool, though.
 
I feel like I saw this 5 years ago,
laugh.gif
.

Still cool, though.
yeah its an old article but first time i have heard of this
 
F Da Heightz.

take it you never been?....uptown is fun as hell.

I strongly dislike anything that has to do w/ me being in or around NYC, and I'm from NY, :lol:.

I was in Williamsburg a few weeks ago and I wanted to jump in front of a moving bus.
 
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If that was my house. I'd be base jumping every time I needed to go to the store.
 
One of his neighbors is building a bigger more expensive house. Vice on HBO did a piece on Mumbai and how this place is surrounded by slums and those in the slums have created a whole economy on the trash of those with money. The neighbor was featured in it. Huge disparity and wealth there, kind of sickening.
 
Yall really gonna let OP rock with posting an article from 2008? :lol:
 
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If that was my house. I'd be base jumping every time I needed to go to the store.
If that was your house, do you really think going to the store would be an option?

I mean base jump for fun - maybe, but to go to the store - highly unlikely!
 
Pretty stupid looking design....I'd buy a small island near Hawaii and have people grow my food for 1 billion
 
We don't even have anything to compare it to, though, :lol:.
 
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