Sold for $86 Million: An LA Compound With Rod Stewart’s Former Mansion
A television producer sold the property to two separate buyers; one paid $57 million for the main house, and the other bought a smaller parcel for $29 million.
A television producer sold the property to two separate buyers; one paid $57 million for the main house, and the other bought a smaller parcel for $29 million.
A Los Angeles compound that includes the musician Rod Stewart’s former home has sold to two separate buyers for a total of $86 million.
The sellers are Bradley Bell, executive producer and head writer of the long-running daytime soap opera “The Bold and the Beautiful,” and his wife, former diplomat Colleen Bell. They bought the house from Stewart for $6.25 million in 1992.
The roughly 6-acre compound is being divided into two sections and sold separately.
The bigger of the two parcels—a roughly 4-acre lot that includes the main house—was sold to David Zander , a television, commercial and film producer for about $57 million.
The remaining parcel, with a circa-1911 cabin on it, has been sold to Nick Kaiser, co-founder of the private-equity firm Marlin Equity Partners for about $29 million.
Zander has a penchant for storied real estate: He previously bought, renovated and sold Lasata, the circa-1917 Hamptons estate where Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis spent childhood summers.
Neither Zander or Kaiser responded to a request for comment.
Designed in 1925 by Montecito architect George Washington Smith, one of the masters of the Spanish Colonial Revival style in Southern California, the property’s main 17,000-square-foot, six-bedroom Spanish Colonial-style home was built for Henry Kern, a retired distillery entrepreneur, and his wife, Elsa Mary Kern.
The Kerns were tough clients for Smith, forcing him to redesign the property several times and to include greater levels of ornamentation than was his usual style, according to “The Legendary Estates of Beverly Hills,” a book by the late real-estate agent Jeff Hyland.
When the Bells bought the main house, they were newly married and in their 20s; Bradley had been making a name for himself in Hollywood producing “The Bold and the Beautiful.”
“I don’t know that we could really even afford it,” said Colleen.
The property required a lot of work, but the house reminded them of Bradley’s childhood vacation home on Wisconsin’s Lake Geneva, where the pair met as teenagers when Colleen’s parents rented the house next door.
They spent two years renovating and restoring the house. Stewart, who bought the house in the 1970s, had added art nouveau-style features, including a disco room.
The Bells removed those elements and restored as many original details as possible, uncovering the coffered ceilings and removing marble floors to reveal the original tiles.
“Of course, it took longer than we anticipated and cost more than we thought it would,” said Colleen, who served as U.S. Ambassador to Hungary under President Obama and is now director of the California Film Commission.
“We just hoped that the [television] work would continue and we’d be able to pay our bills, which it did, and the show stayed on the air.” The drama, which started in 1987, has been running for 38 seasons.
In 2004, the Bells bought the longtime home of the actor Gregory Peck for $19.5 million, razing the Peck home and merging the properties into one roughly 6-acre compound.
The couple had a longstanding friendship with Peck and his wife Veronique Peck; they all frequently had dinner together.
“When Brad and I moved in, they had left a beautiful little Poinsettia plant with a handwritten note that said, ‘Dear Colleen and Brad, welcome to the ‘hood,’” Colleen said.
After Peck died in 2003, Veronique approached the Bells and asked if they’d like to purchase the property.
The Bells weren’t planning to sell, but were approached several times by Zander’s agent. “We said, ‘OK, we’ll just show them around,’” Colleen said.
“Then, one thing led to another, and we started to think about it.” The Bells raised their four children in the house, so selling the property is “poignant,” she said.
Zander wasn’t interested in the entire property, however, so the Bells’ agent, Ben Bacal of Revel Real Estate, brought in Kaiser to take the rest.
The sale has taken more than a year to complete because of the complexities of subdividing the property, Bacal said.
Bacal represented the Bells and Kaiser. Drew Fenton of Carolwood Estates represented Zander.
A record-breaking $11 million sale at The Centennial Collection has set a new benchmark for luxury apartment living in Bondi Junction.
As interest rates, inflation and market sentiment fluctuate, investors are being urged to focus on data, not panic.
A record-breaking $11 million sale at The Centennial Collection has set a new benchmark for luxury apartment living in Bondi Junction.
The Centennial Collection, the new apartment development on the edge of Centennial Park in Bondi Junction, continues to break local residential property records.
A local Eastern suburbs buyer has splashed $11 million on a three-bedroom, sub-penthouse on level 10 of the development, topping the previous record within the same development.
At 266 sqm, including internal and external space, the north-facing residence achieved more than $55,000 per sqm, making it one of the most expensive apartment transactions ever recorded in Sydney’s eastern suburbs outside the harbourfront enclaves of Double Bay and Darling Point.
The buyer had originally purchased a three-bedroom apartment in The Centennial Collection in 2025 for $6.5 million before deciding to secure the larger half-floor sub-penthouse.
Ray White Projects Director of Sales Marcello Bo, who is managing sales for the project, said the transaction highlighted the continued strength of demand for premium apartments in Sydney’s eastern suburbs.
“This sale is a clear indication of buoyancy in the upper end of the market and reinforces the strong demand and appetite for primely located, larger-sized apartments with all the luxurious inclusions you would expect with a development of this calibre,” Bo said.
“It also demonstrates that superbly-designed, lifestyle-driven residences in tightly held locations continue to outperform, particularly when they deliver scale, privacy, rarity and long-term liveability that aligns with how buyers want to live today.”

The Centennial Collection occupies a prominent gateway site overlooking Centennial Park at the junction of Bondi Junction, Woollahra and Paddington. Following recent State Significant Development approval, the project now comprises 79 apartments across two adjoining towers rising 13 and 16 storeys.
The development has been designed to target owner-occupiers seeking larger-format apartments, with residences featuring inclusions more commonly associated with standalone homes, including private rooftop pools, bedroom fireplaces, wet bars, butler’s pantries and full-sized wine fridges.
The record-setting residence was originally designed as one of the project’s penthouses before the approval process allowed additional levels to be added to the scheme.
Positioned on Level 10, the apartment occupies half a floor and has no common walls. It offers 270-degree views spanning Sydney Harbour, the Harbour Bridge, Opera House, Centennial Park and both the northern and southern headlands.
The purchaser said that proximity to Centennial Park, transport connectivity, and the surrounding lifestyle amenities ultimately drove his decision.

“I’m constantly looking at developments everywhere in the east, from Darling Point to Rushcutters Bay, Double Bay, all the beaches, Bondi, Bronte, Tamarama, Woollahra. I wanted something new,” he said.
“Everywhere you go, there’s a trade-off. It might have a great floor plan, but it doesn’t have a view. Working in the city, your daily commute impacts everything, so Bondi Junction train station was a huge factor in my decision.”
The buyer, an avid cyclist who rides regularly in Centennial Park, said his view of the location changed significantly as he spent more time assessing the eastern suburbs market.
“At first, I thought, who would want to live there? It’s one of the busiest intersections in the eastern suburbs. But when you peel it all back, it’s one of the best locations in Sydney. You’re close to everything, you can walk to everything, the amenity is incredible, and the views are amazing.”
Bondi Junction is slated to look materially different in the coming decades, with a draft 100-page masterplan proposing a regeneration of the suburb which would include thousands more apartments as well as a revitalised commercial, retail, and dining precinct.
A record-breaking $11 million sale at The Centennial Collection has set a new benchmark for luxury apartment living in Bondi Junction.
Odd Culture Group brings a new kind of after-dark energy to the CBD, where daiquiris, disco and design collide beneath the city streets.