68°F
weather icon Clear

Mansion sells for $6.5M, the highest price at Lake Las Vegas since 2007

Updated September 29, 2020 - 7:42 am

The firm steering development at Lake Las Vegas has built and sold its first luxury house in the faux-Mediterranean enclave, fetching the highest price there in years.

Raintree Investment Corp., which is developing the upscale Henderson community on behalf of landowner John Paulson, a billionaire hedge fund operator, announced last week it sold an 8,838-square-foot home in Lake Las Vegas for $6.5 million.

The house, 23 Summer House Drive, features “300 feet of waterfront property with a private sandy beach and outstanding views,” according to listing site Zillow.

It marked the most expensive sale in Lake Las Vegas since 2007, Raintree’s news release said.

The 3,600-acre Lake Las Vegas community, off Lake Mead Parkway east of Boulder Highway, boasts mansions, upscale hotels, golfing, retail and a 320-acre human-made lake. Like countless other projects and properties around the valley, Lake Las Vegas was hit hard after the mid-2000s bubble burst. Tourism dried up, golf courses closed and turned brown, and even a human-made waterfall was turned off.

Lake Las Vegas has made headway under Paulson, who acquired about 1,000 acres there after the market crashed. Its latest projects include a roughly 460-home, 55-and-over community by developer Del Webb.

Raintree built the waterfront home in a new luxury housing development called Estates at Reflection Bay. The firm does not plan to build more homes in that project and is instead selling lots to individual buyers, Raintree owner Pat Parker said.

Several lots have closed escrow or are under contract to sell, according to Parker, who noted his firm built the first house as an “inspiration” to others.

Contact Eli Segall at esegall@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0342. Follow @eli_segall on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
 
How many homes do Gen X millionaires own in Las Vegas?

Households making $1 million or more annually own 10 percent of all the single-family homes in the Las Vegas Valley, a new study shows.

Why are mortgage rates so high right now?

A local mortgage broker explains the rates and the misinformation surrounding how they are set and what impacts them