Villa Yin and Villa Yang Ready for Sale
Most of the part of the villa Yin and Villa Yang was intended to put down a 10-foot-tall boulder as the attraction of the Seaside site. The Brodas have placed a Thai-style sala on one side and a roofed deck with a barbecue on the other side. In total, Maya villa has around 6,500 square feet of interior space and another 4,650 square feet of balconies, becking and outside space.
By the side of the west coast of the Phuket neck of land, down a pitted road known as “Millionaire’s Mile,” positioned the Cape Sol development and Villa Yin, a property possessed by Laurent and Chantal Broda.
The house, concluded in 2008 after 4 years of setting up and building, imitates a type of “new Thai” approach. Its sleek inclined roofs and subterranean roof space nod to Thai structural design, however the residences, which sprawls over many levels, has not a single hint of the decoration found in customary structures. All the building lines are in a straight line.
Nevertheless it’s the internal design that right away catches the eye.
The Brodas initially belong to France, where Mrs. Broda, 55, was a service lawyer. Mr. Broda started his line of business as a fashion designer, eventually working a chain of 120 stores, under the “Multiples” brand, in all over France.
After getting retired five years back, Mr. Broda started taking on choice projects, such as the Shanghai gallery. The couple developed Villa Yin in addition to a second, smaller home on a neighboring plot, Villa Yang and now they are eager to sell one of them. Villa Yin is on the market with a sale price of $8 million; the adjacent house is priced at $4.25 million.
The global economic slump and current political turbulence in Thailand has injured the country’s tourism and real estate sectors. However, at the same time as a small number of villas are selling in Phuket, their prices are going at 2008 levels. Luxury villas on the west coast of Phuket are selling for an average price of 126 million baht.
By the side of the west coast of the Phuket neck of land, down a pitted road known as “Millionaire’s Mile,” positioned the Cape Sol development and Villa Yin, a property possessed by Laurent and Chantal Broda.
The house, concluded in 2008 after 4 years of setting up and building, imitates a type of “new Thai” approach. Its sleek inclined roofs and subterranean roof space nod to Thai structural design, however the residences, which sprawls over many levels, has not a single hint of the decoration found in customary structures. All the building lines are in a straight line.
Nevertheless it’s the internal design that right away catches the eye.
The Brodas initially belong to France, where Mrs. Broda, 55, was a service lawyer. Mr. Broda started his line of business as a fashion designer, eventually working a chain of 120 stores, under the “Multiples” brand, in all over France.
After getting retired five years back, Mr. Broda started taking on choice projects, such as the Shanghai gallery. The couple developed Villa Yin in addition to a second, smaller home on a neighboring plot, Villa Yang and now they are eager to sell one of them. Villa Yin is on the market with a sale price of $8 million; the adjacent house is priced at $4.25 million.
The global economic slump and current political turbulence in Thailand has injured the country’s tourism and real estate sectors. However, at the same time as a small number of villas are selling in Phuket, their prices are going at 2008 levels. Luxury villas on the west coast of Phuket are selling for an average price of 126 million baht.
Labels: global economic slump, Luxury Villas, political turbulence
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