The house was built by Alonso & Associates with interiors decorated by Marc-Michaels Interior Design and landscaping by Parker-Yannette Design Group.
The home’s amenities include a glass-enclosed wine-storage wall, a fireplace, an elevator and a two-car garage with a guest suite above it, according to the sales listing.
An arched open-air loggia faces the lakefront. Above the loggia is a second-story covered balcony that overlooks the pool with a sun shelf and whirlpool spa.
With longtime ties to Atlanta, the de Guardiolas have built, extensively remodeled or sold several houses in Palm Beach, including a renovated lakefront home at 353 El Brillo Way, where they reside.
NewsSocietyShiny ShotsArtsReal Estate NewsLifestyleUSA TODAYObituariesE-Edition
EXCLUSIVE: Town OKs razing Jeffrey Epstein’s ‘infamous’ mansion in Palm Beach
A developer has the late convicted sex offender’s mansion under contract and plans to build a house there on speculation.
Darrell Hofheinz
Palm Beach Daily News
A Palm Beach board has approved the demolition of the lakefront mansion that was home to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The disgraced financier regularly assaulted underage girls at the house, prosecutors have said.
The Architectural Commission on Friday unanimously approved a demolition request for the house at 358 El Brillo Way, which is under contract to be sold, according to the local multiple listing service.
On top of the everyday risks agents face in a normal year, real estate professionals in 2020 also had to deal with the challenges of navigating a pandemic, including safely providing home tours and working remotely.
Add to that, a rise in online scams, a gaping political divide that resulted in harassment on social media and a deluge of open house attacks, and it became clear that the real estate industry had its hands full this year.
Below, some of the biggest crime, corruption and agent safety stories in 2020.
Attacked agent receives outpouring of support
GoFundMe
In June, Virginia real estate agent Lenora Farrington of Keller Williams Realty was hosting an open house when a man walked in and, after posing as a homebuyer, cornered her in one of the rooms and hit her in the head with a crescent wrench.