443 Sheridan Road, Glencoe: $18,000,000 | Listed: Feb. 11, 2021 <br><br> This nine-bedroom Glencoe home has 11 full bathrooms, 8 half-bathrooms, a gated entrance, and a 7-car garage. It is the former estate of Pabst Brewing Company president and chairman Harris Perlstein. The contemporary kitchen features custom lighting, a double oven, a wine refrigerator, an electric fireplace, and two islands, one of which is topped in Taj Mahal quartzite. A guesthouse on the property has been revamped to include a kitchen, family room, powder room and two en suite bedrooms. This home sits on two-and-a-half acres and has an in-ground pool, an outdoor fireplace, a hot tub, a screened porch, and a patio. A basement theater room, study, library, breakfast room and sauna/steam room. complete this home. <br><br> Agent: Jamie Ficco and Erica Goldman of Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty, 773-719-9829; 773-682-0546cq <br><br> To feature your luxury listing of $800,
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The home was built in 1936 by architect William Pereira, who went on to design buildings like the Transamerica pyramid in San Francisco. MATT MANSUETO PHOTOGRAPHY Text size
A “blue-ribbon” property in an upscale Chicago suburb is heading to market for $18 million.
Originally the estate of former Pabst Brewing Co. president and chairman Harris Perlstein, the Georgian-style home in Glencoe, Illinois, has been gut renovated over the last three years, according to owner and designer Anita Lisek.
“We had to take everything apart,” she told Mansion Global. “It was a lot of headaches and sleepless nights, but it paid off. It turned out beautifully.”
Matt Mansueto Photography
The married pair of real estate developers who bought the grand Pabst mansion in Glencoe in 2017 have just completed an extensive rehab of the house and are putting it on the market at $18 million.
The house, built for the head of Milwaukee’s Pabst brewing company, is set well back from Sheridan Road behind stone gates on 2.4 acres. The entire 20,000-square-foot interior is new, while the historical limestone shell, designed by a Chicago architect who would go on to build some of the most notable modern buildings in all three of California’s largest cities, has been cleaned up and in some places replaced.