Exploring Xanadu 2.0: Bill Gates’ Magnificent $124 Million Mansion

Young Bill Gates loved software programming and uncovered faults and automated systems with his boyhood buddy Paul Allen in high school. The pair released Windows 1 in 1985 and went public a year later. Gates became a billionaire at 31 years old when his net worth reached $350 million. He remains one of the world’s top 5 richest persons despite retiring from daily operations and leaving as Chairman. Gates has $118 billion in assets and has trimmed costs, but his greatest buy is the $124 million Seattle house.

Bill Gates loves speed and has acquired supercars and real estate that have appreciated in value. Gates and his family call the residence Xanadu 2.0, an architectural marvel with luxuries everywhere. Let’s visit Bill Gates’ $124 million Xanadu 2.0 mansion.

Constructed From Scratch

Bill Gates intended to construct a big house in Seattle since he was born and raised there and founded Microsoft headquarters there. He paid $2 million for lakefront property in 1988 and spent seven years building the Gates family’s 66,000-square-foot dream house. The $63 million mansion, Xanadu 2.0, was built, according to Business Insider. It’s Charles Foster Kane’s magnificent mansion in Citizen Kane.

Bill Gates built and acquired surrounding homes for $14 million to provide his family solitude. Xanadu 2.0 was influenced by Pacific Northwest elements and has a lodge concept. According to Re-Thinking The Future, seven varieties of stones and over 500-year-old Douglas Fir trees were utilized for construction. The estate needed 300 workers, 100 of them were electricians.

Endless Rooms And Space

As an assistant architect on the 1980s Statue of Liberty restoration, French architect Thierry Despont created the home’s interior. The home contains seven bedrooms, 24 bathrooms, and 6 kitchens. The six kitchens are in corners, so one is always accessible. The main dining hall seats 200, while a smaller area seats 24 by the fireplace. A 25,000-square-foot gym, steam room, and sauna are also in the property.

Bill Gates, an art and literature aficionado, has taken extra care to showcase books and artwork. Projected paintings on wall-mounted computer displays create a frame. Gates’ 2,100-square-foot library features a reading dome with a Great Gatsby quotation, according to Yahoo Finance. Gates bought Da Vinci’s Codex Leicester for $30.8 million at an auction and placed it in the chamber. His 20-foot-ceilinged chamber is now a trampoline facility.