Good news for the ex of Gerard Piquewho had been trying unsuccessfully to sell his Miami home for months, has finally succeeded. It was his friend and colleague Marc Anthony the one who has mediated in the negotiation with a famous Hollywood actor, who is about to become the new neighbor of Beyoncé and Alejandro SanzNegotiations are well advanced and Shakira will pocket $17 million from the transaction.
The singer from Barranquilla bought this mansion in 2004. It belonged to a Portuguese businessman dedicated to crafts and ceramics and she paid five million dollars for it. However, the renovations and improvements that she has carried out over the years, such as a private port, have raised its value on the market. What Shakira did not count on was the installation of a septic tank near her private paradise through which the organic waste from the entire development passes for a few years, which is why the media christened the singer’s home as the ‘poop mansion’: “It’s not that it smells constantly, but it is very unpleasant when they clean the tank,” they say.
The property has 750 square meters and several buildings, all white and with many doors and large windows with access to the outside. Very spacious and bright, it has a living room, dining room, kitchen with office and access to the garden, a Lebanese chill out area, three bedrooms with three bathrooms, a gym and a large outdoor pool.
This is where Shakira settled after her separation from Gerard Piqué. Together with Milan and Sasha, she found the peace she longed for after a difficult time in Esplugues de Llobregat, where she became the focus of all the spotlights. Months later, the author of Waka-Waka He decided to isolate himself even more and settled on Fisher Island, located in Biscayne Bay, considered Florida’s greatest treasure for celebrities and large fortunes, as it can only be accessed by ferry or helicopter. Here they enjoy, among other amenities, private security, prestigious schools, restaurants, a nine-hole golf course, majestic swimming pools and restricted-access beaches with sand imported from the Bahamas.
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