If you think it's tough to find a buyer for grandma's silver and the family china, imagine trying to unload an expensive old house with a butler's pantry and a foyer too fancy for muddy boots and dirty dogs.
For five years, Mark Perrin has been trying to sell one of the most beautiful houses in Minneapolis, a 10,000-square-foot mansion on Mount Curve Avenue. It is now priced at $3.1 million, half his original asking price and below what he paid for it.
"It boggles my mind," Perrin said. "You get to the point where it just gets silly."
More homes changed hands in the Twin Cities this year than ever before, and transactions of $1 million and more also set records. But at that exclusive level — the homes most people can only dream about — something is changing: Houses that couldn't be replicated today are sitting unsold as well-to-do buyers seek technology over turrets and perfection over patina.
"I scratch my head sometimes because I think they're bypassing far superior structures," said Barry Berg, who was in the top 10 among Twin Cities sales agents by sales volume last year. "These older homes will be standing long after a lot of what's being built today."
The new-wave affluent shoppers want homes that represent their success, not someone else's. They favor homes with the latest accoutrements, even if wrapped in a new house with traditional elements. Tops on the shopping list are big windows and open floor plans.
"When someone has that kind of money and wants to put it into real estate, it's about creating their own dream," said Meredith Howell, an agent who represents some of the most expensive homes on Lake Minnetonka.
No listing better illustrates the challenges that come with selling an heirloom house than Southways, a 13-acre estate on Lake Minnetonka that would fit right in on "Downton Abbey," the British drama set in a 200-year-old country manor.