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Lachlan Murdoch’s $21 Million Outbids Crowe for Sydney Mansion

By Jesse Riseborough and Madelene Pearson

Nov. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Lachlan Murdoch paid A$23 million ($21 million) to buy France’s former consulate in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, setting an Australian auction record for a single house and beating out actor Russell Crowe.

The six-bedroom estate on Victoria Road in Bellevue Hill, known as “Le Manoir,” was owned by the French government since 1956 and has ocean and harbor views, said Michael Pallier, the principal at Raine & Horne Double Bay, which ran the sale. The auction, attended personally by Murdoch, was conducted at 6 p.m. last night and lasted 10 minutes.

“There weren’t any signs of a global financial crisis at the auction last night with 10 registered bidders going hammer and tong at it,” Pallier said by phone. “It was one of a handful of Sydney’s eastern suburbs trophy homes and they rarely become available.”

Lachlan, 38, is the eldest son of News Corp. chairman Rupert Murdoch. Born in Melbourne in 1931, Rupert Murdoch built News Corp. into a global media company with assets including Fox News, the Wall Street Journal and the MySpace social-networking Web site, after inheriting Adelaide newspaper assets from his own father, Keith. The News Corp. chairman was in Australia this week.

The sale was reported earlier in the Australian Financial Review, which said Crowe monitored the sale via the Internet.

Lachlan Murdoch could not immediately be reached at the Sydney office of his private investment company Illyria Pty.

Panoramic Views

“Le Manoir” is on 4,097 square meters (1.01 acres) of land with panoramic views, a tennis court, swimming pool and a three-car garage, Pallier said. The house was built in 1926. France’s consul-general attended yesterday’s auction, Pallier said.

“There’s probably only a handful of homes that are in Bellevue Hill which sit on over an acre of land, so a substantial offering, a very unique offering,” Damien Cooley, director and auctioneer, Cooley Auctions, said today by phone. “Top-end real estate is really starting to come good. It’s been challenging for the last few years, particularly with the global financial crisis.”

The French government paid 26,000 Australian pounds for the property in 1956 and the house has only had two owners, Cooley said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jesse Riseborough in Melbourne at jriseborough@bloomberg.net; Madelene Pearson in Melbourne on mpearson1@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: November 5, 2009 18:02 EST

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