From: Village Voice
By Lisa Rab
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By Lisa Rab
Two mansions, two miles apart, spark intrigue in Palm Beach,
Florida. The first, on the northern end of the oceanfront street
nicknamed Billionaire's Row, is 30,000 square feet of arched windows and
red, Spanish-tile roof, a villa that includes a ballroom where flappers
danced and sipped moonshine in the 1920s.
This is David Koch's
vacation home. The billionaire oil baron, along with his brother
Charles, has gained recent notoriety as the sugar daddy of the Tea
Party. In 1979, David Koch ran for vice president on the Libertarian Party ticket, and he and Charles have since given more than $100 million to right-wing causes and organizations, according to a 2010 New Yorker profile that exposed their tremendous influence in politics. David lives in New York City and winters in Palm Beach.
The second mansion is a short drive south on Billionaire's Row, a
narrow strip of asphalt that buffers colossal wealth from the ocean.
With an open driveway and a generous front lawn, this house bears little
resemblance to its neighbor up the road. The original historic villa
was leveled, replaced by a 42,000-square-foot mansion built in efficient
Colonial style, with square windows, gray peaked roofs, and columns
framing the front door. The pool is a long rectangle, and the backyard
stretches all the way west to the Intracoastal Waterway. Inside, prized artwork graces the walls, and millions of dollars worth of wine cools in the cellar.
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