Seattle Living

Seattle’s Most Expensive Homes: Laurelhurst Estate

This waterfront property has plenty of room for your yacht.

By Stephen Strom May 31, 2017

0517_Home2ariel

Scroll through the above images of this Laurelhurst estate, the second most expensive Seattle house currently on the market, and check out the other top-priced homes here.

3054 E. Laurelhurst Dr NE, Seattle, WA 98105 (Laurelhurst)
Price: $14,880,000
Built in 1928
Square footage: 7,683
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 5
Listed by Coldwell Banker
Features: Waterfront estate on Lake Washington, outdoor courts, private dock (including two boat lifts and room for a seaplane or yacht).

Check out the third most expensive Seattle home currently on the market here.

 

Join The Must List

Seattle's best events delivered to your inbox

Follow Us

TURNING THE OTHER PEAK

TURNING THE OTHER PEAK

SUNCADIA VACATION HOME REFLECTS FAMILY’S OUTDOOR ADVENTURES

Interrupting their travels to build a vacation home from scratch was the last thing on the minds of Sherri and Ali Anissipour in 2019 when they went on an anniversary holiday to Suncadia resort, located about 90 minutes east of their Seattle home. “We wanted to travel the world,” Sherri says, “not go to the…

From the inside out

From the inside out

INTERIOR DESIGNER ANNA POPOV DID NOT WANT TO WORK ON HER OWN HOME. THEN SHE FIGURED SHE COULD DO IT BETTER

Anna Popov never wanted to design her own house. An interior designer by trade, she didn’t want to put the amount of time, energy, and thought that she offers to her clients into designing her own home. She’d rather just find a place that checked all her boxes. But after two years of searching, nothing…

Publisher's Note: Can Our Architecture Make Us Better?

Publisher’s Note: Can Our Architecture Make Us Better?

Seattle's built environment reveals a lot about the city

With this issue’s focus on iconic Seattle architecture, we continue to drive awareness of the fact that Seattle is a world-class city, even if we ourselves may not know it yet. It’s been said that architecture stands as a representation of how we see ourselves, of how we see the world. At its most practical,…

AIA Home: Goodbye 1970

AIA Home: Goodbye 1970

Family fixes design flaws to bring midcentury home into modern era

“Treehouse” by Floisand Studio Architects returns to glory a Ralph D. Anderson home that had lost its compass. Nick and Rachel Lenington purchased the 1970 Mercer Island home in 2010, attracted to the quiet neighborhood because of its midcentury vibe, big, west-facing windows, and abundant wildlife. An advertised water view didn’t really pan out, but…