- San Simeon
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the very expensive ‘dream castle’ built by the rich US newspaper owner William Randolph Hearst on the Pacific coast between San Francisco and Los Angeles. He began it in 1919 and continued to make additions to it until he died in 1951. It combines Greek, Roman and Gothic architecture and has many original items from the ancient world. More than a million tourists now visit it every year.
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Former estate of William Randolph Hearst in southern California.It was built on a vast private estate of 245,000 acres (99,000 hectares), developed in the 1860s by Hearst's father. In 1919–20, with the architect Julia Morgan, Hearst began construction of a complex of luxurious buildings and gardens to serve as a country house. The main residence, later called Hearst Castle, is a Spanish Renaissance building with 150 rooms, a cathedral-like facade, and two bell towers. Lavish interior decorations were obtained from European churches and palaces. The site's embellishment continued (1919–48) with numerous subsidiary buildings, Mediterranean gardens, statuary, pools, fountains, a pergola, and priceless art treasures collected from all over the world. The complex is now a state historical monument.* * *
village, San Luis Obispo county, southwestern California, U.S. It lies along the Pacific Ocean overlooking San Simeon Bay. Part of a Mexican land grant of 1840, Rancho Piedras Blancas was purchased by George Hearst, father of publisher William Randolph Hearst (Hearst, William Randolph), in 1865. George Hearst later acquired the adjoining ranchos, Santa Rosa and San Simeon.His vast private estate (245,000 acres [100,000 hectares]) was inherited by his son and only child, who in 1919–20 began construction of a complex of luxurious buildings and gardens to serve as a country house. Hearst named his new estate La Cuesta Encantada (Spanish: “The Enchanted Hill”) because of its hilltop site in the Santa Lucia Range. The main residence, the 60,000-square-foot (5,600-square-metre) La Casa Grande (Spanish: “The Big House”), is a Mediterranean Revival building that contains 115 rooms—including 38 bedrooms and 41 bathrooms—and has a cathedral-like facade, complete with two bell towers. This mansion, known popularly as Hearst Castle, has lavish interior decorations and architectural elements obtained by Hearst and his agents from European churches and palaces and is filled with a huge collection of antiques and artworks. The San Simeon complex (the model for Xanadu in Orson Welles (Welles, Orson)'s classic film Citizen Kane) also includes a theatre, three palatial guest houses in an Italianate style, and a Roman temple facade. The site's embellishment continued for 29 years (1919–48) with numerous subsidiary buildings, Mediterranean gardens, statuary, pools, fountains, and a pergola. The architect of the building complex was Julia Morgan (Morgan, Julia).Hearst died in 1951, and in 1958 his heirs gave 137 acres (55 hectares) of the original holdings, including the castle complex and surrounding land, to the state of California as the Hearst San Simeon State Historical Monument. The area also includes several beaches and other recreational facilities.* * *
Universalium. 2010.