End of the beachfront residence
After years of legal disputes, Antonio Banderas' emblematic house has finally been demolished, marking the end of an era for the Malaga actor and his beachfront residence. Antonio Banderas gives Malaga a “cathedral” of the performing arts: “I don’t know anything like it”.
After years of intense legal battles, Antonio Banderas (63) finally saw his emblematic house in Marbella, 'La Gaviota', demolished. The mansion, where the actor has resided for more than two decades, has been at the center of a long and complicated urban planning dispute that recently concluded with its demolition.
The history of 'La Gaviota' began in 1995, when it was built under a controversial license issued by the government of the then-mayor of Marbella, Jesús Gil. Originally, the property belonged to renowned broadcaster Encarna Sanchez, who acquired it in gratitude for her support of Gil during the 1991 and 1995 elections. After Sanchez died in 1996, Banderas bought the mansion in 1997; since then, it has become his primary residence.
Where is the mansion of Banderas located?
The property, located on the beachfront in the urbanization Los Monteros, has witnessed many significant moments in the actor's life. There, he saw his daughter, Stella del Carmen, grow up and lived his marriage with American actress Melanie Griffith (66 years old) until their divorce in 2014. In addition, during the pandemic in 2020, Banderas spent the hardest moments of confinement in this home, accompanied by his current partner, Nicole Kimpel (44 years).
Legal problems from the beginning
However, the tranquility of 'La Gaviota' was interrupted by legal problems that began to gain notoriety in the media in 2009, when Banderas' brother revealed conversations with the community of neighbors of Los Monteros. In 2010, the General Urban Organization Plan (PGOU) initially legalized the house, but a subsequent analysis suspended that legality along with thousands of other homes. In 2013, Banderas reached an agreement to cede 1,243 square meters of land on the side of the property to avoid demolition. However, in 2015, that agreement was suspended, and the Supreme Court declared the home illegal, triggering a series of legal disputes that jeopardized the future of the residence.
End the story of 'La Gaviota'
"I have not committed any illegality. I bought the house from a third party with all the papers in order, and if the City Council deceived me, I am not to blame," Banderas declared in 2013 to Vanitatis in the comings and goings with the PGOU.
Finally, after a pending court order from 2015, the bulldozers ended the story of 'La Gaviota' in recent days, demolishing the house and closing an important chapter in Antonio Banderas' life. Lecturas magazine highlighted this outcome, underlining the end of an era for the Malaga actor and his iconic Marbella residence.
At the start of the fifteenth Starlite Foundation charity gala, Banderas took the opportunity to clarify that the house was demolished of his own volition. "I would like to start by saying that I had my house in Marbella demolished simply because I wanted to build a nicer one there. La Gaviota is no longer there because I wanted it to be, not because someone else decided to. The law has nothing to do with it," he said. "And that's all. Now let's get to the really important stuff," he concluded during the event.