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This roughly 14-acre Beverly Hills, Calif. property, priced at $110 million, includes a large entryway with a courtyard and a retractable roof.Mark Singer
The grounds include over 35,000 square feet of interior space, including this living area with a fireplace.Mark Singer
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The interiors also feature large windows that open to the outside.Mark Singer
The grounds sport a tennis court.Mark Singer
Additional exterior touches include a swimming pool.Mark Singer
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If this home looks fit for royalty, that’s because it is.

A large Los Angeles estate — owned by a business entity affiliated with the late Saudi Prince Saud al-Faisal — will hit the market for a staggering $110 million, the Wall Street Journal reports. The prince, a Princeton University alum, served as Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister from 1975 to 2015 — the year of his death at age 75.

The prince is survived by his widow, Princess Johara bint Faisal, but it’s not clear whether she spends any time at the Beverly Hills spread these days.

The asking price is eye-popping indeed, but it’s all relative: The home has an even pricier neighbor. Palazzo di Amore, the property owned by billionaire real estate investor Jeff Greene, is asking $129 million — down from $195 million when it first listed in 2014.

And while $110 million is impressive, the spread was once whisper-listed for more. Douglas Elliman’s Josh and Matt Altman reportedly shopped it around for $145 million, the Journal notes.

Set on roughly 14 acres, the grounds include more than 35,000 square feet of interior space (which might be combined from multiple structures). Outside, there are tree-lined promenades, a pool and a tennis court. There’s an entryway with a retractable roof and a courtyard.

Not to the mention views. “There’s a spectacular private driveway and, from up there, you can see the ocean all the way to Catalina Island,” the listing broker, Jeff Hyland of Hilton & Hyland, told the paper.

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