Photo: Simon Berlyn Photography. Inset: Kevin Mazur/WireImage

The Malibu mansionCamille Grammeronce shared with ex-husbandKelsey Grammeris on the market for nearly $20 million.
TheReal Housewives of Beverly Hillsstar and the actor wed in 1997 and purchased the 5-acre compound a year later for $4.5 million. Thanks to Camille’s starring role in theReal Housewives of Beverly Hills, the for-sale property was featured heavily on seasons one and two of theBravo reality series.
The Agency’s Sandro Dazzan and Cooper Mount holdthe Malibu listing.
Simon Berlyn Photography

But the former couple finalized their divorce in February 2011 and sold the French country-inspired estate for $13 million in 2015. It’s been on and off the market ever since, most recently selling for $12.94 million in 2015, according to theLos Angeles Times.

Aside from a seven-bedroom, thirteen-bath mansion, the 6,650-square-foot property also includes a guesthouse, a horse riding ring, a carriage house, multiple outbuildings and a six-stall barn. The $20 million property has both mountain and ocean views, along with fruit orchards and rose gardens.

The extravagant Malibu home also has a gym, swimming pool, tennis court and a movie theater.

In June 2017, Camille, who received$30 million after ending her nearly 13-year marriage to Kelsey, said in a segment on theseason 2 finale ofAndy Cohen’sThen & Now: “Thank God I didn’t have a prenup. Thank you Kelsey. I guess you loved me at one point.”
Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic

Last year, the Malibu home Camille was living in at the time was destroyed during the deadlyWoolsey wildfire.She opened up to PEOPLE about the traumatic experience.
“I went from one of the best days of my life, to such a tragedy,” Grammer,who wed attorney David C. Meyer in October 2018, told PEOPLE. “It’s so sad. It’s such a tragedy.”
Grammer was forced to evacuate as theSouthern California firesraged. “We were standing in the house before we left and [my daughter] Mason said to me, ‘Mom, I get this feeling our house isn’t going to make it.’ And I said, ‘Honey, I hope it does, but I have the same feeling.’ We just thought, this is it,” she says. “I had a pit in my stomach.”
Camille Grammer.

“There are times I lamented about it,” she told PEOPLE in March. “I miss my home, and having my bed to go back to. It was my safe haven and there was so much emotional value and memories connected to it.”
Grammar said that many of her personal belongings, including clothing, photos and mementos like notebooks were destroyed, but she is still grateful for what she does have.
“We have the necessities we need,” she says. “We don’t need an abundance of things. Humbling experiences like this bring you to your knees. It really is a fresh start.”
source: people.com