Over the past 14 years, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has quietly transformed a slice of Palo Alto’s upscale Crescent Park neighborhood into a $110 million personal compound, according to The New York Times. The tech billionaire has purchased 11 properties, creating a sprawling estate that blends luxury, privacy, and controversy.
The compound includes a main residence, guest homes, manicured gardens, a pickleball court, and a pool with a movable hydrofloor that can convert into a dance floor. One of its standout features: a seven-foot statue of Zuckerberg’s wife, Priscilla Chan, draped in flowing silver robes. Beneath it all lies a 7,000-square-foot underground space locals have dubbed the “billionaire bat cave.”
Adding to the intrigue, one of the properties operates as a private school for 14 children, reportedly in violation of zoning laws, though city officials have not intervened.
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Not all neighbors are impressed. Some have complained of years of construction noise, blocked driveways, and intrusive surveillance cameras. Michael Kieschnick, a longtime resident, told the Times:
“No neighborhood wants to be occupied, but that’s exactly what they’ve done.”
Zuckerberg’s team has attempted peace offerings from wine and donuts to, perhaps most tellingly, noise-canceling headphones, but tensions remain over the scale and impact of the tech mogul’s residential takeover.