Of all the Vanderbilt mansions I’ve seen Biltmore is my favorite inside and out. I’m glad George had the foresight to envelope it within a productive landscape to help sustain and preserve it.
After a recent trip to Biltmore, I was told that Edith, George's wife deserves much of the credit for preserving things as they were and later opening it to the public.
Biltmore is simply a stunning estate. The grounds are equally as beautiful as the house, so much so, that I have gone there just to stroll through the flowers.
Thank you Ken for your most glorious episode yet. Utterly fascinating and entirely mind-blowing. Your heart breaks when hearing how virtually all of the Manhattan mansions were demolished. Such a shame they weren't protected and preserved for posterity. Favourite? How can one choose between Biltmore and the Breakers?? Heaven or paradise? Rolling hills and forests or the sea? In the end, and though it's a tough choice, it'll have to be The Breakers. All one can say is: thank God for the Vanderbilts!
It is such a shame that so many grand houses in America have been torn down. I haven't visited any of the houses you presented here but I am glad that some are still open to the public. Thank you for the great videos you put out. This one could be straight out of the History Channel. You have done a wonderful job with this one.
Vineland, like the original Breakers, was built by a Lorillard and then purchased by a Vanderbilt. The Versace store at 647 Fifth Avenue was originally George's NYC home. You forgot one: Eliza Vanderbilt Webb's Shelburne Farms in Vermont. Excellent video.
The Breakers has a special place in my heart. While living on the island I went often. The dining room ceiling and the tile mosaic on the floor of the back porch are two of my favorite features. When it's decorated for Christmas it's an absolute dream. I'm not able to travel any more but I would have liked seeing Biltmore.
I visited Biltmore over the weekend. Words and pictures cannot do it justice. I was awestruck, not only by the architecture but also the furnishings and just to be able to walk through an icon of that era.... I'll definitely go back at some point.
While I can appreciate their opulance, for me I don’t find any of the houses to be home-like. I do appreciate their history. It would be interesting to know if any Vanderbilt descendants watch this and see what they have to offer on them. Thanks, Ken; you did an excellent job presenting this!
Marble House is my favorite for absolute luxury. I have toured the biltmore and it is amazing too- especially with its opulent gardens, winery and village.
I’ve read on The Biltmore and it’s was a phenomenal venture to tackle way back when for the Land, Gardens, Farms, Mansion and keeping up with ALL THE ACREAGE of the property. AND THEY started with NOTHING….the forest was in the distant background. They brought in ALL THE TREES! I would love to see it one day.
They're all works of art. But for me they are all a bit on the big side, but if I was forced to take one it would be the one with the pool in the basement -- the George Vanderbilt house designed by Olmsted. Thanks for your time, work and posting. What a great watch.
Thank you Ken. I really enjoyed seeing and hearing about all the mansions they built. It's incredible the workmanship that went into them which unfortunately is no longer seen in modern mansions. It's all low ceilings and plasterboard with disco lights.
I absolutely loved this episode; how you shared all of the homes built and lived in by this family was excellent. Thank you for all your hard work, I enjoy it so much!!
Being in the events industry, I have been to The Elms, Breakers many times but my favorite house to visit was always the Marble house. You really have to see it to believe it. Pictures don't do it justice.
I wonder what it would really cost to build one of these today. Inflation calculations are one thing, but permits, inspections, hiring now rare trades, etc. these were true works of arts that today’s cost cutting builds cannot compete with.
So many of hear videoed on the Vanderbilt family are dull and boring. So many just complaining of their status and opulence. Yours was much more forthcoming and yet truthful. Worth the watch. Thank you.
A video about Richard Morris Hunt would be interesting. I can't be the only one who's curious what he did with all the money he raked in from these commissions.
This video was a testament to the artisans,work laborers that deserve to see the bounty of all that went into every place mentioned,Yes in being too financially pinched to support, there could’ve been ways to support so the mere mention of demolishing wouldn’t ever have been considered,even though the personal essence, and tastes of the previous owners would’ve gotten praises, and possibly kept the places flourishing.❤
Well done to the first Vanderbilt for his entrepreneurship and clever, hard-work. The wealth could only happen. Hope the next Vanderbilt generation finds great success to. God bless the Vanderbilt family.
Ken, you do an excellent job, far better than any AI garbage, we’ve been to almost every Vanderbilt house with the exception of Idlehour, Eagles Nest, Shelburne and Elm Court, maybe some of these are forthcoming?🤞
I love grand houses and externally at least I think I would like to know more about Floreham and Eagles Nest. But, I just am staggered by the amount of wealth seemingly disposed of on these buildings inside a century or less. Some to be nearly simply discarded whether sold for a pittance of their creation value or donated away. Not only.was their creation on an extravagant scale, their legacy is a fallen empire we probably won't witness again.
☀️ Marble House is my personal favorite of the "Vandy Props", it having a pleasing exterior, and although, (the interor was overly heavy in Victorian decor traits in its Era), should I have had the property, for my dwelling or Design/Decor Project, then it would be receive the following, at minimum: A repainting of the rooms usng multiple shades of whites/lightest creams, and using varied levels of gloss trim paint, from matte to semi-gloss to high gloss. As per room purpose: lightest beige bronze-gold, silk wall covering, paint of a softest banana yellow, and another with softest light pink, each appropriate to the room and location . One color may be chosen and continued, like the banana yellow with select furniture pieces covered in cobalt blue, the Gold Leaf Accent, the white trims, and Lighting selected for area and time of day, Windows uninhibited by heavy drapery, rather with silk sheer window scarfs and select locations with straight panels of Cobalt Blue Velvet drapes that would expand when needed to block the Sun. The House has a detailed wood library, and the Public Room done wine red and Gold Leaf. The red would stay, with adjustments to remove the heavy design, giving the room a trio of shades in smooth plain coats, particular details in Gold Leaf, and trim in a Semi to High Gloss White and White + Cream Faux Marble, with Gold and Clear Quartz blended in as desired. Lighting would be my focal point throughout the Interior and Exterior of the Home and Landscape. All the heavy Victorian layers removed and replaced with smooth coats of wall paint, Silks, removing the layers of stess and anxiety promoting decor, and revealing decor that would flatter the Architecture, and lighting that would offer brighter areas, of light and intentional shading/shadows, that would lift the eye and giving an impression of greater heights and a flowing of open spaces in the Public Rooms and those areas that were for relaxing, music, art and garden views. It would be the home that inspired Architects and Creative Design Minds, a Statement of Clarity, Class, and Classic Design in a more Modern Time, and most particularly, at the turn of the 20th Century. With an era Budget for these decor project's products and materials, being half or less than that which was originally paid, a far more appealing, uniquely a Modern statement, but of the era and with Timeless Classic Class, the men would have likely been even more excited about the style than the women, as at that time they had less confidence, requiring Male Decor and Design Professionals contracted to guide them with recommendations and innovations, as the Men were overwhelmingly 99.9% of the Professionals, (women relligated to the roles of: daughter, sister, wife, mother, Mistress, tutors, teachers, housekeeping, seamstress, stage, saloons, and brothels.) A similar Style is one of the Current Decor Styles, h9wever, the Modern Victorian really requires a Talented and Professional Designer, for it calls for several techniques to make it work with apoeal and is "not for the novice DIY Decorator". It can go south at every point of decisiin and will look like a 4yr old playing dressup in Mom Old Prom Dresses. The margin for error is actually "MarginS for ErrorS" with Cliffs and easily Overdone, with undesirable variables of Messy. The thoughts of potentials mistakes makes me a bit dizzy to think of them. Shabby Chique is childs play, mistakes easily called destrssing or textures, giving it great lattitude for the Creatuve Minds to play, have fun, and enjoy good outcomes. But the Modern Victorian calls for Talent and Classes. Actually not one of my personal choices, although a smaller prooerty, 800 - 1200 sq feet, and with a clean Canvas to work on, no "I have to keep this or that and make it work" is allowed. Unless by chance it happens to be a "just by chance", keeper. I like "Minimalism Modern Midcentury"; "Modern Greek Revival"; "21st Century Art Deco 1920's"; "Hotel Lobby Effect"; and "my Version of Frank Lloyd Wright"; ... (Each are scaled back versions that includes the now technologies, and each with the Individual's Creative and Color Pallet.) Beth NW Tennessee, USA .
EXCELLENT video - really engaging. One nit: In your descriptions - Why do you refer to still extant structures in the past tense? Makes it a little confusing to discern between what was demolished vs. still standing.
In 1965 When I was 13 years old, my family and I toured the Biltmore Estate. I've always been fascinated with history and I could've spent a month there, but alas my mother gently prodded me along😂
I could live there, Ken. The only drawback is that I don't really have all that much antique furniture to fill it. Oh well. I could make it work. Cheers! Darryl
The photo at 4:09 is from after the house was remodeled for Grace Vanderbilt who called it "The black hole of Calcutta." Horace Trumbauer was hired to do the remodeling of the interior.
Sadly, all of these houses, along with crazy spending, blew the fortune and they have nothing left. Accept for the family that owns the Biltmore. They are billionaires just from that home
It's amazing how such dazzling, blistering opulence filled with so much art, sculpture, plasterwork, marble, silks, brocades, masonry and exquisite furniture could also be so ugly.
Ken, do you have any info/video on Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney's Long Island home? It was either called (Wheatly Hills) and/or that was the area on LI where it was located. Thank you!
I just wish it was possible to buy a simple little three-bedroom two-bath house with an acre of property. Say nothing about buying something like this even buying a little dinky Dopey place to live is Out Of Reach for most people now
Great question! Of the properties that survived, most are currently being utilized as museums, universities, and country clubs. There’s a small handful that remain private residences.
The public can stay for visits at Shelburne Farm and at Alfred Vanderbilt’s Great Camp Sagamore complex in the Adirondacks. Sagamore was Alfred’s retreat from the marble and gilt of the Breakers and 1 West 57th where he grew up.
This Era encompassed great wealth and extreme poverty. These people could have lifted thousands out of poverty, but unfortunately greed knows no limits.
It's interesting that the Commodore never became extravagant. Very self-disciplined man. Considering how few of these edifices survive, it seems almost all of that fortune went to waste.
I like Marble House, Alva owned it outright and designed it with William Hunt. I find many of these homes to be too opulent for my taste. I like quiet luxury, I enjoyed this video so much, thank you.
This craftsmanship could not be replicated today, the rich now build stapled together junk covered in sheet rock, it wouldn't last 10 years without daily upkeep by imported cheap labor
Can you imagine what those walls have seen? If you go to The Breakers, the first small room that the tour takes you into, near the front of the house and off of Mr Vanderbilt's Master Bedroom, it's plain by contrast and rather sterile. there is a super weird feeling in that room. I can only describe it as if someone did something in there that they very much shouldn't have. IDK what. But it rings with it like a tuning fork and set me back on my heels. Otherwise: GORGEOUS! Anderson Cooper stays on the 3rd floor.
This is the story of one of America's greatest family failures. To go from the wealthiest family too broke in four generations is an amazing tale of fools and their money. You do not want to be a Vanderbilt. It is very hard too make that much money. Too spend it all in 70 years, you have to be incredibly stupid. 😮
Really enjoy and appreciate historical Truth first inventor of Nike shoes all worldmarks and conceptual Converse All Stars by Coco Chanel 5 smarwatch givenchy Family Dollar Family Dollar tree rainbow rainbow kids monarch Heiress sherellHines
Of all the Vanderbilt mansions I’ve seen Biltmore is my favorite inside and out. I’m glad George had the foresight to envelope it within a productive landscape to help sustain and preserve it.
After a recent trip to Biltmore, I was told that Edith, George's wife deserves much of the credit for preserving things as they were and later opening it to the public.
Biltmore is simply a stunning estate. The grounds are equally as beautiful as the house, so much so, that I have gone there just to stroll through the flowers.
Biltmore is my favorite! A dear friend and I visited it in November of 2013 and it was superb!!!🌹
Thank you Ken for your most glorious episode yet. Utterly fascinating and entirely mind-blowing. Your heart breaks when hearing how virtually all of the Manhattan mansions were demolished. Such a shame they weren't protected and preserved for posterity. Favourite? How can one choose between Biltmore and the Breakers?? Heaven or paradise? Rolling hills and forests or the sea? In the end, and though it's a tough choice, it'll have to be The Breakers.
All one can say is: thank God for the Vanderbilts!
It is such a shame that so many grand houses in America have been torn down. I haven't visited any of the houses you presented here but I am glad that some are still open to the public. Thank you for the great videos you put out. This one could be straight out of the History Channel. You have done a wonderful job with this one.
Vineland, like the original Breakers, was built by a Lorillard and then purchased by a Vanderbilt. The Versace store at 647 Fifth Avenue was originally George's NYC home. You forgot one: Eliza Vanderbilt Webb's Shelburne Farms in Vermont. Excellent video.
There are dozens more! If this video performs well I will do a follow up to this one. Cheers!
The Breakers has a special place in my heart. While living on the island I went often. The dining room ceiling and the tile mosaic on the floor of the back porch are two of my favorite features. When it's decorated for Christmas it's an absolute dream. I'm not able to travel any more but I would have liked seeing Biltmore.
Thank you for the history of all the houses of the Vanderbilt family I loved all of them they were beautiful historical breathtaking thank you again
I visited Biltmore over the weekend. Words and pictures cannot do it justice. I was awestruck, not only by the architecture but also the furnishings and just to be able to walk through an icon of that era.... I'll definitely go back at some point.
While I can appreciate their opulance, for me I don’t find any of the houses to be home-like. I do appreciate their history. It would be interesting to know if any Vanderbilt descendants watch this and see what they have to offer on them. Thanks, Ken; you did an excellent job presenting this!
I love these houses! However, "cozy" is not an appropriate adjective to describe these homes.
I'm with ya. I can appreciate the grand history. However for daily living, I wouldn't trade my 1,100sq foot house for any of these places.
They basically lived within the suit between the bedrooms.
Anderson Cooper has talked about his family
Alva has to be the very definition of a sourpuss. I feel sorry for anyone who had to paint or photograph her.
Marble House is my favorite for absolute luxury. I have toured the biltmore and it is amazing too- especially with its opulent gardens, winery and village.
I’ve read on The Biltmore and it’s was a phenomenal venture to tackle way back when for the Land, Gardens, Farms, Mansion and keeping up with ALL THE ACREAGE of the property. AND THEY started with NOTHING….the forest was in the distant background. They brought in ALL THE TREES! I would love to see it one day.
It’s amazing, believe me
They're all works of art. But for me they are all a bit on the big side, but if I was forced to take one it would be the one with the pool in the basement -- the George Vanderbilt house designed by Olmsted. Thanks for your time, work and posting. What a great watch.
The Biltmore House was built by Richard Morris Hunt. Olmsted did design the gardens.
Can you share? Lol
I taught my kids that "Sharing is Caring."@@emmajohnson6955
Thank you Ken. I really enjoyed seeing and hearing about all the mansions they built. It's incredible the workmanship that went into them which unfortunately is no longer seen in modern mansions. It's all low ceilings and plasterboard with disco lights.
I absolutely loved this episode; how you shared all of the homes built and lived in by this family was excellent. Thank you for all your hard work, I enjoy it so much!!
Being in the events industry, I have been to The Elms, Breakers many times but my favorite house to visit was always the Marble house. You really have to see it to believe it. Pictures don't do it justice.
I wonder what it would really cost to build one of these today. Inflation calculations are one thing, but permits, inspections, hiring now rare trades, etc. these were true works of arts that today’s cost cutting builds cannot compete with.
So many of hear videoed on the Vanderbilt family are dull and boring. So many just complaining of their status and opulence. Yours was much more forthcoming and yet truthful. Worth the watch. Thank you.
A video about Richard Morris Hunt would be interesting. I can't be the only one who's curious what he did with all the money he raked in from these commissions.
This video was a testament to the artisans,work laborers that deserve to see the bounty of all that went into every place mentioned,Yes in being too financially pinched to support, there could’ve been ways to support so the mere mention of demolishing wouldn’t ever have been considered,even though the personal essence, and tastes of the previous owners would’ve gotten praises, and possibly kept the places flourishing.❤
Well done to the first Vanderbilt for his entrepreneurship and clever, hard-work. The wealth could only happen. Hope the next Vanderbilt generation finds great success to. God bless the Vanderbilt family.
I can’t pick a favorite, they are all so extraordinary! I am itching to go back to Newport this summer.
Marble House is the most exquisite house.
Absurdly exaggerated does not equal Exquisite. That gives you the Ashville mansion not Marble House.
Its just so crazy to me how they built these beautiful huge homes and then turn around and tear them down.
Two words: absolutely gobsmacked!!!! 💯
Ken, you do an excellent job, far better than any AI garbage, we’ve been to almost every Vanderbilt house with the exception of Idlehour, Eagles Nest, Shelburne and Elm Court, maybe some of these are forthcoming?🤞
I wish there were more pics of the Petite Chateau. I really liked the exterior.
I have visited the Biltmore a few times, it is my favorite.
I love grand houses and externally at least I think I would like to know more about Floreham and Eagles Nest. But, I just am staggered by the amount of wealth seemingly disposed of on these buildings inside a century or less. Some to be nearly simply discarded whether sold for a pittance of their creation value or donated away. Not only.was their creation on an extravagant scale, their legacy is a fallen empire we probably won't witness again.
Absolutely incredible.
I have been to Biltmore and thought that it was wonderful. They do tear down too many old buildings, sad but true.
I love The Breakers.I remember how beautiful it is from the 2 episodes of Antiques Roadshow that were shot there
☀️ Marble House is my personal favorite of the "Vandy Props", it having a pleasing exterior, and although, (the interor was overly heavy in Victorian decor traits in its Era), should I have had the property, for my dwelling or Design/Decor Project, then it would be receive the following, at minimum:
A repainting of the rooms usng multiple shades of whites/lightest creams, and using varied levels of gloss trim paint, from matte to semi-gloss to high gloss.
As per room purpose: lightest beige bronze-gold, silk wall covering, paint of a softest banana yellow, and another with softest light pink, each appropriate to the room and location .
One color may be chosen and continued, like the banana yellow with select furniture pieces covered in cobalt blue, the Gold Leaf Accent, the white trims, and Lighting selected for area and time of day, Windows uninhibited by heavy drapery, rather with silk sheer window scarfs and select locations with straight panels of Cobalt Blue Velvet drapes that would expand when needed to block the Sun.
The House has a detailed wood library, and the Public Room done wine red and Gold Leaf.
The red would stay, with adjustments to remove the heavy design, giving the room a trio of shades in smooth plain coats, particular details in Gold Leaf, and trim in a Semi to High Gloss White and White + Cream Faux Marble, with Gold and Clear Quartz blended in as desired.
Lighting would be my focal point throughout the Interior and Exterior of the Home and Landscape.
All the heavy Victorian layers removed and replaced with smooth coats of wall paint, Silks, removing the layers of stess and anxiety promoting decor, and revealing decor that would flatter the Architecture, and lighting that would offer brighter areas, of light and intentional shading/shadows, that would lift the eye and giving an impression of greater heights and a flowing of open spaces in the Public Rooms and those areas that were for relaxing, music, art and garden views.
It would be the home that inspired Architects and Creative Design Minds, a Statement of Clarity, Class, and Classic Design in a more Modern Time, and most particularly, at the turn of the 20th Century.
With an era Budget for these decor project's products and materials, being half or less than that which was originally paid, a far more appealing, uniquely a Modern statement, but of the era and with Timeless Classic Class, the men would have likely been even more excited about the style than the women, as at that time they had less confidence, requiring Male Decor and Design Professionals contracted to guide them with recommendations and innovations, as the Men were overwhelmingly 99.9% of the Professionals, (women relligated to the roles of: daughter, sister, wife, mother, Mistress, tutors, teachers, housekeeping, seamstress, stage, saloons, and brothels.)
A similar Style is one of the Current Decor Styles, h9wever, the Modern Victorian really requires a Talented and Professional Designer, for it calls for several techniques to make it work with apoeal and is "not for the novice DIY Decorator". It can go south at every point of decisiin and will look like a 4yr old playing dressup in Mom Old Prom Dresses.
The margin for error is actually "MarginS for ErrorS" with Cliffs and easily Overdone, with undesirable variables of Messy.
The thoughts of potentials mistakes makes me a bit dizzy to think of them.
Shabby Chique is childs play, mistakes easily called destrssing or textures, giving it great lattitude for the Creatuve Minds to play, have fun, and enjoy good outcomes.
But the Modern Victorian calls for Talent and Classes.
Actually not one of my personal choices, although a smaller prooerty, 800 - 1200 sq feet, and with a clean Canvas to work on, no "I have to keep this or that and make it work" is allowed. Unless by chance it happens to be a "just by chance", keeper.
I like "Minimalism Modern Midcentury"; "Modern Greek Revival"; "21st Century Art Deco 1920's"; "Hotel Lobby Effect"; and "my Version of Frank Lloyd Wright"; ...
(Each are scaled back versions that includes the now technologies, and each with the Individual's Creative and Color Pallet.)
Beth
NW Tennessee, USA
.
EXCELLENT video - really engaging. One nit: In your descriptions - Why do you refer to still extant structures in the past tense? Makes it a little confusing to discern between what was demolished vs. still standing.
In 1965 When I was 13 years old, my family and I toured the Biltmore Estate. I've always been fascinated with history and I could've spent a month there, but alas my mother gently prodded me along😂
Aàppreciate a 30 min Video.
Know these require more Production effort, but ("it's nice to have an entree, rather than an appetizer, sometimes.").
I could live there, Ken. The only drawback is that I don't really have all that much antique furniture to fill it. Oh well. I could make it work. Cheers!
Darryl
This is what I needed today ❤
My favorite all time structure
Absolutely fascinating!
Amazing! Thank you!
Nothing ever trickled down thru out history.
The photo at 4:09 is from after the house was remodeled for Grace Vanderbilt who called it "The black hole of Calcutta." Horace Trumbauer was hired to do the remodeling of the interior.
Sadly, all of these houses, along with crazy spending, blew the fortune and they have nothing left. Accept for the family that owns the Biltmore. They are billionaires just from that home
很精彩!!!
I just can't imagine living that way .
It's amazing how such dazzling, blistering opulence filled with so much art, sculpture, plasterwork, marble, silks, brocades, masonry and exquisite furniture could also be so ugly.
Just me a rustic looking cabin in the mountains with scenic views. Much easier to maintain!
awesome!
Spectacular way to blow a fortune for ego.
Well to be precise it's not The Biltmore, just Biltmore.
There’s a article on half pudding half sauce detailing all the important rooms in the Vanderbilt Triple Palace
Ken, do you have any info/video on Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney's Long Island home? It was either called (Wheatly Hills) and/or that was the area on LI where it was located. Thank you!
I have been gathering information/ licensing photos of it for a video. Hopefully, I’ll have it wrapped up in a few weeks. Stay tuned!
How the heck do you capture 300 humming birds?
Places full of treasure and gold trim. Unbelievable.
I just wish it was possible to buy a simple little three-bedroom two-bath house with an acre of property. Say nothing about buying something like this even buying a little dinky Dopey place to live is Out Of Reach for most people now
are all of their property's museums now? or any private homes still ?
Great question! Of the properties that survived, most are currently being utilized as museums, universities, and country clubs. There’s a small handful that remain private residences.
The public can stay for visits at Shelburne Farm and at Alfred Vanderbilt’s Great Camp Sagamore complex in the Adirondacks. Sagamore was Alfred’s retreat from the marble and gilt of the Breakers and 1 West 57th where he grew up.
Did you mention Acadia plantation in South Carolina?
Best video ❤❤❤
This Era encompassed great wealth and extreme poverty. These people could have lifted thousands out of poverty, but unfortunately greed knows no limits.
You mean with handouts?
I think they employed many thousands with all the jobs there interests provided
It's interesting that the Commodore never became extravagant. Very self-disciplined man. Considering how few of these edifices survive, it seems almost all of that fortune went to waste.
I like Marble House, Alva owned it outright and designed it with William Hunt. I find many of these homes to be too opulent for my taste. I like quiet luxury, I enjoyed this video so much, thank you.
This craftsmanship could not be replicated today, the rich now build stapled together junk covered in sheet rock, it wouldn't last 10 years without daily upkeep by imported cheap labor
he was the younger brother so he only got 5 million and 5 mil. trust, he spent all his money building this mansion (north carolina)
The mansion next door to the Vanderbuilt triple ? anyone?
Only 37 servants to wait on her. Practically a shut in all alone.
Can you imagine what those walls have seen?
If you go to The Breakers, the first small room that the tour takes you into,
near the front of the house and off of Mr Vanderbilt's Master Bedroom,
it's plain by contrast and rather sterile.
there is a super weird feeling in that room.
I can only describe it as if someone did something in there that they very much shouldn't have.
IDK what. But it rings with it like a tuning fork and set me back on my heels.
Otherwise: GORGEOUS!
Anderson Cooper stays on the 3rd floor.
Yep, trust your instinct. Satanic ritual abuse to children happened and still does happen there. You can find info on this if you dig deep.
Why are so many photographs in black & white?
Nothing like a party with 300 flying poop machines 🥳
I love that the Vanderbilts lost everything
Ok comrade, jealous loser
bk 2:05
This is the story of one of America's greatest family failures. To go from the wealthiest family too broke in four generations is an amazing tale of fools and their money. You do not want to be a Vanderbilt. It is very hard too make that much money. Too spend it all in 70 years, you have to be incredibly stupid. 😮
The wasted it building these objectively ridiculous houses.
Anderson cooper must watch these and say W.T.F happpened to all grand dads money ....L.O.L...😂😂😂
She did WHAT to 300 hummingbirds? Disgusting.
We're they really kings??
These are the great downfall for the vanderbilt dynasty.
Where are these famous family now.... and are n they being yoyfull with sharing like it was in 18-19 hundreds?????
200 rooms for what
Really enjoy and appreciate historical Truth first inventor of Nike shoes all worldmarks and conceptual Converse All Stars by Coco Chanel 5 smarwatch givenchy Family Dollar Family Dollar tree rainbow rainbow kids monarch Heiress sherellHines
anderson coopers killhouse?
Sadly, we have a fascination with how the other half lives.
Nothing sad about admiring architecture I could never afford
I thought they were the architects😒
I find the narrator's voice so annoying. I had to turn it off.
Maybe you’d rather listen to AI, moron