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The current owners bought the home, also known as La Miniatura, about 12 years ago and have even entertained a proposal by an art dealer whose Japanese client considered buying the home, dismantling it block-by-textile-block and shipping it to Japan. "We have a priceless treasure at a bargain price and it's not as well understood at home probably as it is around the world," said the home's listing agent, Crosby Doe. High-priced homes by brand-name architects don't seem to be selling any better in other parts of the country. In the Highland Park suburb of Chicago, the modernist glass-and-steel box-shaped home best known as the launching point of a character's father's Ferrari in 1986's "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" has languished on the market for more than a year. The house, built in 1953 by Mies van der Rohe-protege A. James Speyer, was first listed for $2.3 million in May 2009. Last month, its price was cut to about $1.7 million. James Ebert, a property appraiser who specializes in architecturally significant homes, said prices would have to come down even more in order to attract buyers for these homes, many of which are in disrepair and require expensive maintenance. "When the economy was in better shape, people were willing to spend a little extra for a work of art," he said. "In the recession we're in now, that architectural, creative edge tends to dissipate and buyers become more concerned for basic shelter." Doe, meanwhile, said new rules for property appraisals mean agents can choose an appraiser with an architectural background. A house with excellent design pedigree might lack floor space, kitchen amenities and bathroom spas, and bring in a lower appraisal, discouraging banks from offering loans large enough to cover asking prices. "It's the same thing as taking a Picasso and a paint-by-numbers and saying they're the same," he said.
[Associated
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