Archive for: March, 2006

The Mexican Riviera — Costa Careyes — Costa Alegre

Casa Occidente - Costa Careyes - spectacular luxury vacation rental villa

Casa Occi­dente — Costa Careyes — spec­tac­u­lar lux­ury vaca­tion rental villa

How did Costa Careyes become such a chic inter­na­tional play­ground? William Mid­dle­ton charts its rise—along with the quirks, rival­ries, and feats of imagination.

Did you see that tree at the end of the pool?” asks Alix Gold­smith Mar­cac­cini on my first night at Cuix­mala. “Do you think it works?” I am hav­ing din­ner with her in her villa, Casa Arca­dia, high above the estate founded by her father, Sir James Gold­smith, which she now runs as a glo­ri­ous resort on the west coast of Mexico—a com­plex of vil­las, bun­ga­lows, and casitas that sprawls across 25,000 acres. The con­ver­sa­tion has turned to a new pool she’s had built by Mex­i­can archi­tect Duc­cio Ermenegildo. A bold, rec­tan­gu­lar form, it juts out over the prop­erty like a piece of min­i­mal­ist sculp­ture. “It might be nice if there were noth­ing there to break the view,” I sug­gest, sur­prised to be consulted.

When we stop by the pool the next morn­ing, the tree has van­ished. Some­time after din­ner and be– fore break­fast, one of the 250 peo­ple who work here came and chopped it down. In this bat­tle be-tween nature and aes­thet­ics, nature has lost.

This stretch of the Mex­i­can coast, just an hour-and-a-half drive north of Man­zanillo and three hours south of Puerto Val­larta, is a lit­tle patch of par­adise with some very grand ambi­tions. Besides Cuix­mala, the Eng­lish financier’s vast hill­top spread designed by Robert Cou­turier, there’s Careyes, the resort built by Ital­ian entre­pre­neur Gian Franco Brignone on eight extra­or­di­nary miles of shore­line. Gian Franco, who came here look­ing for his own Eden in 1968, sold Jimmy Gold­smith a nice chunk of land and kept the rest for him­self. Over the past four decades, Gian Franco has main­tained an iron grip on Careyes, lim­it­ing growth to one beach­side hotel with 48 rooms, 36 casitas on a hill above a cove, and some 50 vil­las with sweep­ing views out over the bay. Palm trees, bougainvil­lea, and cacti seem to over­whelm the place, cov­er­ing the cliffs that drop into the clear blue waters of the Pacific. The struc­tures blend the force­ful lines of Mex­i­can mod­ernism with the soft edges of clas­sic Ital­ian archi­tec­ture. The ocher-colored three-story El Careyes hotel could have blown in from the Cours Saleya in Nice, while dozens of pas­tel casitas with red tile roofs ris­ing uphill from the water call to mind Posi­tano. The main Careyes beach, Playa Rosa, is no more than 100 yards wide, with a hand­ful of boats float­ing in a quiet cove. A thatched-roof restau­rant serves what­ever has just been plucked from the sea. Way off in the dis­tance is the domed roof of La Loma, Cuixmala’s main villa, inspired by the Haghia Sophia in Istan­bul. The mood is some­thing akin to that of a French garden—gorgeously unspoiled yet com­pletely stylized.

Just as care­fully as they have groomed their estates, the Gold­smiths and the Brignones—Gian Franco’s dash­ing polo-playing son, Gior­gio, over­sees most of the oper­a­tions now—have care­fully tended their flock. Before he died in 1997, Jimmy Gold­smith would reg­u­larly fly friends and fam­ily (who included three for­mer wives, count­less mis­tresses, and eight chil­dren from four women) to Man­zanillo in his Indian-themed 747, also designed by Cou­turier, and then have a pri­vate plane ferry every­one to Cuixmala.

 

La Guarida del Cordero - Luxury real estate in mexico

La Guar­ida del Cordero — Lux­ury real estate in mexico

Over the years both prop­er­ties have served as a play­ground for heiresses, dig­ni­taries, and roy­alty. In more recent days, how­ever, Hol­ly­wood and its orbit have descended on this remote land, along with ordi­nary mil­lion­aires look­ing for a lit­tle pedi­gree and a way into an often sealed-off world. Lee Radzi­well has been replaced with Sarah Michelle Gel­lar, Mark and Domi­t­illa Getty with Simon and Jas­min Le Bon, and Gianni Angelli with Madonna. Seal and Heidi Klum, whose wed­ding here brought out the paparazzi, have built their own peach-colored villa at Careyes. The cast of Kill Bill threw a party on the beach (Quentin Taran­tino shot the final scenes of his styl­ish B-movie riff on the prop­erty). And this win­ter Bill and Melinda Gates took over La Loma for a week.

 

We try not to focus on who has come here,” Gior­gio Brignone says. “We don’t want peo­ple to come to see stars. That’s not what it’s about.” That line may be the old­est trick in the book—making a beau­ti­ful place for beau­ti­ful peo­ple and then refus­ing to name names—but Gior­gio may have good rea­son to hedge. As the glare of the spot­light inches closer, how do you pro­tect this sequestered world of pri­vate vil­las and hid­den bun­ga­lows, this luxe and aes­thet­i­cally con­sis­tent Mex­ico that is almost impos­si­ble to find elsewhere?

The future, it seems, still lies with the man whose extra­or­di­nary vision this was. When I first meet Gian Franco, he’s hav­ing a party at Sol de Occi­dente, one of two match­ing round vil­las that crown the hill­tops on either side of a bay. The roof ter­race drops off to a black infin­ity pool, wrap­ping around the house and reflect­ing views in every direc­tion. Milling about are a cou­ple dozen guests—some young Ital­ians, a few French fam­i­lies, a Peru­vian polo player, a hand­ful of Amer­i­cans. The sun dips below the hori­zon as wait­ers serve frozen mar­gar­i­tas, chilled hibis­cus water, and fresh gua­camole. Gian Franco has long gray hair under a chic straw som­brero, wears a striped Mex­i­can pon­cho over one shoul­der, and car­ries a gnarled wooden cane. A play­boy at 80 years old, he has one arm around his very beau­ti­ful, very young Brazil­ian girl­friend. At one point in the evening I over­hear him say to a group of friends, “The inven­tion of Via­gra has changed my life.”

As we talk, he draws a grand—but prob­a­bly apt—parallel between him­self and the Aga Khan. He says he was inspired to found Careyes by the imam’s plan for the Costa Smer­alda in Sar­dinia. Gian Franco scoured the globe search­ing for an unspoiled coastal area with a year-round tem­per­ate cli­mate and a sta­ble polit­i­cal envi­ron­ment. When he flew over these jagged cliffs and jungle-covered hills, he imme­di­ately knew he’d found his spot. Look­ing out now over the land­scape that he has spent decades cre­at­ing from scratch, he says, “Gianni Agnelli once told me that what is remark­able about Careyes, as much as what we have built, is what wehaven’t built.”

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Lux­ury six bed­room vaca­tion rental villa for sale: Over­looks all of Careyes

Gian Franco not only keeps the big pic­ture in sight but also manages—even micromanages—every inch, from the style of archi­tec­ture to the color of paint used on each struc­ture, whether he owns that struc­ture or not. One after­noon, as we pull up to the Casa Igua­nas, a pri­vate villa under ren­o­va­tion, Gian Franco stops by to make an inspec­tion. Alarmed by a par­tic­u­lar shade of pink being tested on the exte­rior wall, he con­fronts the designer, Mallery Roberts Lane, an Amer­i­can who lives in Paris and Lon­don and has spent sev­eral months here dec­o­rat­ing the villa for its Eng­lish owner.

That’s not a Careyes pink,” Gian Franco says in firm, though polite, French.

It’s the exact shade of a hibis­cus flower,” she replies.

A Careyes pink is the shade of a bougainvil­lea flower,” he answers. “I have lived here for a long time—I know what pink will work.”

Once the house was fin­ished, with the hibis­cus pink con­signed to a sin­gle ver­ti­cal stripe on an inte­rior wall, Gian Franco would return to praise the designer. “He still says he would have cho­sen another pink, but he con­grat­u­lated me on the house,” Mallery tells me later. “I find it touching—this is his Careyes. Even after all these years—the pol­i­tics, the money, the peo­ple, the changes—he still takes every detail to heart.”

Early the next morn­ing Gior­gio, who is mar­ried and has two chil­dren, takes me for a spin in his boat to show how Careyes looks from the water. He points out some of the more suc­cess­ful vil­las (“That one has just been shot for Archi­tec­tural Digest”) and such idyl­lic scenes as the Playa Teopa, a three-mile-long beach, with only two peo­ple walk­ing along it. “The prob­lem with many places in Mex­ico is that a beau­ti­ful place has some­thing hor­ri­ble just on the other side,” Gior­gio says. “The qual­ity of archi­tec­ture at Careyes is con­sis­tent over a very extended area. We’re also sur­rounded by an enor­mous nature reserve, which helps give it a magic that doesn’t exist any­where else.”

Still, there have been occa­sional mis­steps. Peek­ing into some of the older houses for rent, I see that the interiors—with out­dated fur­ni­ture and ques­tion­able art—could use some fresh­en­ing up. Gior­gio shows me one recent villa that is too big for its lot: a McMan­sion landed in Careyes. And on a small cove called Playa Rosa, he ges­tures toward a clus­ter of brick build­ings con­structed in the early sev­en­ties. Now vacant, this used to be a Club Med. “At first it brought in lots of young peo­ple, which was amus­ing,” he says, then with a wave of his hand adds, “it’s all being torn down and con­verted into one villa.”

Among Giorgio’s main con­tri­bu­tions to Careyes is an enor­mous Bermuda-grass polo field near the ocean. It has become an impor­tant draw, with a delight­ful restau­rant run by a cou­ple from Guadala­jara. There are matches three days a week and a pro­fes­sional tour­na­ment called the Agua Alta every Easter. “There is great polo in Argentina, too, but then your fam­ily will be stuck for a week on a dusty estancia,” Gior­gio says. “There are not many places that offer polo and the chance to spend time on the beach with the fam­ily. And here, the com­mu­nity invites play­ers into their homes and has par­ties and din­ners for them—you become a part of the place.” That sense of involve­ment is the chief advan­tage of Careyes. “There’s a real com­mu­nity here,” says Mallery Lane, the dec­o­ra­tor of the hibis­cus pink. “You’re not just stay­ing in a hotel—you’re part of a social scene. It’s like you have an instant social life.”

 

The way into that life is Viviana Dean, a beau­ti­ful fortysome­thing native Guadala­jaran who used to work for Gian Franco and is now Careyes’s ulti­mate fixer. She over­sees three of the resort’s finest vil­las: Casa La Huerta, a soar­ing rose-colored struc­ture, Casa Alti­plano, which is pale yel­low with graphic gray stripes and a sparkling blue pool, and Casa Can­de­labro, with a black wrap­around infin­ity pool that looks out over the bay. A grand dame of Torino soci­ety spent sev­eral weeks here train­ing the staff at each house. One evening, Viviana pulls together a casual din­ner with Gior­gio, Mallery, and Viviana’s boyfriend, land­scape archi­tect Diego Quiñones. Dressed in a vin­tage Moroc­can caf­tan that belonged to her great aunt, Viviana serves zuc­chini soup, grilled mahimahi, red rice with peas, and a dessert of coconut flan. Over din­ner she explains the allure of the local hibis­cus water (a highly addic­tive tisane made from dried blos­soms and served ice cold) and intro­duces us to her Chi­huahua, Nube. “She has a friend stay­ing with her for the week­end,” Viviana says. “She likes younger men, too.” By the time we’ve moved to the liv­ing room, Viviana and Diego have kicked off their shoes and leaned back into the over­size cush­ions and are talk­ing about Careyes days gone by, set­ting a scene of mag­i­cal real­ism. It’s no won­der that many vis­i­tors here end up buy­ing their own slice of Careyes. (Vil­las sell for $1.5 mil­lion and up.)

The Gold­smith and Brignone fam­i­lies are on ami­able terms, but from a dis­tance and with an under­cur­rent of healthy rivalry. The day we are to leave Careyes for Cuix­mala, that friendly con­flict turns into farce. “There is really not that much to see in Cuix­mala,” one res­i­dent I’d met informs me. “You won’t need to be there more than a day.” Another shows me an arti­cle on Careyes and says, “See, Cuix­mala is barely men­tioned.” For our 12:30 lunch with Gior­gio on Playa Rosa, he shows up at 1:45. “Are you sure you don’t want to go look at the sea tur­tles this after­noon?” he asks. Instead of serv­ing lunch, wait­ers bring out dish after dish for Jonathan Becker to pho­to­graph. Gior­gio lingers with friends at another table while Gian Franco, putting in a sur­prise appear­ance, describes some new top-secret sculp­ture he is erect­ing in the jungle—it’s not clear exactly what he’s up to. He offers, “Would you like to see it?” Even though the con­di­tions couldn’t be love­lier, we’re being held hostage.

Whether the Brignones like it or not, the Gold­smith legacy has become as key to the idea of a luxe Mex­i­can Riv­iera as their own. Sir James, an invet­er­ate gam­bler who inspired tremen­dous crit­i­cism along with fierce loy­alty, first came to Careyes to ring in the New Year of 1984. “We had rented Casa Mi Ojo, Gian Franco’s house,” recalls Alix, who was 19 then. “Gian Franco stayed with us and did every­thing pos­si­ble for us to fall in love with Careyes.”

It worked. After com­pli­cated nego­ti­a­tions to assem­ble all the prop­er­ties, Sir James hired Cou­turier to design the entire project and had thou­sands of work­ers swarm­ing over the site to make sure every struc­ture was fin­ished in two years’ time. Alix quips, “It was like build­ing the bloody pyramids.”

Indeed the estate is noth­ing short of aston­ish­ing, with a scale that is oth­er­worldly. La Loma, the domed main house, has only four bed­rooms in more than 37,000 square feet, with ceil­ings more than 15 feet high. On the crest of Cuixmala’s high­est hill some dis­tance from La Loma, the peach-stuccoed Casa Puma, where we are stay­ing, looks back at the main house over a plan­ta­tion filled with 10,000 palm trees. Else­where is another large villa; six guest bun­ga­lows, scat­tered near La Loma on an over­grown butte; the house of Alix’s mother, Ginette Gold­smith, nes­tled by the ocean; three hill­side vil­las for fam­ily; nine casitas orig­i­nally for senior staff and now rented to guests; and a huge sta­ble in orange stucco topped by a gigan­tic bronze bust of a horse. (Because of severe under­tow, there’s no swim­ming beach at Cuixmala—a fact that raises more than a few eye­brows at Careyes. Instead, there are two pri­vate beaches, both per­fectly pic­turesque, 20 min­utes away.) From within the estate, there is vir­tu­ally no sign of out­side life—except for Gian Franco Brignone’s own sprawl­ing house, Castillo el Tigre del Mar, which he built after Sir James fin­ished Cuix­mala. “My father would look out his win­dow and see this big blue penis,” Alix remarks, “with a flag on top!”

Jimmy was a very big man and he swal­lowed up space,” says Cou­turier, now based in New York. “He thought a lot, and he would think while walking—he’d walk around the patio, chew­ing his hand­ker­chief or chew­ing his cigar and think­ing.” Cou­turier says the style of Cuix­mala emerged through the process of elim­i­na­tion. “Jimmy didn’t want some­thing mod­ern, and we knew we didn’t want to build a Euro­pean cas­tle. What we ended up with is more Moorish—a com­bi­na­tion of a mogul’s palace and a monastery.” And yet the inte­ri­ors are sur­pris­ingly spare. All the vil­las have white floors and walls; bright cot­ton fab­rics cover the ban­quettes; and the ceil­ings are done in the tra­di­tional domed red­brick style called bóvedas. The sim­plic­ity was inten­tional, Cou­turier explains, “because with so much going on already, we didn’t want to add any more. That would have been preposterous.”

As indul­gent as Cuix­mala may be, Jimmy Gold­smith also com­mit­ted him­self and his heirs to sig­nif­i­cant stew­ard­ship of the land. He estab­lished the Chamela-Cuixmala Bios­phere Reserve, the first such pri­vate con­ces­sion in the coun­try, with 32,000 acres of dry trop­i­cal for­est and more than 1,100 species of plants, 72 mam­mals, 110 vari­eties of fish, and 270 species of birds. The rivers and lagoons are now crawl­ing with hun­dreds of snap­ping croc­o­diles. Dozens of imported zebras, gazelles, and elands roam the coconut plan­ta­tion. The estate is 80 per­cent self-sufficient, with all the fruit, veg­eta­bles, and live­stock raised organ­i­cally. Almost everything—the orange juice and huevos meji­canos at break­fast and the roast pork and plat­ter of fresh cheese at din­ner— is pro­duced on the estate.

After her father’s death, the only way Alix could con­tinue what he began was by open­ing up the prop­erty to guests (“You can’t imag­ine how much it costs to paint that every year,” she says of the glossy white walls, floors, and ceil­ing). She does, after all, come from a fam­ily with a long his­tory of hos­pi­tal­ity: Sir James’s father ran some of the finest hotels in Europe, among them the Hôtel de Paris in Monte Carlo and the Carl­ton Hôtel in Cannes. His eldest daugh­ter and Alix’s sis­ter, Isabel Gold­smith, owns Las Ala­man­das, an ele­gant small hotel 30 miles north of Careyes. Alix has also con­verted her father’s moun­tain retreat into a hotel—the Hacienda de San Anto­nio is near the town of Col­ima, some three hours from Cuix­mala. (Those vis­it­ing both places usu­ally take a 45-minute flight between them; each has its own airstrip.) Tucked into a lush 5,000 acres in the shadow of a live vol­cano, the Hacienda is a work­ing cof­fee plan­ta­tion that dates back to the 19th cen­tury. In the eight­ies Sir James hired Cou­turier to build a 25-bedroom colonial-style house in pink stucco and black vol­canic rock. Hav­ing turned over man­age­ment of the Hacienda to the Aman hotel group for sev­eral years, Alix has now regained con­trol, redec­o­rated, brought in a gen­eral man­ager from Paris, and hired a pro­tégé of cel­e­brated French chef Guy Martin.

Despite the mon­u­men­tal­ity of Cuix­mala, I never feel intim­i­dated or lost in the shuf­fle of such a com­pli­cated oper­a­tion. This, like Careyes, is still a fam­ily affair: Alix’s hus­band, Gof­fredo Mar­cac­cini, runs the prop­erty, and Alix—along with her strik­ing assis­tant, Maria Campos—oversees every detail of the guests’ stay. That sense of the per­sonal, that Cuix­mala is a home, is never lost, and the result is an entirely unique experience.

One morn­ing near the casitas, we come across a group of five friends: the head of a Mex­i­can tele­phone com­pany and his wife; the pub­lisher of a polit­i­cal mag­a­zine and his wife; and a renowned and remark­able Mex­i­can singer named Car­olina Cor­dova. She has light green eyes and is wear­ing a black and white polka-dot dress, as if she just stepped out of a fifties film. They sit around a late break­fast, talk­ing, laugh­ing. Soon Car­olina moves to the side of a hill under a tree; the pool sparkles below, the palm trees and the rest of the estate glim­mer in the dis­tance. She takes out her gui­tar, strums rhyth­mi­cally, and breaks into full-throated song. “Que Bonito”—it’s a love song, a beau­ti­ful lament. Pulled in by her per­for­mance, her friends take their places on the chaise longues around the pool. When she fin­ishes, she closes her eyes dra­mat­i­cally and the lit­tle audi­ence breaks into applause. The morn­ing air fills with shouts of “Brava! Brava!”

http://www.departures.com/articles/mexican-riviera

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