A dollhouse for $8.5 mn

It took 13 years for Diehl, a celebrated miniature artist, to build the dollhouse, which has an appraised worth of $8.5 million

The salon with the postage-size reproduction of the "Pinkie"
The salon with the postage-size reproduction of the “Pinkie”
Patrick Clark (Bloomberg)
Last Updated : Nov 21 2015 | 12:08 AM IST
This extravagant home has a weaponry room, a dovecote, a wizard's tower, and an appraised value of more than $2,000 per square inch - all good hints that it's not a traditional abode but a 9-foot-tall miniature called the Astolat Dollhouse Castle. Built by the artist Elaine Diehl around 1980 and decorated with 10,000 teeny-tiny items, the $8.5 million dollhouse is the world's most expensive and will be on display till December 8 at the Shops at Columbus Circle, in Manhattan's Time Warner Center.

It took 13 years for Diehl, a celebrated miniature artist, to build the dollhouse, which has an appraised worth of $8.5 million. That works out to about $288,000 per square foot - a number that could make the luxurious apartments at the Time Warner Center, which can run about $5,000 per square foot, feel like servants' quarters.

The dollhouse takes its name after the castle in The Lady of Shallot, a 19th-century ballad by Alfred Lord Tennyson.

Suits of armour abound, which is a neat feature and the secret to the castle's overall worth. The dollhouse's lofty appraisal is based on its valuation as a work of art and on the price tags associated with the thousands of tiny objects collected therein. A silver flatware set, for instance, is said to be worth $5,000.

the luxurious finishes visible with the hinges open
As with any stately home, there are finishes like real parquet floors, marble bathrooms, and gilt trim - giving the sense that the castle was inhabited by a Victorian dame married to a medieval warlord.

Some of the finer touches include hand-stitched tapestries, vases in real lapis lazuli, and replica 18th-century oil paintings - such as the postage-size reproduction of Thomas Lawrence's "Pinkie", displayed on the wall of the salon. Come have a cocktail and sit for a spell.

The library contains tiny books with tiny letters that can be read under a magnifying glass. The book collection includes a Bible considered one of the world's smallest. A drop-leaf secretary bookshelf is valued at up to $2,500; a miniature Hebrew Torah was worth up to $2,500 at the time of purchase.

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First Published: Nov 21 2015 | 12:08 AM IST

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