Essayer OR - Gratuit
Too rich for Carmel? Billionaire developer slams city over delays
Los Angeles Times
|August 17. 2025
Patrice Pastor spent big bucks on Carmel-by-the-Sea, in part because of cherished childhood memories, vacationing with his father in this charming, if quirky, coastal town.

Photographs by GENARO MOLINA Los Angeles Times SHOPPERS and visitors at the Der Ling Building, one of the properties billionaire Patrice Pastor has purchased in Carmel-by-the-Sea.
But after snapping up more than $100 million in properties in the area in recent years, the Monaco billionaire has grown increasingly infuriated by delays on his development projects, including a midsize retail and residential development that he has been trying to get approved.
After six years of holdups and redesigns on that project —due, he said, to townsfolk endlessly nitpicking his plans — he has decided to bail on Carmel.
“It’s time to leave this strange community, if you can call it a community,” Pastor said in a statement after the City Council this month delayed taking any action on the development, which he named the JB Pastor project in honor of his great-grandfather.
City officials, he wrote, have used “reasons that are akin to a schoolyard” to stand in his way, and it is time, he said, to “reconsider my investment in Carmel.”
In Carmel-by-the-Sea, development — including upgrades to private homes — is notoriously slow.
This wealthy Monterey County enclave strictly regulates architecture to maintain the much-vaunted “village character” of a place filled with cottages, courtyards and secret passageways.
Residents in the one-square mile town, population 3,200, have long sought to keep out the so-called trappings of city life.

They have no street addresses, instead giving their homes whimsical nicknames like Almost Heaven and Faux Chateau. And they have no streetlights or sidewalks in residential areas.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition August 17. 2025 de Los Angeles Times.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times
Nacua’s fast start looks familiar
The star receiver's numbers are drawing comparisons to Kupp’s historic 2021 season.
3 mins
October 02, 2025
Los Angeles Times
U.S. begins drawing down forces in Iraq
Defense official says military has shifted burden for combating ISIS to Iraqi troops.
2 mins
October 02, 2025

Los Angeles Times
His L.A. Phil farewell bridges 2 cities
Dudamel opens his last season with a program that rings from coast to coast.
3 mins
October 02, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Aces top short-handed Fever, return to Finals
A’ja Wilson scored 35 points and Jackie Young had 32 to lead the Aces back to the WNBA Finals as Las Vegas held off pesky Indiana 107-98 in overtime in the deciding Game 5 on Tuesday night after the already-depleted Fever lost another star player to injury.
2 mins
October 02, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Ukraine at ‘critical’ moment with reactors
Concerns are again mounting over the safety of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which has been cut off from an external supply of electricity for more than a week.
2 mins
October 02, 2025

Los Angeles Times
HITTIN' POWER SWITCH
Dodgers belt five home runs to back Snell’s dominance in rout of Reds
5 mins
October 02, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Little hope for an LAX revival
Re “Struggling LAX hopes for lift,” Sept. 28
1 min
October 02, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Pope wades into U.S. dispute over term ‘pro-life’
Leo XIV sees a conflict in opposing abortion, supporting the death penalty.
3 mins
October 02, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Dodgers usher in October in style
This isn't a series, it's calisthenics.
5 mins
October 02, 2025

Los Angeles Times
'War-ravaged' Portland protests troop moves
Oregonians maintain they don't need Trump to send the Guard
6 mins
October 02, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size