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Las Vegas SUN - January 20, 1997
Title: Heart and Home: Millionaire couple's house of dreams
By Art Nadler nadler@lasvegassun.com, LAS VEGAS SUN
It's not Whoopi Goldberg's Hollywood-style
mansion, a drug house or an illegal brothel. Such rumors make William Gohres
shake with laughter. Villa de Reve, translated literally, is "Our Dream
Home." Gohres and his wife, Millie, built their $6.5 million, two-story
brick home 8 1/2 years ago. It sits like a majestic feudal castle, its blue
porcelain tile roof with twin copper-covered towers glistening in the afternoon
sunlight. A massive black iron electric gate surrounds the three-quarter-acre
estate at 6150 W. Palmyra Ave. It is guarded by video cameras and a high-tech
alarm system. The elongated front yard is adorned with statuary that includes
mythical gods, Venus-like beauties and towering Greek pillars. Within the
8,500-square-foot sanctuary is a virtual microcosm of Renaissance Europe,
featuring copies of the work of some of the world's greatest painters on the
walls and across most of the ceilings. You enter Villa de Reve through a
650-pound carved wooden door. It is 7 inches thick and requires five ball-bearing
hinges.
The Gohres family crest is the first thing you
see. It's embedded in the foyer floor and weighs 1,200 pounds. A crane was
required to lift and place the Italian mosaic in place. "We started to
build this home because the ones in Las Vegas weren't what we wanted,"
Millie says. "We lived in a Spanish home in California. After we traveled
in Europe, we realized that this was the look we wanted." A typical Las
Vegas two-bedroom, two-car garage stucco home still remains on the property to
the rear of the estate. This was the house the Gohreses lived in while they
were building Villa de Reve. Today, it serves as servants' quarters. "The
(outside) walls are a foot thick," Bill said of the details he demanded.
"Whatever the (building) code said, I went to the next stage." The
foyer to the five-bedroom, eight-bathroom mansion is divided in two, separated
by a winding 5-foot-wide marble staircase and overhead walkway. A 558-pound
glass chandelier, a 5-by-5-foot sphere, hangs from the ceiling. In all, 13
crystal and porcelain chandeliers are featured throughout Villa de Reve.
Doorknobs are also either crystal or porcelain. There are seven marble and
carved-wood fireplaces in the formal dining areas, the library and bedrooms.
Numerous hand-carved cherry-wood mantles, grandfather clocks and wall fixtures
are found in virtually every room. Many of the bathroom fixtures are finished
in 22-karat gold plating. "When a married couple builds a home, it tests
the marriage," Bill says with a laugh, giving his wife an affectionate
nudge. "I had a choice. Send the money back to (Washington) D.C., or give
it to charity. We decided to do this."
The Gohres donated their beloved Villa de Reve to
charity in 1993, forming the Gohres-Hohmann Foundation (Hohmann is Millie's
maiden name). Their plan is to host six to eight charity fund-raisers a month.
So far they have hosted parties for the Boy Scouts of America and firefighter
organizations. They will remain as caretakers and live in the home, opening it
up to tours (including their living quarters) with all proceeds going to
charities. "Our slogan, as seen in our crest, is 'Giving From the
Heart,'" Bill says. "All I'll want is to get paid for the catering
(of fund-raisers), and then I'll hand over a check every month. We'll keep no
money." Self-made millionaires Bill was born and raised in Orange County,
Calif. Millie is from Arkansas. They met while at an Alpha Beta supermarket in
California. Millie was a checker, Bill a manager. They married in 1972, and
shortly thereafter began investing in real estate and income properties. Good
fortune quickly became a silent partner. "I made my wealth in California
and tripled it in Nevada," Bill says, referring to his development of a
320-acre North Las Vegas site in 1988 called Rancho Del Norte. "Now we
want to give it back to Nevada through this foundation. This foundation will be
a billion-dollar foundation before my death."
The artist Tom Bisesti, 48, is the artist who painted the murals on the walls
and ceilings. He also hand-painted highlights in much of the carved wood
throughout Villa de Reve. Bisesti, a 12-year resident of Las Vegas, began
working with the Gohres one and a half years ago. He usually works six days a
week from 11 a.m. until 9 p.m. "For a free-lance artist, this is a dream
come true," Bisesti says. "It's a long-range project that I enjoy,
working for really supportive people who allow me total artistic freedom.
"I get to see rooms transformed with just some paint and imagination. It's
very exciting and a major process." At one point, Bisesti hung scaffolding
high above the main foyer and across the second-floor walkway. He posed and
took photographs of five friends in his back yard to model many of the ceiling
mural scenes. "The foyer ceiling is 1,300 square feet," Bisesti says.
"It took three months to paint and another seven months for the walls. I
did it all myself. There were days I didn't think I would finish. Just to keep
my stamina up was a challenge." Bisesti's secret? He stuck on a pair of
Walkman headphones and cranked up the rock 'n' roll.
He figures he still has about three years of work ahead. "I completely
underestimated the size of the place and complexity of the work," Bisesti
says. "It's a landmark in my career, and I've been free-lancing for 27 years.
"Here in Las Vegas, everyone is moving so fast. Maybe this will make
people realize that there is something more in Las Vegas. This house is a
tribute to an era gone by." The Gohres have hosted seven charity
fund-raisers to date. They think it will take two more years -- finishing the
murals and finalizing the government foundation requirement -- before they're
ready to do charity events full time. "When people come to visit for a
cause, they won't be able to take Villa de Reve all in one visit," Bill Gohres
boasts. "You sprout your wings when you make it. I'm a multimillionaire,
and I did it all. So now what do I do? "It's very, very rare that someone
gives back to charity. But that's what we plan to do."
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©copyright 1997 and 1999 Las Vegas SUN, Inc.
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