• San Francisco has a new contender for the city’s most expensive home: 950 Lombard was recently listed at $45 million.
  • If it sells at asking price, it’ll shatter the city’s current real-estate record of $38 million.
  • The compound features an infinity pool, six bedrooms, eight bathrooms, and a four-car garage.

San Francisco is notorious for its overpriced housing market – 60% of tech workers now say they can’t afford homes – and nowhere is that more evident than in a new $45 million listing in Russian Hill.

The home straddles two hillside lots and has six bedrooms and eight bathrooms, in addition to an array of terraces and wellness features, including an infinity pool, a wellness center, and a Japanese water-filtration system.

If it sells for its asking price, it will shatter the current real-estate record. According to Terri Tiffany, PR counsel to Pacific Union International, that record is held by 2712 Broadway on San Francisco’s Gold Coast, which was listed at $42 million and sold for $38 million.

Here’s a look inside the 950 Lombard compound:


The house is located at 950 Lombard St. in San Francisco's Russian Hill.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International, San Francisco Business Times


The compound sits on 9,500 square feet of property, which includes 100-year-old olive trees and an outdoor kitchen.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: San Francisco Business Times, The Wall Street Journal


And includes a four-car garage, which is entered through a tunnel on the side of the hill.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


The property takes up two lots and the home itself is a modern mix of concrete structures and bright, open spaces.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Curbed San Francisco


The home has four levels, all of which are connected by a glass elevator ...

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


... that reaches from the two-story underground art gallery ...

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International, Curbed San Francisco


... to the three ensuite top-level bedrooms, including a master bedroom.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


The master bedroom opens up to a deck with sweeping views of the city.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


The middle two floors of the home feature plenty of open living spaces, as well as two more ensuite guest bedrooms ...

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


... two separate bars ...

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


... and a formal dining room.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


In addition to offering plenty of seating ...

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


... the kitchen also opens right up into the grounds.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


The complex also features an 850-square-foot wellness center, including a massage table ...

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Curbed San Francisco


... and a hot tub.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

A 40-foot infinity pool is the finishing touch to one of the home's many patios.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: SF Gate


The patio area offers yet another dining area, replete with two chandeliers and more views across the bay.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Val Steele, listing agent with Pacific Union International in San Francisco, described the complex as offering the "rare opportunity for a person to own their own 'park' in San Francisco."

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


"There has never been an offering of this kind in the city and there may never be one of this caliber again," Steele added.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: Pacific Union International


The home is listed for a whopping $45 million.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: The Wall Street Journal


If it sells at asking price, 950 Lombard will become the most expensive home ever sold in San Francisco, displacing the current record-holder, which sold for $38 million in 2017.

Foto: sourceCourtesy of Jacob Elliott

Source: The Wall Street Journal