logo
Won't you be my neighbour? No thanks, Elon Musk

Won't you be my neighbour? No thanks, Elon Musk

The Age15-05-2025

Unless the city council disagrees with that decision, Musk faces the prospect of tearing down the fence and gate or changing them to comply with the town's rules.
Loading
Musk did not return requests for comment. A house manager linked to the property declined to comment.
Musk's history in Texas is relatively recent. The tech mogul, who oversees six companies, moved most of his business operations to the state from California starting about 2021. He has built factories for his electric vehicle company, Tesla, his rocket company, SpaceX, and his tunnelling venture, the Boring Co., around Austin and neighbouring Bastrop.
Musk also moved himself to Austin. He initially wanted to build houses for himself and his children (he has at least 13) on hundreds of acres that he bought there. After the plan fell through, he looked at other properties.
In 2022, Musk bought the West Lake Hills home through a limited liability company, which was named after the street where the property sits. The house is in the middle of a residential neighbourhood at the bottom of about 8000 square metres of sloping land off a narrow public road, making security challenging.
'Castles are supposed to be built on hills, right?' said Anne Yeakel, a long-time West Lake Hills resident who lives around the corner. 'These were sophisticated buyers, and if security was the prime directive, this was not the house for it.'
Musk and his staff did not introduce themselves to the neighbours. Few residents have seen him there. But word travelled fast in the community of 3400, and soon everyone knew he had moved in.
'It's common knowledge here,' Yeakel said.
The mansion was one of three that Musk bought in the area over the past three years to create a compound for his children and their mothers. At one point, Claire Boucher, known as the musician Grimes, lived with Musk and their three children in the house. Shivon Zilis, a brain technology executive who has four children with Musk, lives about a 10-minute walk away. Musk also bought a Tuscan-style mansion about a year ago.
Neighbours soon grew frustrated with the constant hubbub at the house. They saw people coming and going carrying gun holsters, as the security team ballooned along with Musk's safety concerns. Though Texas has permissive gun laws, the activity stood out.
'I call that place Fort Knox,' said Hemmer, a retired real estate agent who lives across the street and is president of the neighbourhood home owners' association.
The house was quieter on days when Musk was not in town, neighbours said, especially in recent months, when he lived mostly in Washington to advise President Donald Trump. Now residents are bracing for Musk's return, after he said he would spend less time in the capital.
Some neighbours became particularly annoyed at the hulking fence in front of the mansion, as well as the giant metal gate at the other end of the property, which appears to serve as an employee entrance.
Loading
Hemmer, who has long owned a Tesla, grew so frustrated with his neighbour that he began flying a drone over the house to check for city violations, and he keeps a video camera trained on the property around the clock. Last year, he complained to West Lake Hills officials about Musk's fence, the traffic and how he thought the owner was operating a security business from the property.
Musk's security team also contacted the West Lake Hills Police Department about Hemmer, according to city records. One security official accused Hemmer last year of standing naked in the street, according to the records.
Hemmer denied that he was naked and said he was on his property wearing black underwear. On another night, he said, he was walking his dog fully clothed and stopped when he suddenly needed to urinate – which Musk's camera captured.
'The cameras got me,' Hemmer said. 'It's scary they have guys sitting and watching me pee.'
After repeated remonstrances from Hemmer, West Lake Hills officials found that Musk had violated city ordinances with the fence and the gate. Last month, the Zoning and Planning Commission debated whether to grant him variances for the projects.
Before the meeting, Tisha Ritta, a permit expert working for Musk's limited liability company, wrote a letter to the planning commission asking for relief from the city rules.
'As a high-profile public official, the property's resident faces ongoing security threats, making proactive safety measures imperative,' she wrote, according to a copy of the letter. Ritta did not respond to requests for comment.
Loading
Hemmer and other residents wrote their own letter to the planning commission, admonishing their neighbour for facilitating 'bad behaviour on our quiet little cul-de-sac'.
For a time, Musk appeared poised to win the neighbourhood battle. Planning and zoning officials recommended that his property be granted 'hardship variances', which would allow him to keep the fence and other projects with only small changes to the property, according to city documents.
But at the planning meeting, the commissioners refused Musk the variances. When they questioned Ritta, she blamed a former house manager for failing to get permits for the construction.
'I just met the property owner last year, and unfortunately they were under the guidance of the property manager,' she said, according to a recording of the meeting.
Hemmer also spoke up at the meeting to say he doubted the homeowner had been misguided.
'If you follow him at all in the news, he's always guilty of building stuff and then asking for permission later,' he said.
One commissioner, who was not identified in the recording, said she could not believe West Lake Hills staff had recommended that the home owner receive any exceptions.
'I'm astounded the staff is putting forth any kind of suggestions we bend based on who is asking,' she said.
The planning commission's decision does not end the process. At the upcoming West Lake Hills City Council meeting, members must decide whether to stick with the commissioners' recommendation on Musk's mansion.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Car giant's space fight with Musk
Car giant's space fight with Musk

News.com.au

time3 days ago

  • News.com.au

Car giant's space fight with Musk

One of the world's biggest car makers has joined Elon Musk in the race to the stars. Honda has officially entered the space race alongside Musk's Space X, after Japan's second largest carmaker announced it had successfully launched a 'resusable rocket prototype'. In the same week, a Space X rocket dramatically blew up while preparing to take flight, Honda showed it was serious about its space exploration ambitions, first mentioned four years ago. Honda R&D, which is a subsidiary of Honda Motor Co. said it 'conducted a launch and landing test of an experimental reusable rocket developed independently by Honda'. The rocket, which was 6.3m long, 85cm in diameter and weighed 1312kg, reached an altitude of 271.4m and landed within 37cm of the target touchdown point after a flight of 57s. According to Honda R&D, the purpose of the test, conducted at a Honda facility in Taiki Town on Hokkaido, the northern most of Japan's main islands, was the 'establishment of key technologies necessary for a reusable rocket'. 'This test marked the first launch and landing test conducted by Honda with an aim to demonstrate key technologies essential for rocket reusability, such as flight stability during ascent and descent, as well as landing capability,' Honda said in a statement. 'Through this successful test, Honda achieved its intended rocket behaviours for the launch and landing, while obtaining data during the ascent and descent.' Honda announced in 2021 that it was 'pursuing research and development in the field of space technologies' with the thought that its discoveries could also be used in Honda vehicles. That includes in regard to automated driving systems and sustainable transportation. Honda is aiming at a suborbital launch by 2029. 'We are pleased that Honda has made another step forward in our research on reusable rockets with this successful completion of a launch and landing test,' Global CEO of Honda Toshihiro Mibe said. 'We believe that rocket research is a meaningful endeavour that leverages Honda's technological strengths. 'Honda will continue to take on new challenges—not only to offer our customers various services and value through our products, while addressing environmental and safety issues, but also to continue creating new value which will make people's time and place more enjoyable.'

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov reveals plans to pass down multi-billion-dollar fortune to 100-plus kids
Telegram CEO Pavel Durov reveals plans to pass down multi-billion-dollar fortune to 100-plus kids

West Australian

time3 days ago

  • West Australian

Telegram CEO Pavel Durov reveals plans to pass down multi-billion-dollar fortune to 100-plus kids

Pavel Durov, the founder and CEO of messaging app Telegram has revealed who will inherit his multi-billion-dollar fortune. Mr Durov recently drafted his will, making provision for over 100 children — but they won't get a cent for another 30 years, he revealed in an interview with French magazine Le Point . The app founder is worth $13.9 billion (AUD$21.4b), according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. 'I want them to live like normal people, to build themselves up alone, to learn to trust themselves, to be able to create, not to be dependent on a bank account,' he told the publication. Mr Durov, 40, added that he has six children who were conceived naturally with three different partners, along with at least another 100 children he has fathered through sperm donations. 'The clinic, where I started donating sperm 15 years ago to help a friend, told me that more than 100 babies had been conceived this way in 12 countries,' he said. Given his current net worth and an estimated 106 children, each child would stand to inherit approximately $131 million. 'I want to specify that I make no difference between my children: there are those who were conceived naturally and those who come from my sperm donations,' he told the publication. 'They are all my children and will all have the same rights! I don't want them to tear each other apart after my death.' Mr Durov is not the only tech billionaire to have fathered a surprising number of children. Tesla founder and billionaire, Elon Musk, is also an enthusiastic advocate of spreading his genes, welcoming 14 children with four different women since 2002. Over the years, he has been vocal about his desire to have more children to increase the birth rate. In 2021, he claimed that there are 'not enough people' in the world, expressing concern for civilisation if people don't have large families. 'I think one of the biggest risks to civilisation is the low birth rate,' the Tesla CEO said at an event hosted by the Wall Street Journal. 'Please look at the numbers. If people don't have more children, civilisation is going to crumble, mark my words.' It is not yet known how Musk will divide his fortune.

Billionaire with 100 kids reveals how he'll divvy up fortune
Billionaire with 100 kids reveals how he'll divvy up fortune

Perth Now

time3 days ago

  • Perth Now

Billionaire with 100 kids reveals how he'll divvy up fortune

Pavel Durov, the founder and CEO of messaging app Telegram has revealed who will inherit his multi-billion-dollar fortune. Mr Durov recently drafted his will, making provision for over 100 children — but they won't get a cent for another 30 years, he revealed in an interview with French magazine Le Point. The app founder is worth $13.9 billion (AUD$21.4b), according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. 'I want them to live like normal people, to build themselves up alone, to learn to trust themselves, to be able to create, not to be dependent on a bank account,' he told the publication. Mr Durov, 40, added that he has six children who were conceived naturally with three different partners, along with at least another 100 children he has fathered through sperm donations. 'The clinic, where I started donating sperm 15 years ago to help a friend, told me that more than 100 babies had been conceived this way in 12 countries,' he said. Given his current net worth and an estimated 106 children, each child would stand to inherit approximately $131 million. 'I want to specify that I make no difference between my children: there are those who were conceived naturally and those who come from my sperm donations,' he told the publication. 'They are all my children and will all have the same rights! I don't want them to tear each other apart after my death.' Mr Durov is not the only tech billionaire to have fathered a surprising number of children. Tesla founder and billionaire, Elon Musk, is also an enthusiastic advocate of spreading his genes, welcoming 14 children with four different women since 2002. Elon Musk has 14 children with four different women. Credit: Al Drago / Bloomberg Over the years, he has been vocal about his desire to have more children to increase the birth rate. In 2021, he claimed that there are 'not enough people' in the world, expressing concern for civilisation if people don't have large families. 'I think one of the biggest risks to civilisation is the low birth rate,' the Tesla CEO said at an event hosted by the Wall Street Journal. 'Please look at the numbers. If people don't have more children, civilisation is going to crumble, mark my words.' It is not yet known how Musk will divide his fortune.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store