Mark Wahlberg’s new $37 million mansion skyrocketed in value. Here’s what fueled the megahome’s extraordinary rise


Actor-entrepreneur Mark Wahlberg paid $37 million for a fully furnished mansion in Delray Beach, Florida, last month. The deal piqued interest and prompted coverage from TMZ to Architectural Digest, with most of the focus on the celebrity buyer.

But aside from the name recognition, the home’s skyrocketing price over the past five years also makes it stand out.

The actor’s transaction in October marks the home’s fourth sale in that same time period, and a dramatic 118% price increase from its sale in January 2020 when the fully furnished mansion traded for $17 million.

The grand entrance to the almost 17,800 sq ft estate known as Palazzo di Lago.

Daniel Petroni

The estate, located at 9200 Rockybrook Way, saw a rise in value that outpaced not just the local market, but also many of the top luxury markets in America.

In Delray Beach, the average sale price for a single-family luxury home, represented by the top 10% of closed sales, rose by just over 78%; Los Angeles was up 30%; the Hamptons rose 44%; and Manhattan increased just 4.5% according to Elliman Report data from the first quarter of 2020 to the third quarter of 2025.

The home’s steep rise in value even outperformed the S&P 500, which was up about 100% over the same time period.

One mansion, four sales

Remarkably, the residence has traded hands four times since 2020. Just one real estate broker represented the listing in all four transactions, making the soaring value of the seven-bedroom, 10-bath mansion even more unique.

Back in 2020, Douglas Elliman real estate broker Senada Adzem represented the original owners of 9200 Rockybrook, when the house was known as the Sundara estate. Three years later, Adzem represented the mansion’s second owners who listed the home again, when it sold for $26 million, up 53% in just three years.

A little over a year after buying the place, public records show a trust connected to William Cafaro, the co-president of a retail property development company in Niles, Ohio, and the home’s third resident decided to sell. Adzem was once again the listing agent.

This transaction was more unusual. Cafaro sold the home as part of a larger $50.5 million deal to purchase a Ferrari-inspired mansion less than half mile up the road in Stone Creek Ranch. Casa Maranello, as it’s known, was being sold by local developer Aldo Stark, of Prestige Design Homes, with Adzem as the listing agent.

Cafaro paid for the new home with $24.5 million in cash, plus the deed to 9200 Rockybrook Way, which was valued in the deal at the same price he’d paid for it: $26 million. 

When that sale closed in January 2025, Stark became the fourth owner of the mansion and he immediately started a dramatic multimillion-dollar renovation of the almost 17,800-square-foot megahome. He scrapped the old Sundara name and clad the home’s old sheet-rocked walls in polished rare stones and bold high-gloss Guyana wood from Brazil.

A side-by-side before and after of the foyer’s grand staircase. Stark added a 30-ft tall vegetation wall and finished the adjacent walls in high-gloss Brazilian wood.

He installed vibrant green vegetation above a grand stairway and into the ceilings.

Stark completely reimagined everything from the kitchen to the clubroom and filled the residence with bespoke furniture.

The kitchen before.

Daniel Petroni

The kitchen after. The new-look includes counters clad in Orobico Grigio marble, floor-to-ceiling walnut cabinetry, vegetation accents in the ceiling and 30 tear-drop shaped light fixtures.

And about two moths after closing, the megahome was listed for sale for a fourth time.  

Reemerging with a new look, new name and a new price tag, one of the few things to remain the same was that Adzem was once again the listing agent.  

The lounge bar before.

Daniel Petroni

The lounge bar after.

Daniel Petroni

The home, now called Palazzo di Lago, debuted with an ambitious $45 million asking price, $19 million more than what Stark paid for it two months earlier and 165% more than what it sold for in 2020.

By October Adzem closed the fourth deal and delivered Palazzo di Lago to its fifth owner, who the buyer’s broker, Michael Costello of Compass, confirmed to CNBC was Mark Wahlberg.

One of the mansion’s two home offices clad in great wave marble.

Daniel Petroni

According to Florida’s Multiple Listing Service, the fully furnished mansion closed at $37 million, $11 million more than what Stark bought it for seven months earlier, and up 118% from its 2020 sale. 

And Adzem pulled off an uncommon feat in real estate, selling the same house four times in five years in transactions totaling $106 million.

Primary bedroom

Daniel Petroni

Five owners across five years seems like an unusually high turnover rate, but Adzem has a simple explanation.

“People’s circumstances change and they have different chapters in their life. So we were privileged to be able to guide this home through different evolutions and different owners and be able to add value to it,” Adzem said.

According to Adzem, the mansion’s remarkable appreciation was fueled by a multitude of factors. Here are the top five:

1. The pandemic

2. The ‘micro-market’

3. The power of VIP neighbors

4. Wealth migration

5. The multimillion-dollar renovation



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