
Designed by the “Frank Lloyd Wright of adobe,” this equestrian ranch near Tule Springs has sold for $11.75 million.
Located at 7330 N. Rainbow Blvd., this mansion in Gilcrease in northwest Las Vegas was described as an “equestrian oasis,” by listing and buyers agent Ivan Sher. It was designed by architect Bill Tull, known for his adobe homes in Arizona and for designing country music star George Strait’s Texas home.
Sher said the designer called it one of his “finest properties.”
According to Sher, “good” equestrian homes are hard to come by, but this property has it all.
“Most equestrian homes, the home is nothing. It’s all about the riding and the stables,” said Sher. “This happens to have both. It has a very unique architectural home and one-of-a-kind property.”
The white-washed adobe property, which was built in 1993, sold on May 21.
“It just feels out of sorts because it’s in Vegas,” said Sher. “It’s nestled in this greenery with horses and wildlife, and they have rabbits and owls and squirrels and quail and all sorts of things in the area.”
The property includes three homes, with a combined 11,200 square feet, sitting on around 10 acres, according to the property listing. The main house itself is 8,611 square feet, with four bedrooms, complete with kiva fireplaces and freeform stone flooring. Outside of the main home is two detached casitas, with private bedroom en suites and kitchenettes.
The previous owner, according to Sher, did a “total facelift” on the home.
The whole property is fit for equine royalty, including an Olympic-size covered and lit arena, 16-stall barn with runs, seven pastures, two hot walkers and round pen. Additionally, the home has a well and includes 45 acre feet of golden water rights, which Sher called “almost non-revocable.”
The land is also bustling with other luxury amenities like adobe architecture, pool, spa, sauna, walking trails, clay tennis courts and a 40,000 bottle wine/whiskey “bunker”.
“It feels current and new and not in any way older,” said Sher of the home. “It’s just this slice out of whatever equestrian villages are in Southern California, but in Vegas.”
Contact Emerson Drewes at edrewes@reviewjournal.com. Follow @EmersonDrewes on X.