
Terry and Heather Dubrow just quietly went vertical in a big way, shelling out $13.75 million on Thursday for a Century City penthouse directly beneath the Roberto Cavalli-designed aerie they already own at The Century. The new spread clocks in at roughly 5,600 square feet, and when paired with their upper-floor home, the combined footprint grows to about 10,854 square feet, putting the duo in contention for one of the tower’s largest single-residence setups.
According to the New York Post, the lower penthouse had been listed at $15.99 million before the deal closed. Agents Charlie Edgar and Cassandra Petersen Harris represented the buyers, while Bachir Oueida handled the listing for the seller. Oueida told the Post that "discerning high-profile buyers are drawn to the Century for its exclusivity, privacy and convenience," and the outlet pegs the deal as the priciest condo sale in Century City so far this year.
How This Fits the Dubrows' Portfolio
The couple already made a splash at The Century in 2022, when they bought a Roberto Cavalli furnished penthouse for about $14 million, a move widely reported at the time and seen as a signal of their deeper shift into Los Angeles high-rise living. Entertainment Tonight noted that purchase as part of a pattern in which the pair split their time between their L.A. pied-à-terre and larger homes in Orange County and Beverly Hills.
Century City Remains a Celebrity Address
The Century is no stranger to headline-making closings and full-floor trades that lure in celebrity and ultra-wealthy buyers. A $21.6 million full-floor sale in 2021, reported by the Los Angeles Times, underscored why some owners stitch adjacent units together to create homes that feel close to single-family scale in a high-rise tower.
What the Dubrows plan to do with their newly doubled-up space is still an open question. The New York Post notes there was no immediate public comment about any renovation plans or a formal combination of the two units. For neighbors and local market watchers, though, the move fits a familiar Los Angeles script, with high-net-worth buyers paying top dollar to assemble larger, ultra-private homes inside amenity-heavy Westside towers.









