Wayne Newton

Casa de Shenandoah, a 36-acre ranch outside Las Vegas once owned by performer Wayne Newton, is back on the market for $30 million, down from $70 million. Newton lived at the ranch since the 1960s. The property was purchased in 2010 by CSD LLC to develop a Wayne Newton museum. While the project failed, the Newton family owned 20 percent of CSD, which was not enough to keep the home, Redfin reports.
Wayne Newton

The main house has three bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms, but there are seven additional homes on the property.
Wayne Newton

The property has a jumbo jet terminal that allows the plane to pull up next to the home. There is also a "car museum," with seven double doors.
Wayne Newton

The home has a zoo and an equestrian pool. Newton previously kept Arabian horses, and the museum had plans for sloths, wallabies, penguins, lemurs and more than 100 birds. Oregon's Zoological Wildlife Conservation Center and Sloth Captive Husbandry Research Center of Rainier purchased about 280 animals from the intended museum for about $27,300.
Wayne Newton

Part of the zoo is shown.
Wayne Newton

The home has 37 stables and acres of corrals.
Wayne Newton

The last owner invested more than $15 to $20 million in improvements, the listing states.
Wayne Newton

The "car museum" with seven double doors is shown.
Wayne Newton

The home has a green room, gaming room and tennis court.