The Ultra-Rich Living Richer: L.A.'s Giga-Mansions Spark Feuds Between Developers, Residents

Some residents cry foul over new mansions, some built as large as 95,000 sq. ft.

— -- Some high-end developers are giving up on the McMansions for the new “giga-mansions,” in the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Beverly Hills and Bel Air, but many residents are upset over the construction of these enormous, extravagant homes.

Hadid said there is a new generation of global billionaires driving this construction boom.

“There is a need for it,” Hadid said. “And there are customers asking for it… they want to have a splash, to have 200-300 people at a party, they need to have several bar areas, an outdoor area, something specific about the house that is different than anyone else.”

But to some, this giga-construction feels more like a giga-invasion. Just yards from entertainment attorney Joe Horacek’s front door, Hadid is developing a 30,000-square-foot home made of glass, steel and cement.

“I feel the privacy is completely and totally gone,” Horace said.

Horacek said for 15 years he lived a quiet life tucked away in the hills until Hadid bought the house above him, tore it down, and began excavating thousands of cubic yards of soil from the hillside. Once finished, the home will have two wine sellers, a movable bar and a wrap-around infinity pool.

“Personally I see the Starship Enterprise,” Horacek said. “I get very angry.”

Horacek is worried the mansion above him could crumble on top of his house.

“[My] biggest concern is a combination of the total invasion of privacy, the total disregard which I believe Mohamed Hadid has for the building code… and for the safety of living beneath it,” he said.

The city of Los Angeles investigated and issued a stop work order after building inspectors found that Hadid added several unapproved features to the home. Since then, Hadid went back to the approved building plans. His attorney Benjamin Reznik told “Nightline” that “it’s going to be simpler to remove those add-ons now and have the house comply with the original set of plans so that our client can finish the project.”

Hadid said the order came “because neighbors had complained to the city and they decided to look into [the permits].”

“We had our permits correctly,” he added.

Real estate expert David Kramer said this high-end real estate boom started with the sale of famed TV producer Aaron Spelling’s 56,000-square-foot home.

“People saw the reality of, we have buyers here,” he said.

Kramer sold the Spelling home for $85 million, and says it opened the flood gates for larger, luxurious homes.

Fred Rosen, who created Ticketmaster, recently started the Bel-Air Homeowners Alliance. He cringes at every large construction truck that drives through his neighborhood.Rosen says over one million cubic yards of dirt has been dug out of the hills around Bel-Air for new mansion construction and the City of Los Angeles is letting it happen.

"You have 1980s rules for 2015 technology,” Rosen said. “There’s always somebody with more, so that’s not the issue, we just want them building safely."

Maureen Levinson, a Bel-Air mother of two, is a member of the alliance who lives down the road from a 90,000-square-foot home under construction. She claims she often videotapes workers from around the neighborhood when cement trucks block streets or when their work starts earlier than the permits allow.

“There’s wildlife here, and that’s the way Bel Air used to be, very peaceful and quiet,” Levinson said. “[Now, the construction trucks] would come down in conveys, they were like a freight train.”

Levinson said she believes there won’t be peace and quiet again for “many, many, many years.”