Monaco is one of the wealthiest nations in the world: It has thehighest per capita GDP in the world andone-third of its residents are millionaires.
The country, which issmaller than New York City's Central Park, hosts glamorous events each year, such as the Monaco Yacht Show and the Monaco Grand Prix.
And it was once home to the world's most expensive street. In 2008, The Wealth Bulletin ranked Avenue Princesse Grace the most expensive street in the world, with an average price of $17,750 per square foot, beating out Severn Road in Hong Kong and Fifth Avenue in New York City.
The roughly 1.25-mile waterfront street was named after American actressGrace Kelly, who married Prince Rainier III of Monaco in 1956.
But today, while it's still a prestigious area, Avenue Princesse Grace is no longer one of the world's priciest streets — or even one of Monaco's. Its average price is about a third of what it was in 2008, and its housing stock is now mainly made up of rentals, according to local real-estate experts.
On a recent trip to Monaco, I walked down Avenue Princesse Grace. Here's what it looked like.
Of Monaco's 38,300 residents, roughlyone-third are millionaires, and it currently hasthe highest per capita GDP in the world.
Princess Grace was beloved by the people of Monaco, abandoning her film career to focus on charitable work untilshe died in a car accident in 1982.
Today, her name can be seen throughout the city-state, from the Princess Grace Hospital Centre to the Princess Grace penthouse suite at Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo.
And she's even the namesake of what was once the priciest street in Monaco — and the world.
That surpassed Severn Road in Hong Kong, where the average price was $11,200 per square foot, and Fifth Avenue in New York City, where it was $7,500 per square foot.
But today, while it's still a prestigious area, Avenue Princesse Grace is no longer amongthe world's top 10 priciest streets, which include 57th Street in New York City and Mount Nicholson Road in Hong Kong, according to global real-estate consultancy firm Knight Frank.
In fact, it's no longer even the most expensive street in Monaco, according to local real-estate agents.
The street had only five sales closed in 2018 with an average sale price of $6,212 per square foot — about a third of what it was in 2008, according to Laurent Locchi ofHammer Draff Great Properties, an affiliate of Christie's International Real Estate.
"Although the Avenue Princesse Grace remains as one of the most expensive and prestigious waterfront locations, the properties located in the Monte Carlo's Golden Square (right next to the casino) have the highest price tag per square meter and now are the most prestigious ones in Monaco," Derrick Tryniecki, managing director of MonacoEstate.com, told Business Insider.
And most of the housing stock on Grace Kelly's namesake street is now made up of rentals, according to Tryniecki and local real-estate agents.
It even extends into neighboring France.
I found Monaco to be mostly full ofoutdated, ugly architecture — and Avenue Princesse Grace was no exception.
According to real-estate consultancy firm Knight Frank, "much of Monaco was built between the 1950s and 1970s, and, in many cases, has seen little modernization since."
It's free andopen to the public.
At times, I spotted some beautiful historical buildings, but they were mostly hidden away behind newer high-rises.
The luxury residential tower, completed in 2015, is thetallest building in Monaco at 558 feet.
It was quite small, and instead of sand, there were small pebbles, which looked and felt more or less like gravel.
While I know that other French Riviera cities, like Nice, France, also have rocky beaches, Monaco's beach just didn't live up to the city-state's glamorous reputation.
As I looked out over Larvotto Beach, I saw multiple cranes and other signs of construction along the waterfront.
A project calledTestiminio II, developed by Groupe Marzocco, will revamp parts of Monaco's waterfront, including part of Avenue Princesse Grace, with a mix of apartments, parking, a kindergarten, and a school.
This construction project will "totally redo the entire seafront and beaches of Monaco" in the next two years, which could increase the area's desirability and prices, according to Locchi.
It may have fallen out of favor for a time, but Avenue Princesse Grace "will certainly still be in the headlines for the next decade," Locchi said.
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