Shocking images of Cara Delevingne's mansion reduced to rubble

Actress Cara Delevingne is still recovering from the big scare she got last week.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
25 March 2024 Monday 17:03
9 Reads
Shocking images of Cara Delevingne's mansion reduced to rubble

Actress Cara Delevingne is still recovering from the big scare she got last week. Early last Friday, a raging fire destroyed the mansion that the model owns in Los Angeles and reduced everything she had on the property to ashes.

The protagonist of Suicide Squad or Paper Towns was not in the house located in Studio City, since she is temporarily living in London because she plays the character of Sally Bowles in the play Cabaret. Thanks to the work of firefighters, the actress's pets were rescued without apparent damage.

As reported in a statement by the Los Angeles Fire Department, a woman who was in the house had to be treated by medical services, as well as one of their workers (who was trying to put out the fire), who was taken to the hospital.

The fire started in a room at the back of the mansion of more than 600 square meters. In a matter of minutes, the flames devastated the house, collapsing its roof and destroying everything in its path. According to the statement cited above, 94 troops were sent to the property and it took them more than two hours to enter and control the fire.

The result of the housing after the catastrophe has been terrible. Photographs of the house reduced to ashes and rubble have spread quickly on social media and thousands of Delevinge's fans have commented on them with horror, curiosity and pity.

Roofs on the ground, charred personal belongings, completely broken windows... the actress has been very lucky that there have been no human and/or animal losses, but she has been left overnight without her most precious belongings.

The artist from the United States bought the 750-square-meter mansion in 2019 for $7 million. Last year she, proud of her home, presented it to the world in a video on the Architectural Digest channel.

Shocked by everything she had experienced in the last few hours and not really knowing what to do or how to act, the interpreter uploaded a post to her Instagram account to thank the firefighters and all the workers who collaborated in extinguishing the fire for their work. fire.

"Life can change in an instant," he reflected on the same social network to make his followers aware that each moment must be valued as if it were the last, since you never know what can happen.