Jean-Baptiste Pastor

Jean-Baptiste Pastor was an Italian-born Monegasque businessman and property developer.

Jean-Baptiste Pastor
Born
Giovanni Battista Pastor

Pigna, Italy
NationalityMonegasque
OccupationCEO and owner,
J.B. Pastor & Fils
ChildrenGildo Pastor
RelativesMichel Pastor (grandson)
Hélène Pastor (granddaughter)
Victor Pastor (grandson)
Philippe Pastor (great-grandson)

Early life

Jean-Baptiste Pastor was born Giovanni Battista Pastor in Buggio, Italy, just across the border from France. He was orphaned at an early age, and was already working as a miner by the age of 13,[1] or as a stonemason, according to another source.[2]

Career

He emigrated to Monte Carlo as a young man in 1880,[1] to seek work on the construction of the Saint-Charles Church.[2][3]

His career as a public works contractor was a success. Pastor eventually started his own company, – J.B. Pastor & Fils – in 1920,[4] and won the contracts to build Monaco's water supply system.[1] In 1936, Prince Louis II of Monaco awarded Pastor and his company J.B. Pastor & Fils, the commission to build the country's first football stadium.[2] The Stade Louis II was finished in 1939 and had a capacity of 12,000.

With his newfound wealth, Pastor bought seafront land at low prices after World War II, particularly in the Larvotto district, when there was still no development east of the casino. With the post-war tourism slump, Prince Rainier resolved to diversify from gambling and turned Monaco into a tax haven. In subsequent decades, Pastor's son Gildo was able to build apartment blocks, after getting planning permission to develop in 1966 on this now very valuable land, retaining ownership, and avoiding long leases to maximise rental income.[1][2][4]

When his granddaughter, Hélène Pastor was shot dead in 2014, it was reported that the Pastors were Monaco's "second dynasty", behind the ruling Grimaldi family, with an estimated holding of 15 percent of Monaco's housing stock, valued at approximately 20 billion.[2]

Personal life

Pastor was married and lived in Monaco. His son was Gildo Pastor.[2]

gollark: No. The limit is the value it approaches as you increase x to get closer to infinity.
gollark: Dubious.
gollark: means "you can pick a sufficiently large value of x such that it will get as close as you want to 0".
gollark: Well, if it didn't, it wouldn't be there.
gollark: (which I think is right, but I don't really limits so I can't prove it whatsoever)

References

  1. "Obituaries: Hélène Pastor". The Times. 3 June 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  2. "Hélène Pastor- obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 22 May 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  3. Philippe Bidalon, Roger-Louis Bianchini, Aline Cochard, Laetizia Dannery, Lea Delpont, Jennifer Schwarz, Pauline Sommelet, Vie économique, L'Express, December 11, 2003
  4. Metcalf, Tom (17 October 2014). "Monaco Murders Reveal Six Hidden Real Estate Billionaires". Bloomberg. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
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