SALIM Mehajer’s money woes just keep mounting with another of his companies placed into administration.

It’s another event in a bad few weeks for the former deputy mayor of Sydney’s Auburn Council who is under “virtual house arrest” and faces charges of breaching an AVO taken out by estranged wife Aysha Learmonth, committing electoral fraud and civil cases about his property developments.

Even his staircase — the centrepiece of his western Sydney home that once featured in a music video for US rapper Bow Wow — is causing him stress and he has been ordered to pay $1 million for construction and court costs relating to the lavish marble structure.

On Thursday, The Australian reported Downtown Project Developments, a firm wholly-owned by Mr Mehajer, had been placed in the hands of administrators Veritas Advisory.

The company owes millions in debts and had failed to make interest payments to lenders, according to documents filed with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC). Banking giant ANZ is one of the creditors.

In August, the 31-year-old property mogul lost an appeal to prevent two of his other companies from falling into administration. The companies reportedly owed creditors almost $100 million.

In 2015, he was banned by ASIC from being a company director for three years, a decision which saw other members of the Mehajer clan step into management positions.

However, Mr Mehajer seems to be taking the recent bad news in his stride. On his Instagram feed he has kept silent on his companies’ crumbling fortunes. He’s too busy planning for Christmas and hanging giant decorations outside and inside his western Sydney home.

But even at home he can’t escape his financial worries.

On the weekend, it was revealed he has been threatened with bankruptcy due to allegedly not paying off the full amount on an ostentatious floating staircase inside his $3 million home.

The marble marvel was made by Prime Marble and Granite, but Mr Mehajer did not pay the invoice of $596,178, the Sunday Telegraph reported.

The Greenacre company sued him and won, with NSW District Court Judge Judith Gibson in October ordering Mehajer to pay up to almost $1 million — the cost of the staircase and about $400,000 to cover Prime Marble’s court costs.

Mr Mehajer was served a bankruptcy notice on November 3 after failing to pay, and has until December 12 to pay up, according to the paper.

However, Mr Mehajer is understood to be fighting the move, with a Federal Circuit Court date for a hearing to have the notice set aside.

Mr Mehajer’s lavish house was the backdrop for his extravagant wedding to his now-estranged wife in August 2015. It was the so-called ‘wedding of the century’, which shut down a suburb and involved four helicopters, a jet, a private sea plane and a motorcade of luxury cars and motorbikes.