A 5.5-carat triangular-cut diamond billed as the largest fancy vivid blue-green diamond known to exist has sold for more than 13.5 million Swiss francs (NZ$29.1 million), Christie’s said, calling it a record price for a stone of its kind sold at auction.

The Ocean Dream, the standout offer at the auction house’s Geneva sale of jewellery, was found in Central Africa in the 1990s. The price easily topped the presale estimate to fetch 7-10 million francs (around NZ$15-21.5 million).

Rahul Kadakia, president of Christie’s Asia Pacific, said an unspecified private client was the buyer, and the stone took about 20 minutes to sell — an indication of high interest.

The price was more than double the roughly US$8.5 million (NZ$14.3 million) that the gem, which was featured among rare coloured diamonds at the Smithsonian Splendour of Diamonds Exhibition in 2003, sold for at Christie’s in 2014.

“A stellar result worthy of the world’s rarest blue-green diamond,” Tobias Kormind, managing director of online jeweller 77 Diamonds, said in a statement.

On Wednesday, a 6-carat fancy vivid blue diamond at a Geneva auction at Sotheby’s didn’t sell.

Sotheby's Deputy Chairman, Middle East & Head of Sotheby's UAE, Katia Noun Boueiz wears the Mediterranean Blue diamond during its worldwide debut in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.

The auction house said the rare stone unearthed from South Africa’s famed Cullinan mine had come in with a presale estimate of 7.2 million to 9.6 million francs (NZ$17.5 million to $20.7 million).

“Although the diamond didn’t find a buyer during the auction, we are now in conversations with several interested parties and are confident that it will find a new home soon,” Sotheby’s said in a statement.

Both houses say collectors are increasingly drawn to rare, coloured diamonds, which make up only a fraction of all the diamonds mined around the world.