Showing posts with label new yorks narrowest house. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new yorks narrowest house. Show all posts

Sunday, August 30, 2009

N.Y.'s Narrowest House For Sale



The skinniest house in New York City is on the market for a fat price

The 9-1/2-feet-wide townhouse was built in 1873, and is located at 75-1/2 Bedford St. in the West Village. It was put up for sale this week for an asking price of $2.75 million, or $2,777 a square foot.



This is how the house looked in 1932 ...

It's a unique space - one of a kind.

Built in 1873, the diminutive house is squeezed between 75 and 77 Bedford St. and has been home to a who's-who list of luminaries, including anthropologist Margaret Mead and Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent Millay.

Author Ann McGovern lived there briefly and the red-brick house inspired her to co-write the novel "Mr. Skinner's Skinny House." Actors Cary Grant and John Barrymore also once called the thin house home.

The residential interiors are a tight squeeze even by New York standards, measuring just 8 1/2 feet wide and 42 feet long on each of its three floors.

"Due to the narrowness of the house, I think you have to be very clever in how you decorate," Nicholas said.

The current owners bought the house for $1.6 million in 2000.

The broker's Web site describes it as a vertical suite, with a kitchen, dining room and parlor on the first floor, a double living room on the second floor and a top-floor master bedroom suite. A trapdoor in the kitchen floor leads to a finished basement.

Large windows in the front and back of the house and a garret skylight, plus a small backyard garden, give it an airiness, a sense of light and charm.


Your guide shows how wide the house is ...



The city's skinniest house, 75 1/2 Bedford St. in West Village, is listed for sale for $2.75M. The home's interior is slightly more than 8-feet wide.

Real estate records show the current owner, Steven Balsamo, purchased the house in 2000 for $1.6 million from Christopher Dubs, an architecture preservationist.

Dubs bought the house in 1994 for $270,000 and spent about $200,000 fixing it.

So if you act now this could be yours!!!!!!!!!!!!