The current house was built in 1949, spans 2,200 square feet in size, and has three bedrooms and three bathrooms. Inside, the cottage hosts an open floorplan, a large bay window in the living room, water views throughout, and a wood-burning fireplace.
Sited in an extremely private location where one can’t hear any traffic, the property includes a 7,000-square-foot home with five bedrooms and five bathrooms, a 2-acre pond, meadows, trails, two natural 100-foot jetties, and 400 feet of direct ocean frontage.
Designed by architect James Biber in 2006, the property has been honored by the American Institute of Architects and the American Architecture Awards. Each property has about 2 acres of land, totaling 4.1 acres and offering 300 feet of direct ocean frontage.
Leslie Danzis—a jewelry designer who launched her first collection at 20 years old and whose lines have been in stores like Saks Fifth Avenue, Bergdorf Goodman, and Nordstrom—has listed her Quogue home for $1,895,000.
The property was purchased in 1992 by frame dealer Eli Wilner and his wife for just $630,000. However, at the time, there were absolutely no permits in place and buying the property without building permits was a risk.
The Old Montauk Highway address is still owned by Drexler (in the name of Drexler 2008 Family Trust on public record), which he bought in 2010 for $7 million.
The 1-acre property is perched on top of a hill, allowing ocean views from nearly every room in the house and from the exterior terraces—which comprise nearly 4,000 square feet of outdoor living space.
Located at 100 Pantigo Place, the three-unit, 10,856-square-foot building is sited on 1.5 acres of land, has 45 parking spaces, and is zoned with neighborhood business restrictions.
Originally built in 1796 and then later expanded in the 1800s, this classic Colonial style home in Quogue has recently come on the market—so this week, we’re having readers guess its asking price.
Just four years ago in 2014, Johansson bought a quiet Amagansett home on Shipwreck Drive for $2.2 million. The Gurney’s condo that her and Jost toured is the most expensive one at the 26-unit complex currently on the market, listed for around $8 million.
In 2,970 square feet, there are four bedrooms, three full bathrooms, and two half-bathrooms. Interiors include stone floors, multiple fireplaces, sliding glass doors that lead outside, and ocean views.
The traffic light change hasn’t been approved by the Department of Transportation quite yet, but if it does go into effect, it will likely be a blinking light from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. through the month of July, which is the Hamptons’s rush hour.
The home is fully equipped with a Sonos sound system and stainless steel appliances in the kitchen, but still maintains its historic integrity with hardwood floors, soaring beamed ceilings, and barn doors throughout.
Originally built in the 1887 and renovated by Edward P. Morse in 1919, Villa Maria once served as a convent, has had many notable residents, and is considered a Long Island landmark.
This is the second home that Frankel now owns on the East End, after having purchased a different Bridgehampton home on Lumber Lane just a few years ago.
Last year it was asking $8.75 million. The home just relisted under Corcoran Group Real Estate agents Pam Jackson and Tim Davis for a bit less than it was asking before, now priced at $7.9 million.
Southampton, East Hampton, Shelter Island, and Brookhaven Towns have all been approved to equally share a $500,000 sum of money used to repair local roads.
The true downside is that it’s on the highway. But for less than $1 million in Amagansett and being just a five-minute walk from the beach, that’s not too bad.