Every year, many summer residents take the long weekend to come out to the East End and look for a house that they’ll call home for three months out of the year.
Originally asking $24,995,000 when it went on the market two years ago, one $5 million price cut was made in September of 2018. In total, $7,595,000 has come off this luxury Hamptons listing.
The property has been on and off the market for the past few years: In March of 2017, it was asking $16 million, but after several price cuts, it was most recently available for the final closing price of $9.95 million.
There is a 1,189-square-foot beach house on the property that was built back in 1890, but it will probably get torn down to make room for a bigger and more modern house.
Originally built in 2007, the home sold for $5.2M in 2014 and the current owner renovated the 6,100-square-foot home. Then last year, it came on the market for $15M.
Most recently asking $6,495,000 under Corcoran Group agent Susan Breitenbach, the 1985 contemporary house went into contract earlier this month and has sold.
After the recent re-listing with Douglas Elliman in September, it didn’t take long for the house to sell. The 2-acre property has sold for $16.15 million—nearly $10 million under the original asking price from 2015.
In 2005, the property was purchased for $970,000 and the current home was completed two years after. Since the property now includes a home, we’re going to start the guessing at $1.5 million.
For guests or additional living space, the pool house and the carriage house both offer a sitting room with a fireplace, a kitchenette, and two ensuite bedrooms each.
Designed by local architect Val Florio and designed by McGrath Builders, the Narrow Lane farm offers 10 buildings across the property, including a 7,300-square foot main house and a 2,600-square-foot renovated farmhouse from the 1920s.
Even after the $5 million price cut, the 10-acre property is still the most expensive single-family home available on Parsonage Lane, followed by the contemporary estate at the 289 address seeking $17.95 million.
For those who crave space, a modern barn with high ceilings will almost never make you feel claustrophobic. This sizable new construction has plenty of space both inside the home and outside on the property.
We’re particularly fond of the futuristic floating glass staircase, hardwood floors found throughout, and the massive eat-in kitchen with stainless steel appliances and clean white cabinetry.
We’re not totally surprised that the property was scooped up so quickly—one reader wrote into our tipline to tell us that the open house had what seemed like "100 people there."
Built in 1992, the traditional style home has eight bedrooms and seven and a half bathrooms between two levels and includes multiple entertaining areas, a double-height living room, a library, an open kitchen, and views of Wainscott Pond.
When it first went up for sale under Corcoran Group’s luxury real estate agent, Susan Breitenbach, it was listed for $23.95 million. After its first price cut, the home is now asking $21.5 million.
One enters the home through an 18-foot custom front door and goes straight into the living room, which has 20-foot ceilings and walls of glass that allow plenty of natural light indoors.
Located at 209 Hedges Lane, the property is adjacent to a nature reserve, ensuring a level of privacy. It’s located about a mile and a half away from the ocean at Gibson Beach, and about two miles from Wölffer Estate Vineyards.
This tiny Southampton home has multiple reclaimed wood details—including century-old barn doors, decorative wood from a Sag Harbor home, and hardwood floors from a sustainable pine farm.
After just four months on the sales market with no changes in price, the home found a buyer and went into contract. Last week, it sold and closed for $11.5 million.
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.
Standing 4,256 square feet in size, the pre-Revolutionary home was built all the way back in 1775 and it still belongs to Hedges’s ancestors, which means that it has stayed in the same family for 243 years.