$24,500,000
$29,500,000
16.9%For more information regarding the value of a property, please contact us for a free consultation.
10 Beds
14 Baths
23,450 SqFt
SOLD DATE : 12/29/2021
Key Details
Sold Price $24,500,000
Property Type House
Sub Type Townhouse
Listing Status Sold
Purchase Type For Sale
Square Footage 23,450 sqft
Price per Sqft $1,044
Subdivision Lenox Hill
MLS Listing ID PRCH-3418339
Sold Date 12/29/21
Bedrooms 10
Full Baths 10
Half Baths 7
HOA Y/N Yes
Year Built 1905
Annual Tax Amount $277,740
Property Description
Sited on a lot 45 feet wide by 100 feet deep, and built 39 feet wide by 93 feet deep, this is a rare opportunity for the first time in 43 years to restore this grand property back to one of New York's great houses, which as noted in “Great Houses of New York, 1880-1940”, Volume II, this most extraordinary mega mansion had an original drawing room, library, and dining room spanning the full 39' width of the house. The property may also be developed into condominiums, a co-op, or retained as an investment rental property. This immense, Gilded Age Beaux Arts double width mansion with an interior of 23,450 sq. ft., is open on four sides, and soars past seven levels with ceiling heights of 16' to a roof height of 79' above the sidewalk, ending in a seamed copper roof with three copper sheathed dormers. Erected in 1906 by the architectural firm of Heins & La Farge for the widow of the banker, George T. Bliss, the exterior is reminiscent of a theatrical stage set, with limestone base, buff brick above, and four mighty Ionic columns set on oversized plinths, similar to the architectural style of the English architect, Sir John Soane, particularly for his design for Pitzhanger Manor at Ealing, in West London. A 10' areaway on the west border of the house allows natural light to fill the center of the house. The interior was a visual splendor filled with artistic riches filling the salon, library and dining room, each room 39' wide with 16' ceilings, with an exceptional book and art collection, which Jeanette Bliss shared with her daughter, Susan Dwight Bliss. Rooms were brought from the great houses of Europe, one of which from the Hotel Crillon in Paris, is on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in the Jayne Wrightsman collection, while others were given to Princeton University and Bowdoin College by Susan Bliss, who died in 1966. John La Farge's great stained glass window of Susan Bliss, once hanging at the top of the grand staircase of the mansion, is displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The mansion is now divided into rental apartments and waiting for its return to one of New York's most regal mansions, a splendid new project, or retained as is. Please call for further information.
Location
State NY
County Newyork
Building Detail https://www.elegran.com/nyc/buildings/9-e-68th-st-2&sold-listing=true
Interior
Interior Features Separate/Formal Dining Room, Entrance Foyer, Eat-in Kitchen
Fireplaces Type Wood Burning
Fireplace Yes
Appliance Dryer, Washer Dryer Allowed, Washer
Laundry Common Area
Exterior
Exterior Feature Balcony
View Y/N Yes
View City
Porch Building Terrace, Terrace, Balcony
Private Pool No
Building
Story 6
New Construction No
Others
Monthly Total Fees $23, 145
Pets Allowed Building No, No
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RLS Data display by Elegran | Forbes Global Properties