‘Rare architectural gem’ on the Upper East Side seeks $7.25M - source Curbed NY
Javier Perez-Karam
Javier Perez-Karam
Real Estate Broker in NYC - Focused on Agent Success & Innovative Brokerage Growth - Entrepreneur in the Mindfulness space
I am honored to have had a write up in Curbed NY, by Amy Plitt.
From her article:
"the home, located at 172 East 71st Street, is stunning; the 3,750-square-foot townhouse, listed with Keller Williams for $7.25 million, has benefited from a modern renovation that kept some of the home’s historic details, including “ornate original floors and 12-foot ceilings,” intact."
About the listing:
The year is 1867, two years after the end of the Civil War. William S. Wood, doctor and sometime real estate speculator, commissions architect Frank S. Dwight to build three Italianate-style brownstones on East 71st Street. In an area that was considered a suburb to the city's bustling commercial center downtown, No. 172 was a departure from the cookie-cutter townhouses that were popular for the era. At the turn of the century, William Alciphon Boring, President of the Architectural League of New York and Dean of Columbia University's School of Architecture, chose 172 as his home. He was most famous for having designed the Immigrant Station at Ellis Island.
If you have any questions about it, please let me know about we can schedule a private showing.