New year, new $10M Greenwich Village loft
Photo credit: DDReps for Brown Harris Stevens
With a $5 million renovation dialed in, this sprawling Greenwich Village home looks ready for a new life and a new year. The three-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath co-op at 43 West 13th Street has a dedicated space for every part of your life, including a meditation room and a TV room. Asking $10,000,000, the full-floor loft is a study in the latest and most luxurious fixtures, finishes, and high-tech comforts.
Built in 1906, the nine-story Glass House co-op building occupies a former warehouse, giving its homes classic loft proportions, without any loft inconveniences. Accessed via not one, but two, key-locked elevators, the 4,870-square-foot loft opens under a tall ceiling, framed by ten-foot-high windows.
The home’s main space is a huge great room framed by tall columns, recessed lighting, and floor-to-ceiling windows.
At the center of this lofty space, the kitchen is wrapped in walnut. Appliances from Wolf, Sub-Zero, and Miele join double sinks and a pair of dishwashers to serve a crowd or an intimate dinner. An open dining area is situated for both convenience and elegance.
Three bedrooms (with room to create more) were designed with tranquility and sophistication in mind. The primary suite gets a walnut-paneled dressing room and a fabulous bath.
Three bathrooms, a powder room, a Zen meditation room, and a media room ensure there’s a space for everyone, every hour of the day. For added convenience, there’s a laundry room with a vented dryer.
The pet-friendly converted pre-war warehouse building has two key-locked elevators and an intercom system.
[Listing details: 43 West 13th Street, #4FL at CityRealty]
[At Brown Harris Stevens by Jeffrey Stockwell and Ben Haymes]
RELATED:
- This $3.3M Village co-op will brighten even the darkest winter days
- Vogue editor Hamish Bowles lists his treasure-filled pre-war Village duplex for $2.9M
- This $1.9M West Village pre-war condo has all the interior style of a chic design hotel
- In the West Village, $799K pre-war co-op boasts pops of color and pied-à-terre potential