The property, totaling four acres, presents an opportunity for a waterfront compound on one of the last remaining buildable parcels of its kind in the area.
Top stories of the week in real estate news, including Martha Stewart closing on the sale of her East Hampton home and an historic Montauk home finds a buyer.
Mold and mildew are not only unsightly, they are unhealthy. These fungi grow readily in damp areas and are found in the air breathed both indoors and outside. If left unaddressed, mold and mildew can threaten the health of a home’s inhabitants
Martha Stewart revealed back in June that she was parting ways with her home on East Hampton Village’s famed Lily Pond Lane, but now we know for just how much.
“The many summer activities from this one-of-a-kind location include water skiing and wakeboarding,” the listing says. “Live among the osprey and heron, amid the iridescent light of East End’s most picturesque waterways.”
Fall is here, and so is an opportunity to surround yourself with some great real estate.
Dan and Charlotte DeSmet, the bar and restaurant’s owners since 2017, are selling the business and its contents with a long-term lease in place.
It’s not typical for a publication to have the stamina to endure — and thrive — for the better part of two centuries, but that’s what Long Island Press has been doing.
“The owners of 5 Burnetts Cove Road., a professional couple, really enjoyed the process of the design and build of this amazing modern home,” says Cee Scott Brown of the CeeJackTeam.
One of the historic “Seven Sisters” cottages in what was a summer colony designed by Stanford White, one of the Gilded Age’s most famous architects, has finally found a buyer.