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.
A vacant 2.7-acre parcel on Georgica Pond in East Hampton — with some famous neighbors — is being offered for the first time.
As we enter the cooler months of the year, the Hamptons have gone from a flourishing summer getaway, to the perfect place to find your home.
“I’m so happy that the property is going from one fashionable Jackie to another, so to speak,” says Kathy Zappola of Compass who helped designer Jackie Astier find the unique East Hampton property.
A cabinetmaker is back to work skillfully making modern kitchens and vanities, after a spinal surgery left him paralyzed.
Madison Wienckowski has honed her skills as hand pouring resin for functional art pieces over the last two years. Still, she doesn’t consider herself an artist, but a creator.
The Landfall home exudes country charm from the entrance through a skylit steel silo to the massive hand-hewn barn beams.
The award-winning architect, Michael Haverland, has said, “One of the most important aspects of true Modernism is simplicity and economy of construction.” Haverland and co-owner, Philip Galanes, proved this to be true with their creation at 73 Cove Hollow Road in East Hampton.
Not many homes in East Hampton offer the same proximity to the village and quaint interiors as 84 Gould Street.
Two separate parcels near Georgica Pond traded—the 6.8-acre parcel with the residence sold for $75 million while the vacant adjacent 1.63-acre property went for $10 million, according to Suffolk County deed transfers.