Total Est. Monthly Carrying Cost:
$201,844 ($14.29/ft2)
Note: the above is based on a down payment of 20% ($7,600,000),
which is the minimum amount permitted by the building.
Description
A magnificent 26 foot wide Beaux-Arts mansion, 9 East 88th Street is situated on a charming tree-lined street just off Fifth Avenue, in the southern portion of the Carnegie Hill Historic District. Noted Gilded Age architects James R. Turner and William G. Killian in 1902-1903 designed this handsome residence with unparalleled grandeur, size and the lavish detail typical of the era. The house has remained a single family since that time.
The house underwent interior alterations in 1912-1913 by the young, but soon-to-be renowned American architect, John Russell Pope, who later designed the National Gallery of Art and the Jefferson Memorial. Pope was commissioned by Vivian Straus Sheftel, a daughter of Isidor and Ida Straus.
The elegant façade of pink brick trimmed with limestone and marble is distinguished by a broad three-story bowed front with a wrought iron balcony.
Built almost full on a 100’8” lot, the interior square footage of 9 East 88th Street measures 14,125+/-, with rooftop terraces of 1,525+/- square feet. In addition to the gorgeous center stairway and two service stairways, the wood paneled elevator services the basement to the sixth floor, where a sun-flooded Conservatory is flanked by a pair of verdant terraces. Superbly located only steps from Central Park and Fifth Avenue’s legendary Museum Mile, this exceptional home represents the rare marriage of grand reception rooms, generously proportioned family accommodations, meticulously restored original architectural detail, inspired landscaping, with fully updated mechanical, security and irrigation systems and with central air conditioning throughout.
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