Monday, February 3, 2014

Walter De Maria's 'giant-robot laboratory' going for $25 million; inside is amazing as you'd expect



Famed sculptor Walter De Maria died last July at age 77. De Maria owned one of the most intriguing buildings in the East Village — the mysterious 421 E. Sixth St. between First Avenue and Avenue A. The building was a Con Ed substation built in 1920. (NYC Songlines described No. 421 as "a giant-robot laboratory.") De Maria bought it in 1980 to use as a home and studio.

We had never seen any photos of the interior … or met anyone who had been inside. Who is up there? What is up there?


[Photo by Goggla]

We were curious what would happen to this after his death. (After all, it was our dream home.)

Well, Robin Finn at the Times has the story: The building and adjacent lot are ready to hit the market for $25 million.

Meanwhile, the Times got a look inside… and it is as amazing as we expected.

In keeping with his Minimalist philosophy, Mr. De Maria left the substation’s industrial origins intact: An impressive grittiness prevails throughout the raw space. Major improvements were confined to the overhead lighting that illuminated his room-size installations.

Even the elevator is a vintage artifact, as is the Viking stove in the bare-bones kitchen where he cooked steak and vegetables. But mostly he worked, dreaming up installations like Bel Air Trilogy, an assemblage of three classic, two-tone (red and white) 1955 Chevrolets, each with a silver stake embedded in its front and rear windshields. A two-story ramp at the back of the property made it possible to take the cars, and other huge objects, up to the second-floor studio.


[Katherine Marks for The New York Times]

There are a lot more photos on the Times website.

The sale will include the lot next door.



Per the Times:

The sale also includes an unimproved lot at 419 East Sixth, a 7,920-square-foot expanse of grass and gravel partially enclosed by a chain-link fence with the potential to be repurposed into gardens, a noncommercial gallery, a garage or townhouses.

The mind reels at what a developer might do to/with this.

P.S.
Can anyone lend us $25 million?

Previously on EV Grieve:
About that "giant-robot laboratory" on East Sixth Street

RIP Walter De Maria

What is your East Village dream home?

20 comments:

  1. I always wanted to pitch a yurt on that lot

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  2. Since only one person lived there, it wouldn't require much conversion. They could probably sell it as-is.

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  3. Someone with a lot of money is going to ruin this really quickly and its going to be shitty. PREPARE for the worst

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  4. I just need to borrow (er, have) a couple bucks from a few million friends...

    Would love to see the inside of this place. It would be cool if it could still be used as some type of art gallery/workspace.

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  5. I always loved that building. It's a shame that it will be town down for an insta-condo.

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  6. Someone (his wife?) still lives there, as the light on the left of the building's lowest level is generally on at night. I also saw the mailman deliver mail to the building last week.
    WD was famously misanthropic. As I walked by one day about ten years ago, he stuck his head out evidently looking for something. I spoke to him and he scowled and slammed the door shut.

    Anyone have any Philip Seymour Hoffman stories?
    Bill the lib. anarchist

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  7. http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2014/02/02/realestate/20140202-EXCLUSIVE.html?partner=rss&emc=rss#1

    this is the correct link to the Times photos of the interior. amazing.... I will totally lend you the money... (ha ha)

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  8. Wow the inside is even better than I imagined.

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  9. Super sick. I'd hate to see the heating bill though...

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  10. Since childhood I have wondered what was inside that building! This is so awesome! Like finding the Titanic for me! lol

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  11. I'm sorry. All these years of suspense, I actually expected something a lot cooler.

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  12. I honestly don't think they're going to tear that down (call me an optimist…)
    Way to costly to demolish that thing. And the prices they'll get as ultra-luxury industrial loft conversions will rival prices in Tribeca.

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  13. I move to the EV in 1981 and live on 6th @ C and passed this place a million times and never thought I would ever see what was happening inside, thanks for ending my speculation.

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  14. I really , really want to live there, a lot. I'd let anyone willing to back me stay there as well. Just don't tear it down. The mystery and ominous facade make walking to work (never home, I walk on B, or 1st straight past} a lot more fun. It puts the places in my imagination to work that normally would be flat.And if we lose every mystery in our city, why not move to Portugal?

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  15. I use to walk past this bldg almost everyday and I would make up all kinds of stories about what goes on in there and who lives there. A lone window at the very top would always be lit late at night when the rest of the bldg would be dark. The story I always stuck with was a mad scientist lived there who worked on his formulas into the wee hours of the morning upstairs in that room... Wow, I can finally stop guessing. Thank you for posting!

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  16. In case you guys hadn't heard, these days the giant robot factory is over at NYU.

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  17. The top light is still on at night. I've never seen it turned off actually. Where is his wife? Can't some gallery/museum preserve it? He was pretty well known. I used to see strange notes posted there late at night....

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  18. I actually walked in there one time. I rang the bell and no one answered, but the door happened to be open so I walked around for 10 minutes. Until someone came down from the elevator and told me I was trespassing.

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  19. Because you WERE trespassing, J. B.! You're lucky you weren't arrested.

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  20. i'm buying it and converting it into my batcave. that or i'll start up a ghostbusting business there ... cause i'm batman.

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