[File photo]
Hey, our favorite floor-through condominium triplex with a fully retractable second floor façade/wall that flips open like a garage door overlooking East 14th Street returns to the market! (Or maybe it never left the market!)
This listing for The Brownstone East Village at 224 E. 14th St. arrived on Streeteasy this week.
Here's a snippet from the Douglas Elliman listing:
The first floor is sheathed in perforated metal that provides great privacy, while filtering natural light into the generous entry foyer/home office area. An exposed brick hallway leads to an all-white eat-in Kitchen. Here, a glass garage door retracts, opening the entire wall to an enormous private, south-facing Garden and outdoor Cabana, ideal for intimate gatherings or large-scale entertaining. The Kitchen is equipped with a Viking dishwasher, downdraft-vented cooktop and oven, 36" Subzero refrigerator, and is finished with custom lacquered cabinetry and seamless enamel coated countertops.
This appears to be the unit that Bill Peterson, the architect behind the building, owns. Back in 2012 the asking price was a reported $2.499 million. This time around the asking price is $2.1 million. Public records show that he paid $1.8 for the home in 2008.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Finally, your chance to own the 3-level penthouse at the Brownstone East Village
More photos of the apartment with the garage door for a living-room wall on East 14th Street
The photo is out of date the bar has changed name/owner.
ReplyDeleteThe first thing I would do is nail that garage door / wall in place to keep fumes the M14 bus from suffocating my family.
ReplyDeletewait... how is that up to code?
ReplyDeleteWeird! Why would you want such a broad view of one of the ugliest blocks in the city? Who was the genius that came up with that idea. It'll probably get bought by some foreigners who are only there 2 weeks per year.
ReplyDeleteTo answer one of the comments above, there is a building wide heavy duty piece of glass or plastic place several feet inside from the building facade to prevent unwanted plunges to the sidewalk. I agree this open front concept should have stayed on paper and not have become a reality if the owner had plans on ever selling this building (apartment). It's a noisy strip of 14th street near a bus stop, and constant unloading from trucks servicing the businesses there. My guess is the architect of owner is from a warmer climate and was trying to force indoor outdoor lifestyle on a gritty New York City street. Big fail, bro.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen that wall open - has anyone else? Seems like a great way to attract pigeons.
ReplyDeleteGoggla, I've watched it open (and close). It was cool. But, I also thought, 'why the hell would anyone want that in/on their home?! And what if there was a power failure halfway through and it was stuck partly open?!'
ReplyDeleteThis continues to be the stupidest New York apartment I've ever heard of.
ReplyDeleteIt would be nice facing a backyard full of trees... or on a very high floor with a view. If you opened it on 14th street you would just get a crowd of onlookers gathering and looking up at you in your living room. It's an cool idea in the totally wrong location, no one would ever use it unless they were just showing it to someone.
ReplyDelete