58 West 9th Street
9 & Sixth
Greenwich Village
|
$8,300,000
This home has been sold
We have 8 similar homes for sale.
|
Subway Lines
Nearby Subway Stations
|
4th Floor
Children's bedroom with a full bathroom, Laundry room, office and maid's room all bathed in sun light from the oversized skylight above.
3rd Floor
Master bedroom with full bathroom, steam shower, Whirlpool tub and a large California closet. In the front, children's bedroom with bathroom and an original claw tub, fully fitted California closet.
Parlor Floor
Mahogany staircase leads to sun flooded, gracious living room with marble gas fireplace and floor to ceiling windows with balcony, small wet bar. Hallway Powder room. Generous library with floor to ceiling bookcases, marble gas fireplaces. Large closet with sound system and a dumb waiter (last floor).
1st Floor
Entry way with round, arched doors and windows on the street level. Marble fireplace and extra large fully fitted California coatroom closet and mud room and large powder room. Elegant dining room with floor to ceiling windows overlooking the garden. Marble gas fireplace, auxiliary small kitchen with dumb waiter.
Garden level
Separate entrance under the stoop. A comfortable family room in the front and enclosed mechanicals. powder room leading to a beautifully designed country kitchen with top of the line appliances. Central Island with sitting marble countertop and brick hearth (non working). Viking stove, Bose dishwasher, double width Sub Zero refrigerator. Full pantry with wine cooler and dumb waiter. Kitchen opens to a planted south facing garden with charming children's playhouse.
Essentials
- Price$8,300,000
- TypeTownhouse
- Unit1
- Floors5
- Bedrooms5
- Bathrooms6
- Rooms11
- Approx. Sq. Ft.5,000
Key Features
- Decorative fireplaces
Rarely does one come across a townhouse as gracious and elegant as 58 West 9th Street on the Gold Coast of Greenwich Village. Timeless, romantic and inviting, this house was designed and renovated in a fashion that maintained the integrity of the Anglo Italianate style of architecture reminiscent of days gone by yet modern in its amenities. This house offers multiple layers of style and comfort.
The interior of the house combines the grace and romance of yesteryear with the comforts of modern life. Through double arched doors and roped moldings, the entranceway leads to a huge foyer with soaring ceilings, a sweeping staircase and a fireplace with an original mantle. The generous formal dining room complete with prep kitchen and dumb waiter offers the promise of fine dining, a glamorous cocktail party or an intimate affair. French doors open out into a delightful garden making this an ideal room for either grand entertaining or intimate dinner parties. This floor also has a powder room renovated to perfection with reclaimed fixtures that compliment the era of the home. The garden level offers a comfortable family room which joins a powder room and a large country kitchen with custom cabinets, professional appliances and a large pantry. The country kitchen is the heart of the home complete with the original brick hearth and offering everything you could desire: state-of-the art appliances, a generous marble counter space with a center island eating area and much more
Additional features of this building include: Bathroom on Every Floor, Excellent Light, Dumb Waiter on Two Floors, Lovely Garden, Beautiful Renovation, and High Ceilings.
More | |
Agents
Ask us a question
jfk@corcoran.com Email Me
sg@corcoran.com Email Me See my 3 other sale listings
ptk@corcoran.com Email Me See my 2 other sale listings
Press Mentions
Greenwich Village
Downtown Central, from Houston Street to 14th Street, from the Bowery to Seventh Avenue.
If you’re new to Greenwich Village, and you’re walking along admiring its townhouses and co-ops, the spot where West Fourth Street crosses West Tenth Street might cause you to scratch your head a little. Even the Village’s most modern luxury condos get a bit of European charm from the meandering, tree-lined streets, leftovers from the 19th century, when Greenwich Village was new development, started up before the city’s grid plan.
Need more details?