Why office landlords and developers are partnering with NYC’s top chefs

The Howard Hughes Corporation’s recent purchase of a $55 million chunk of Jean-Georges Vongerichten’s global restaurant company made one thing clear: It’s getting harder to tell where the restaurant world ends and the real estate world begins.

Although simple-minded pundits blame the closing of every “iconic” bagel shop on greedy landlords, the fact is that New York City restaurateurs depend on developers to fund and support new eateries more than ever.

Hughes, which operates the South Street Seaport under a long-term lease with the city, already brought Vongerichten’s acclaimed seafood brasserie the Fulton to Pier 17 and opened Vongerichten’s colossal Tin Building food market and eatery complex at the pier.

Now, the relationship is going global with a 25% stake and an option for 20% more in Jean-Georges Restaurants, the superchef’s 40-location eatery empire. It’s likely the largest ownership stake ever taken by a publicly traded real estate company in a restaurant brand.

Howard Hughes Corp. brought Jean-Georges to the Tin Building. Now, they’re buying into his biz.
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The Big Apple’s leading restaurateurs have always had close, mutually beneficial relationships with developers and landlords. Related Companies backed the Hudson Yards dining temples.

In the 1980s, Equitable designed its former headquarters at 787 Seventh Ave., home to Le Bernardin, to accommodate restaurants and subsidized their rents for many years. But the Hughes-Vongerichten partnership easily dwarfs them all.

“We’re always looking to make our tenants’ and communities’ lives better coming out of the pandemic and there’s no better person on this globe than Jean-George in delivering these experiences,” Howard Hughes’ CEO, David O’Reilly, enthused to The Post.

Portrait shot of Jean-Georges Vongerichten.
Superchef Jean-Georges Vongerichten now has a global relationship with the Howard Hughes Corporation.
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Asked whether the deal was intended to bring Vongerichten’s brand to Hughes’ seven planned communities in the US, or to promote the chef’s growth beyond the Hughes portfolio, O’Reilly chuckled, “Does that have to be an either-or question?”

“We’re always looking to make our tenants’ and communities’ lives better coming out of the pandemic and there’s no better person on this globe than Jean-George in delivering these experiences.”

Howard Hughes’ CEO, David O’Reilly

“It’s not like we’re going to replicate the Tin Building at six other locations,” he said. “But there are plenty of opportunities for us to leverage Jean-Georges’ other restaurants” into the Hughes communities at such locations as Summerlin in Las Vegas and in Phoenix’s West Valley, and, “We’re in discussions now.”

But, he added: “It’s not us driving his expansion. We’re a 25% passive partner. Our goal is to give him leverage to support his growth plans by supporting his back-office development.”

Hughes’ commitment to Vongerichten came last summer as it prepared to open the Tin Building, which Hughes spent $194.6 million to launch. It’s now open five days a week and on track to be open seven days by January.

The Tin Building, a 53,000-square-foot culinary marketplace at Pier 17, opened in September.
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Meanwhile, the landlord-restaurateur love fest continues apace at scores of major Manhattan office buildings, including at L&L Holding Company’s 425 Park Ave., where Vongerichten plans to open next year.

“You only get one chance to make a first impression at the base of a building,” SL Green’s EVP in charge of retail and “opportunism,” Brett Herschenfeld said.

At SL Green’s One Vanderbilt, Daniel Boulud’s thriving Le Pavillon quickly established a culinary identity for the tower that is fully leased, mostly to financial and law firms. This fall, the developer and the chef teamed up again to launch Joji, an omakase spot helmed by sushi masters George Ruan and Wayne Cheng and nestled in an underground corner of Grand Central Terminal.

Restaurants like Daniel Boulud’s Le Pavillon help raise public awareness for office towers and attract tenants. In return, developers are partnering up with, rather than leasing to, some of the city’s top eateries.
Thomas Schauer

Le Pavillon from Boulud’s Dinex company is not a traditional tenant of SL Green but a partner with the developer under a deal they made pre-pandemic.

“We knew the old landlord-tenant lease model wasn’t what would work going forward,” Herschenfeld said.

Such increasingly common partnerships may or may not include a base rent and a revenue- or profit-sharing formula.

At Rockefeller Group’s 1271 Sixth Ave., where Greek seafood brasserie Avra opened last spring, the model is “to let restaurateurs focus on what they do best without the stress of a fixed monthly rent,” Herschenfeld said.

Herschenfeld added SL Green’s next culinary news is at One Madison Ave., the office tower that the developer is spending $2.3 billion to expand. The project will boast a “lifestyle-type offering where people can easily interact” of between 10,000 and 15,000 square feet; a gourmet market of 8,000 square feet; and a smaller, full-service sit-down restaurant, he said.

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Louis C.K. lists his decade-long NYC townhouse for $8.5M

Comedian Louis C.K. is saying goodbye to his longtime New York City townhouse on the heels of downsizing to a $3.85 million apartment in the Greenwich Village, The Post has learned.

Located at 35 Charlton St. in Soho, the comedian, born Louis Székely, purchased the three-story, five-bedroom home in 2012 for $6.5 million, records show. The property is now on the market for $8.5 million.

Described as a “rare opportunity to own a piece of history,” the townhouse is part of the longest row of Federal and early Greek Revival buildings developed by John Jacob Astor, the listing notes.

Built in 1829, the home spans 4,800 square feet and features 13 rooms total.

Details include a second-story terrace, a private yard and neighborhood views.

“There are endless value-add opportunities either as an expansive single family home with a separate rental apartment below or one completely private residence,” the listing adds.

Carl Gambino and Justin Montero of Compass hold the listing.

Meanwhile, The Post reported this week that Louis C.K. purchased an eighth-floor unit at the famed downtown Art Deco building One Fifth Ave.

Made up of four bedrooms and three baths, that co-op is a corner two-unit combo that was available for the first time in almost 40 years.

Additionally, the comedian, who admitted to sexual misconduct in 2017, is also unloading a third downtown home. It initially hit the market for $2.5 million earlier this year, and has since received a $600,000 price cut after being unable to secure a buyer.

If he sells that home at ask, he will lose out on a big chunk of money. Louis C.K. initially purchased that two-bedroom, two-bathroom Greenwich Village pad for $2.45 million in 2014, according to Dirt.com.

He also owns a Tudor cottage on 2 bayfront acres out east on Shelter Island.

Despite the controversy surrounding the 55-year-old, he won a Grammy in April for Best Comedy Album.

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Wedding guests stranded after booking lavish Airbnb that’s under construction

This Airbnb was more air and less B&B.

A woman said her family members were left devastated when they arrived at a home they booked on Airbnb, only to discover it was under construction.

Renee Menzies took to TikTok last Wednesday, saying her sister and 11 other relatives traveled to the Australian resort town of Byron Bay to stay at the Airbnb for a wedding, but were left stranded after realizing the listing was a scam.

Menzies slammed the vacation rental company for leaving her family in the lurch and for failing to quickly refund them the money that was forked out on the fraudulent lodgings.

“My family turned up to this today,” the ticked-off TikTokker griped in her viral video, which has clocked up more than 230,000 views. “A completely vacant home, in the middle of a massive renovation.”

An Australian woman claims her family was left stranded after they arrived at a price Airbnb property only to find it was still under construction.

Menzies’ clip featured footage which showed the home did not have any flooring and was awaiting the installation of a new oven and refrigerator. The walls of the property were also partially painted.

The 12 guests arrived to find the Byron Bay home still under construction, with partially painted walls and no flooring.

Menzies said her family booked out the pricey property in the Australian resort town of Byron Bay.

The property was clearly not fit for stay, with the guests forced to fork out money on alternative and expensive last-minute accommodation.

The oven, refrigerator and cupboard had not been installed inside the home and were left out on a back deck.

In her caption, Menzies directed her ire at Airbnb, writing, “No warning, and when they rang you for help you accused them of lying, wouldn’t help find somewhere else to stay and wouldn’t provide them a refund.”

“You left 12 people and 3 kids under 3 literally standing on the side of the road,” she further raged.

The clip quickly clocked up hundreds of thousands of views — but Menzies claimed the company didn’t adequately address her family’s concerns.

The listing showed the property fully renovated and complete with a plush pool.
TikTok/reneescbfs

The following day she posted another clip, in which she declared, “Hey @airbnb still no communication from you after our family turned up to this yesterday. Left stranded on the side of the road, literally, with 3 toddlers and nowhere to go.”

Menzies continued to post videos about her family’s ordeal on TikTok, saying it took days for the family to be refunded. They were eventually also reimbursed for money they were forced to fork out on alternative accommodation.

Menzies claims her viral TikToks forced the company to pay attention to her complaints.

The Post has contacted Airbnb for comment.

The vacation rental provided a statement to Newsweek about Menzie’s messed-up videos.

“We were disappointed to learn about this experience and have fully refunded the guest and provided rebooking assistance,” it stated. “We have taken appropriate action on the Host while we investigate further and reached out to the guest to provide further support. In the rare event something isn’t as expected on arrival for a stay, our Community Support team is on hand 24/7 to help.

Aibnb added, “Our team is very much focused on ensuring each stay is a positive experience for guests, Hosts and the wider community. That’s why this year we introduced AirCover for guests, the most comprehensive protection in travel, included for free with every stay.”

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Landlord sues White Horse Tavern for $640K in back rent

One of New York City’s oldest watering holes is in hot water. 

The West Village’s White Horse Tavern, which proudly claims to be “the second oldest pub in New York City,” is allegedly experiencing a problem as old as the Big Apple: Being late on rent — and a lot of it. 

Owner Eytan Sugarman allegedly owes more than $650,000 in unpaid rent for the 567 Hudson St. venue, landlord Steve Croman claims in a lawsuit filed Thursday in Manhattan Supreme Court. 

The debt traces back to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, when Sugarman began inconsistently paying the $41,500 he owes a month for the 142-year-old corner location (which is entirely separate from the 89-year-old White Horse Tavern located in the Financial District), Crain’s reported. The situation has come about despite Sugarman collecting $437,840 in federal Paycheck Protection Program funds in the summer of 2020 — money intended for the protection of 18 jobs at the establishment, which has either been forgiven or paid back, the publication reported.

The bar’s landlord sued the tenant for back rent and an additional $15,000 in legal fees.
Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
The White Horse is among the oldest bars in the city.
Education Images/Universal Image

Croman was at one point more supportive of the saloon’s continued existence, granting Sugarman a monthly concession for half his rent for 18 months, the Real Deal reported. In August, that changed, and Croman demanded Sugarman repay the 18 months of concessions.

The suit also demands Sugarman pay a minimum of $15,000 in legal fees — in addition to the rent debt. However, the Real Deal notes, citing court documents, that Sugarman had issues paying rent in the early months of his tenancy; he signed a 15-year lease in March 2019. That April, Sugarman closed the bar for a month for renovations, which reportedly cost $1 million — and late payments allegedly began that August. By the New York arrival of COVID, there were allegedly already $11,500 in fees.

White Horse Tavern did not immediately return The Post’s request for comment.

The suit represents a turning of the tables for Croman, who spent eight months in prison for crimes involving mortgage and tax fraud in 2017, and also previously settled for $8 million after a federal civil suit found him liable for harassing rent-regulated tenants, Crain’s reported. 

Croman purchased the White Horse for $13.7 million in April 2019, not long after getting out of prison. The mixed-use property also has two residential apartments.

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Mariah Carey lists Atlanta mansion for $6.5 million

This sweet, sweet fantasy house is on the market, baby. 

Pop powerhouse Mariah Carey is looking to part ways with her Atlanta home for — far from a song — $6.5 million. The nine-bedroom, nine-bathroom — and four half-bath — property is currently listed with Shana Bradley of Christie’s International Real Estate affiliate Ansley Real Estate. 

“Where can you find a home that has a gated entry, hilltop setting and acreage but still manages to be very welcoming and warm? This is a happy place with space and big rooms, but it flows well and offers just the right balance,” Bradley told The Post of the 12,575-square-foot offering. 

Carey, 53, weathered much of the pandemic at the compound in the affluent Buckhead area, but is offloading it as she looks to head back east, to New York, the Wall Street Journal reported. A New York native, Carey grew up in Huntington, Long Island. Her decision to sell her luxurious southern pad is unrelated to a July burglar at the residence, Bradley told the Journal. 

Set on 4 private acres, the Davis Drive property includes a heated pool, a pool house and entertainment pavilion, a three-car garage, tennis courts and a “charming series of gardens,” according to the listing.

The estate’s front entrance.
Bartolotti Media
Mariah Carey spent much of the pandemic in this for-sale residence.
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An aerial shot of the palatial estate.
Bartolotti Media
One of nine bedrooms.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
A walk-in closet in the primary suite.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
A heated pool and pool house on the grounds.
Bartolotti Media
The property is set on 4 acres.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
The property is located in Atlanta’s Buckhead area.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
The home measures in at 12,575 square feet.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
The sprawling kitchen.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
A pink dressing area.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
One of nine full bathrooms.
Jon-Michael Sullivan
A home theater within the compound.
Jon-Michael Sullivan

Inside, there’s an abundance of group gathering spaces, including a central “dream kitchen” with a large, marble-topped center island, a breakfast alcove and custom cabinetry reaching the ceiling. The primary living room has backyard access, and interior amenities include a workout room with a mirror wall, a home theater and a guest suite with a fireplace-equipped living room.

The main-floor primary suite includes its own dressing room, a fireplace surrounded by built-ins, a sprawling walk-in closet and an ensuite bath. 

On the third floor, there are additional bedrooms and, naturally, a small recording booth.

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Adrienne Arsht sells Miami estate for a record $106.87M

Living in the Free State of Florida doesn’t come for free.

Businesswoman and philanthropist Adrienne Arsht has sold her 4-acre waterfront compound in Miami’s Coconut Grove neighborhood for a cool $106.87 million, its listing brokerage confirmed to The Post on Friday. The Wall Street Journal, which broke news of the sale, reported that mighty sum not only breaks a sales record for Miami-Dade County, but also marks the first time a Miami home has traded hands for nine figures.

Arsht listed the property in January for $150 million, with that asking price also having marked a record for the priciest single-family spread ever to list in that county.

The identity of the deep-pocketed new owner, according to listing brokerage Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices EWM Realty, is undisclosed. That buyer first visited the spread in July and the deal reportedly moved fast. However, Arsht — for her part — knows she’s leaving the estate in good hands.

“As the steward of this beautiful property, I am proud to leave its legacy to the next generations of caretakers,” said Arsht in the press statement. “May they also enjoy the breathtaking view!”

Located in Coconut Grove, the property has views of downtown Miami.
1 Oak Studios
It features 400 feet of water frontage.
1 Oak Studios
The estate has two houses. This one, Indian Spring, has a pool.
1 Oak Studios

From the time Arsht listed it, she knew she would donate the proceeds of the sale to charity — and she still doesn’t know which one, or ones, she’ll choose.

This high-dollar deal beats the previous record set earlier in 2022 by InterSystems founder Phillip Ragon’s roughly $93 million purchase for three adjacent Atlantic Ocean-front homes in Golden Beach.

Arsht’s estate — neighboring the Vizcaya Museum — includes two separate houses spanning some 25,000 square feet of living space and a total of 12 bedrooms. Perched on one Miami’s highest Biscayne Bay-front elevations, it also includes more than 400 feet of water frontage, looking out to views of Key Biscayne and the downtown Miami skyline.

Arsht will donate the proceeds of the sale to charity.
Getty Images

The compound’s main residence is known as Indian Spring, which Arsht built in 1999, tapping Jose A. Gelabert-Navia, a former dean of the University of Miami School of Architecture, for the design. Inside Indian Spring, which has a foyer with a sweeping staircase, all living areas have views of Biscayne Bay — and include a great room and a formal dining room with seating for 20-plus guests.

The master bedroom suite has a full gym. Elsewhere, this structure has a garage for six cars, an upstairs apartment with an office space, a swimming pool that fronts the bay and a lighted tennis court. Arsht purchased the site for Indian Spring in the late 1990s for approximately $4 million. That land was previously owned by the Ziegfeld Follies star Peggy Hopkins Joyce and her then-husband, the lumber magnate James Stanley Joyce.

The estate has a total of 12 bedrooms.
1 Oak Studios
Villa Serena has a stunning tiled floor.
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Another angle of Villa Serena.
1 Oak Studios

The other residence on the grounds is known as Villa Serena, which dates to 1913. William Jennings Bryan, a former US Secretary of State and a three-time candidate for president, built it with the design help of architect August Geiger. It’s listed on the National Register of Historic Places — and it, too, looks out to bay vistas. Restored by Arsht after she bought it in the late 2000s for about $12 million, Villa Serena boasts two ornate staircases heading up to the sleeping quarters and, elsewhere, a three-car garage with a guest house perched above.

Villa Serena had been listed in 2007; a developer had planned to purchase it, demolish the existing structure and build several homes on its land. Arsht worked with local historians to give it that historical designation. The restoration took upwards of four years and cost several million dollars.

Indian Spring, the more recently built home, has a massive dining room.
1 Oak Studios
Another grand entertaining area inside Indian Spring.
1 Oak Studios
Another peek inside Indian Spring.
1 Oak Studios

Arsht hails from Delaware and splits her time between Miami, Washington, DC and New York. She’s the former head of her family’s TotalBank, which sold to Spain’s Banco Popular Español in 2007 for $300 million. Miami’s Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts bears her name following a $30 million donation made in 2008.

Ashley Cusack of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices EWM Realty had the listing. Jill Hertzberg of The Jills Zeder Group with Coldwell Banker represented the buyer in the deal.

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Tenants say luxe Jersey City building floods, is a ‘nightmare’

For Jordan Mendelson, 28, living in a luxury building with a rooftop swimming pool, private gym, floor-to-ceiling views of Manhattan, the Hudson River and Statue of Liberty all within a stone’s throw away from New York City sounded like a dream when she got the keys to her $3,600-per-month two-bedroom apartment in September 2020. But six months later, it became a living nightmare. 

In March of 2021, Mendelson, an attorney, got a frantic call from her fiancé while she was at the hair salon saying the elevator in their 49-story building in Jersey City — 70 Greene — had flooded. 

“There was water pouring down in the elevator. We ended up having to climb up 72 flights of stairs,” Mendelson, who lives on the 36th floor, told The Post. She said it took her 40 minutes to hike up to her apartment, where she found her cat scurrying in fright, amidst no power and a leaky ceiling. 

Slow and stalled elevators have been an ongoing issue, Jordan Mendelson said.
Stefano Giovannini

“We hadn’t experienced anything like this,” she said, noting a pipe bursting in the building. The same thing happened, she said, in April 2022, and once again – and at its worst – earlier this month. That time it was so bad that hordes of residents had to relocate to nearby hotels for four days, sources told The Post. 

According to the listing portal Rent, Jersey City is now the most expensive US city to live in, but those living in 70 Greene say it’s hardly a luxurious life. More than 260 of the building’s residents have been sounding off in a community chat about the building’s management — publicly owned real estate company Equity Residential, which owns numerous waterfront properties in Jersey City, as well as New York City, D.C., Boston, San Francisco and others. Some of the gripes include maintenance staff unable to turn off the building’s water during the most recent floods, which reportedly led to a 9-month pregnant woman falling down a flight of stairs as she tried to exit the building. Other complaints include leaks causing property damage, elevator and hot water outages.

During the last flood, the elevator dropped 10 floors down before the emergency brake kicked in, one source told The Post. (Equity Residential denied this claim.) More proof and scathing reviews can be found on Google, Yelp and TikTok. 

Some residents took to social media platforms like TikTok to post about the flooded elevator inside 70 Greene in Jersey City.
TikTok

“This building is a complete nightmare. It was duct taped together years ago and its pipes explode every six months,” a Yelp user who goes by John B wrote of 70 Greene.

“The elevators were designed by squirrels and only operate 25% of the time. I don’t care what website tells you its [sic] 5 stars or who in the building says its [sic] a luxury building DO NOT LIVE HERE,” he urged in the one-star review.

Other current residents would agree, particularly after the last flood incident.

“You had to find your way through a dark staircase. Coming down 32 flights of stairs was just impossible. It was complete lockdown for the building,” a 46-year-old resident who has lived in the building for five years and asked to remain anonymous told The Post.

“There was no action plan from Equity until four days after the incident. Imagine just being homeless for four days? You couldn’t get a hotel room because the hotels were packed from residents. The fact that it took four days to come up with a resolution plan is unheard of, especially in a place where rents are exorbitant,” they said.

A flooded hallway after a pipe burst inside 70 Greene.
TIKTOK/@luanamoreira2103

A spokesperson for Equity Residential noted that residents will get reimbursed for hotel stays and property damage. The spokesperson told The Post they were unaware that a pregnant woman fell during the August building flooding.

Another resident, Clarissa Latman, posted a video on TikTok after the last flood showing puddles of water leaking from the elevator’s ceiling, a flooded gym, soiled carpet and residents climbing up flights of stairs as firetrucks appeared to assess the situation outside the building.  

“I have lived here for more than three years, and have experienced a number of dangerous conditions which came to a head after our third major flood due to negligent maintenance of the building’s pipes,” another resident, who asked The Post to remain anonymous out of fear of building retaliation, said. “The building has been giving us the run around, not communicating with us,” said the source, who also claimed 70 Greene was “deleting reviews” all the while upping the rent by as much as 30%. 

Jersey City, often called the invisible sixth borough of New York City, can command an average of $5,500 in rent, according to a report by the listing portal Rent as previously reported by The Post. Mendelson started packing her bags after seeing her own two-bedroom apartment listed for $5,942, up from the $3,600 COVID deal she got in 2020. 

“We ended up chasing them [70 Greene] for a lease renewal and they came back at $4,400, but it was still a $600 increase in one year,” Mendelson said,

Another woman paying close to $3,900 for a one-bedroom, who asked The Post to leave her name out, said she suffered $1,500 in property damage from the most recent flood when leaks from the ceiling on her 15th-floor unit damaged clothing, shoes, bedding and personal items in the apartment she shares with her partner. Luckily, she had renter’s insurance and said the building had offered to pitch in.

A memo posted inside the building notifying residents of a closed amenity space following the flood.
Stefano Giovannini

“Unfortunately we did recently have a pipe burst at 70 Greene which resulted in water damage to a number of apartment units as well as common areas and impacted the regular operation of the elevators,” Equity Residential spokesman Marty McKenna told The Post.

“We have worked with the impacted residents to find other accommodations, which we are paying for. We have also offered rent abatements to the residents. We are working with our contractors to assess the cause of the pipe burst and to make the necessary repairs at 70 Greene.”

Mendelson, however, is wary of such messaging from the management company after all she’s seen. She and her fiancé will be moving next month.

 “It’s not worth it, at the end of the day,” she said.

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Conn. estate of late songwriter Lee Pockriss lists for $3M

The Bridgewater, Connecticut, estate of the late ’50s and ’60s hit songwriter Lee Pockriss — of “Catch a Falling Star,” “Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini” and “Johnny Angel” fame — has hit the market for $3 million.

The charming property at 137 Skyline Bridge Road spans 10 acres surrounded by woods — and it includes a pool.

At 2,873 square feet, the three-bedroom, 3½-bathroom home, built in 1940, features a large formal living room that flows into a dining space, a sunroom, a sunken home office and a large den.

The main bedroom also comes with a balcony overlooking the pool and the surrounding rolling lawn. 

The estate begins with a gated drive that leads to two separate paths — one goes to the front of the house and the other leads to a detached three-car garage.

Pockriss passed away in 2011. His widow, Sonja, is selling the estate.

The widow of Pockriss has listed the spread for sale.
Michael Bowman
It’s located in the town of Bridgewater.
Michael Bowman
Touches include wood details, such as in this beamed vaulted ceiling.
Michael Bowman
A cozy living area.
Michael Bowman
There’s aptly enough space for a grand piano.
Michael Bowman
The charming wood touches extend into this dining space.
Michael Bowman
Large windows let in copious light.
Michael Bowman
Make a splash in the property’s serene pool.
Michael Bowman

The late musician wasn’t the only creative inspired by these surroundings. The property was formerly owned by animal portraitist and children’s book illustrator Marguerite Kirmse. Before that, by sculptor and actress Jenifer Heyward, daughter of Dorothy and DuBose Heyward, the couple behind “Porgy and Bess” — the book and play with music by the Gershwin brothers including classic songs like “Rhapsody in Blue.”

The listing broker is Michael Caporizzo, of William Pitt Julia B Fee Sotheby’s International Realty. 

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Thom Filicia sells upstate New York home to friend for $4.6M

“Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” interior designer Thom Filicia has sold his Skaneateles, New York home in an off-market deal for $4.6 million. 

The TV host not only found a buyer for the five-bedroom upstate lakefront spread, but a buyer who’s a longtime friend. 

“They separately bought about 60% of the furnishings and they want to reupholster and update some pieces,” Filicia, who hails from nearby Syracuse, told The Post. The buyer, who requested anonymity, also wants to work with Filicia on renovating the boat house, making the space more child-friendly (they have a young daughter) and customizing an outdoor cooking area.

Filicia purchased the property, where he spent weekends when away from his Chelsea apartment, for $965,000 in 2008, Syracuse.com reported. He came upon it while driving back from a friend’s wedding and spotting a “For Sale” sign. 

“I was not in the market to buy the house,” he said — a theme for Filicia, who also just bought a Sag Harbor home after finding a property by happenstance.

“My brother was looking for a new house in the Hamptons and asking me my opinion,” he said. Filicia found a house he liked — on the water, gated and with three modern barns — and suggested it to his sibling. 

Filicia sold the lakefront upstate home off-market.
Amy Lamb
The new owner — who requested anonymity — paid $4.6 million for the house.
Eric Piasecki
Filicia still plans to spend time in Skaneateles, where he has another property.
Eric Piasecki
A jewel box of a powder room.
Eric Piasecki
Filicia purchased his former Skaneateles estate in 2008.
Eric Piasecki
Space for dining with a view of the lake.
Eric Piasecki
A cozy woodburning fireplace.
Eric Piasecki
Filicia plans to work with the new buyer on personalizing his old home.
Eric Piasecki
The upstate property abuts a lake, and is a popular destination in Central New York.
Nick Johnson

Then, a few weeks later while in Los Angeles, his phone rang. It was the childhood friend, and she wanted to know if she could buy his house and enlist his expertise for personalizing it. 

“I decided that instead of having two properties in Skaneateles, I’d figure out something else, and I thought, ‘Wait a minute, there’s the house I found with my brother in Sag Harbor. Maybe I should see if that’s available,’ ” he said. 

It was, and now it’s his. (His brother went with another home in the area.) 

“It was kind of like this storybook” of organic coincidences, Filicia said of the series of real-estate deals. 

He now plans to split his time between fixing up the Sag Harbor home, spending time in New York City and continuing to enjoy Skaneateles, where he still owns a federal-style mixed-use building he’s in the process of converting into apartments.

As for his incredibly good luck with property acquisition processes, all he can offer by way of an explanation is simply that “[rescue] dogs and houses always find me.”

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