Mansion where ‘My Fair Lady’ was written hosts estate sale

The rain in Spain stays mainly in the plain, but the antiques in this historic home are seeking to scatter to the winds.

The Stamford, Connecticut abode where “My Fair Lady” was penned will soon hit the market for roughly $2 million — and ahead of it listing for sale, it’s the site of a multi-day curio fair.

“The estate sale is being held at a historic home, designed by architect Frazier Peters, where in the summer of 1955 Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe wrote the musical ‘My Fair Lady’ while renting the property,” interior designer and antique dealer Francis Merante told The Post of the event, which began this Friday and will continue until this Sunday, Jan. 29. (Specific hours and further details are available on an online listing for the event.) 

Lerner and Loewe’s stage musical was inspired by the 1913 play “Pygmalion” by George Bernard Shaw, and — following its success on Broadway — was made into the same-name 1964 film adaptation starring Audrey Hepburn as the poor flower vendor Eliza Doolittle. 

According to Merante, “The set design of the original production is actually based on the floor plan of the house.” 


A shot of the property.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Following the antique sale, the house itself is set to hit the market for roughly $2 million.
Following the antique sale, the house itself is set to hit the market for roughly $2 million.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Outdoor decor being sold at the sale.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

The property listing will include its contents.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Various relics up for grabs this weekend.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

The historic home is where “My Fair Lady” was reportedly written.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

An assortment of dolls seeking new homes.
Francis Merante / FM Antiques & Interiors

Audrey Hepburn in 1964’s “My Fair Lady.”
Courtesy Everett Collection

Composer Frederick Loewe (left) and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner sit at a piano.
Corbis via Getty Images

The stone house is set to list after the weekend, the first time it will be on the market in nearly half a century as its current resident, a woman named Jakki Peters, has owned it for nearly 40 years. “She has filled it with antiques and decorative objects she collected while traveling the world and shopping local antique stores in New York and Connecticut,” said Merante. “The sale includes many unique antique items including Chinese furniture, Victorian-era furniture and unique garden items from around the estate.”

The main house — as well as its remaining contents, a carriage house apartment, a two-car garage on the property and a 2008 Mini Cooper S — will list with Andrew Smith of Houlihan Lawrence once it formally hits the market.

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Inside California’s ‘Butterfly House’ listed for $998K

If Lisa Frank were to vomit the color wheel all over a house — you’d have 309 Ninth St. This eye-grabbing property, nicknamed the P.G. — because it’s in Pacific Grove, California — Butterfly House stands out so much, it has its own entry in Atlas Obscura.

And now, it’s listed for sale. The asking price for the two-bedroom, two-bathroom, 1,334-square-foot house adorned with hundreds of butterflies: $998,000.

It’s a steal considering Zillow’s “Zestimate” is $1.02 million. Or it’s a scam considering the property was purchased for $37,500 in 1977 — about $191,000 today.

Granted, the house was just an ugly little caterpillar at that point. When the original owners, J and Sonja Jackson, purchased it, it was in such poor condition that the floor collapsed one day while J was washing dishes in the kitchen. Fed up with living in an abode that was falling apart, the retired school counselor took a hammer to the house and brought it down to its studs so he could rebuild it himself.

Multiple butterflies adorn the home’s bright exterior.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
Even the garage comes decked out in butterfly patterns and bright hues.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
A foyer leads inside.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA

The metamorphosis into the cozy cottage it is today took nearly two decades. J started decorating the house in the 1990s when Sonja, the secretary of the Blind & Visually Impaired Center of Monterey County, began suffering from a degenerative eye disease. Despite the fact she was losing her eyesight, they discovered she could still see bright colors. J immediately went out and bought the brightest paints he could find.

Thanks to Sherwin Williams, and her husband’s labor of love, Sonja wasn’t left completely in the dark.

Of course, it’s hard to miss the butterfly theme. Why butterflies? J wanted to pay homage to Pacific Grove’s unofficial mascot: the Monarch butterfly. What’s more, the property — which is just four blocks from the beach — is only a mile away from the Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary. Many of the home’s butterflies were handmade by J in his on-site workshop. He spent an average of six hours a day making them.

Even this bathroom comes with a bold blue tone.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
More colors that extend inside.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
A bedroom with a view into its ensuite bathroom.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
The kitchen.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA

Most of the flutter is found on the exterior of the home, where there’s a sign above the two-car garage that reads, “P.G. Butterfly House.” But there are also butterflies to be found in the bedrooms, the kitchen, the bathrooms and basically every living space. If you were to walk through the house and take a drink every time you saw a butterfly, you wouldn’t be able to walk in a straight line.

“I love the eclectic artwork,” said listing agent Arleen Hardenstein of Sotheby’s International Realty – Pacific Grove Brokerage. “One whimsical section flows to another — it’s very sparkly, fun and pretty.” According to Hardenstein, J passed away a few years ago, and Sonja is selling the home because her needs have changed.

Needless to say, prospective buyers have to be either colorblind or a fan of bright colors to live here.

“A buyer has to love this house and be willing to live in a bit of a ‘fishbowl,’ ” said Hardenstein, who factored in the décor when pricing the home. “The P.G. Butterfly House is well known in the community and attracts a fairly constant stream of visitors who are curious to see it.”

A bathroom that doesn’t shy from color.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
A bright outdoor hangout.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA
Another angle of the exterior.
Paul Black, Black Sky Photography, Pacific Grove CA

Naturally, neighbors haven’t always been fans of having a tourist attraction on their street. “I think it looks like a circus,” neighbor Wendy Davies told the Monterey Herald in 2015. “People drive by, some park in front of my house or block my driveway.”

According to J, one such spectator — who came all the way from south of the border — took a photo of the house to hang in his butterfly store in Mexico City.

“It’s amazing how many people drive by, stop, get out of their cars to look at the property and of course take photos [and] selfies,” said Hardenstein, who says they have a lot of eclectic homes on the Monterey Peninsula, but none are as unique and colorful as this one. Fortunately for Hardenstein, it has great bones.

“The home appears to be in good shape, and the interior is very comfortable,” she said.

So far, she’s received an “enormous amount of interest” from all types of prospective buyers who either love the home, love the story behind the home — or both. Haters — or negative Nancies hooked on neutrals — are gonna hate. After all, colorful cocoons aren’t for everyone. But if you’re looking for Lisa Frank personified, good luck finding a more perfect property.

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US home price plunge is ‘just beginning’ as housing market rapidly cools: economist

A substantial plunge in US home prices is likely “just beginning” as decades-high mortgage rates cause a downturn in the housing market, a prominent economist cautioned Friday.

The warning from Pantheon Macroeconomics chief economist Ian Shepherdson followed more dismal data that showed a slowdown in housing activity.

Pending home sales – a measure based on signed contracts – plunged 10.2% in September, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The pending home sales index has plummeted 35% compared to one year ago, according to Shepherdson.

But cratering demand has only recently started to result in lower home prices – meaning more financial pain is on the way for prospective sellers.

“The bad news is that prices have much further to fall before the market adjusts fully to the collapse in demand,” Shepherdson said in a note to clients.

“Home prices have only recently started to decline on a month-to-month basis,” Shepherdson added. “The resilience in prices was made possible by a lack of existing homes on the market, but supply is now rising — albeit slowly — as homeowners who previously held off on selling worry that further delays will mean they fetch a much lower price.”

Mortgage rates are above 7%.
Bloomberg via Getty Images

As The Post reported, Shepherdson recently warned he expects home prices to fall by 20% by next year – a substantial correction after values hit record highs during the pandemic-era housing boom.

Mortgage rates topped 7% this week for the first time since 2002, according to Freddie Mac. Long-term rates have spiked as the Federal Reserve hikes interest rates to combat inflation.

“The good news is that mortgage rates likely are close to a peak, and if they remain around their current level, sales will find a floor early next year,” Shepherdson added.

Home prices are falling fast in some markets.
Getty Images

Sellers are slashing their asking prices to entice buyers who are facing the worst affordability crunch in decades. Mortgage payments are commanding a much larger share of household income, and while home prices are falling fast, they’re still higher than they were one year ago.

NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun warned that 7% mortgage rates are the “new normal” for buyers until the economy begins to improve.

“Only when inflation is tamed will mortgage rates retreat and boost home purchasing power for buyers,” Yun said.

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Housing starts tumble more than expected in September

US homebuilding fell more than expected in September, led by a 13.1% decline in multi-unit projects, according to Census Bureau data released on Wednesday.

Housing starts dropped 8.1% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.439 million units last month. Data for August was revised down to a rate of 1.566 million units from the previously reported 1.575 million units. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast starts would come in at a rate of 1.475 million units.

The Federal Reserve’s aggressive monetary policy tightening has significantly weakened the housing market, with most indicators falling to levels last seen during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the spring of 2020. In contrast, other sectors of the economy, like the labor market, have shown resilience despite the central bank’s attempts to cool demand.

Since March, the Fed has lifted its benchmark policy rate from near zero to a range of 3.00%-3.25%, and the fed funds rate is now expected to end the year in the mid-4% range with inflation yet to show signs of abating materially.

Mortgage rates have risen even higher. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 6.94% last week, the highest since 2002, up from 6.81% a week earlier, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Permits for future home construction rose 1.4% to a rate of 1.564 million units in September. Residential fixed investment declined at its steepest pace in two years in the second quarter, contributing to the second straight quarterly drop in gross domestic product during that period.

Homebuilding is likely to remain on the back foot for the rest of the year. A survey on Tuesday showed the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market sentiment index fell for the 10th straight month in October.

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Papa John’s founder slammed for saying he ‘lost a home’ in Florida due to Hurricane Ian

John Schnatter, the founder of Papa John’s Pizza who was forced to step down as CEO after uttering a racial slur during a conference call, was slammed on Tuesday for telling a cable news channel that he had “lost a home” in Florida as a result of Hurricane Ian.

Schnatter, whose net worth was pegged by Forbes at around $1 billion in 2017, is the owner of an expansive real estate portfolio that includes some 20 properties throughout the country, including a $6 million condominium in Naples, Fla., according to Louisville Business First.

The mogul told OAN on Tuesday that his property in Naples suffered damage from the massive Category 4 storm which left dozens dead after bringing record rainfall, flooding and storm surge to Florida.

In a viral clip circulating online, the cable network noted that Schnatter, 60, was speaking from one of his other homes in Utah.

“Of course, you’re currently in Utah but we’re seeing the images of your home in Naples,” the anchor, Stella Inger Escobedo, said during the interview with Schnatter.

“It appears it is completely under water.”

“Just seeing all those images — it’s heartbreaking,” Escobedo added. “Can you tell us the aftermath in your neighborhood?”

Schnatter said the extent of the damage depicted in the images “gives you a little bit of perspective…[as to] how devastating this storm is.”

He then added that he wasn’t “worried about myself because I have the resources and the team and institutional knowledge” to get through the crisis.

“You just can’t imagine how bad this is and my heart goes out to the folks in Florida,” Schnatter said.

“Yeah, I lost a home, but they’ve lost everything.”

Schnatter shared images of the damage to his home in Naples, Fla., which was caused by Hurricane Ian.
OANN

Schnatter and OAN were ridiculed on social media for the segment.

One Twitter user sarcastically remarked: “I’m not worried because I have 600 million and can afford proper insurance. OAN is ridiculous.”

Others also mocked OAN for misspelling the word “hurricane” in the chyron before quickly fixing the typo.

“Well it’s a hurrican, not a hurrican’t,” tweeted one Twitter user.

But others defended Schnatter. They noted that he acknowledged he would be better off than most people in Florida who have had their properties destroyed and lives upended.

“Idk seems like u took this pretty outta context here,” one Twitter user wrote.

“Isn’t he sorta admitting that because he’s rich he’ll be just fine and that people that aren’t Papa John will not be?”

Schnatter, whose net worth was valued by Forbes at $1 billion back in 2017, is reported to own many properties across the country.
OANN

Another Twitter user wrote: “i mean at least hes being honest, he could’ve pretended it affects him a lot more.”

At the time Schnatter filed for divorce from his wife in 2019, he owned at least three properties in Anchorage, Ky., not far from Louisville. The properties, which totaled more than 100 acres of land, were managed by a limited liability co-owned by Schnatter.

At least 70 people have been confirmed dead in Florida as a result of Hurricane Ian.
ZUMAPRESS.com

After he was forced out as CEO in 2018, he started selling a large chunk of his 31% ownership stake in Papa John’s. In total, he pocketed more than $500 million from the sale of his shares in the company that he built into the fourth-largest pizza chain in the country.

At least 71 Floridians have been confirmed dead as a result of the hurricane, according to authorities.

About 520,000 homes and businesses in Florida were still without electricity as of Monday evening, down from a peak of 2.6 million. But that is still nearly the same amount of customers in all of Rhode Island.

A Sept. 29 estimate from CoreLogic found that wind and storm surge damages from Ian could total between $28 billion and $47 billion, according to CNBC.

With Post wires

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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.
1 Oak Studios
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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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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