In March, a 7 -acre fortune in 372 and 370 further lane in East Hampton began the season with a $ 70 million sale.
It was the type of agreement you expected from the massive assets that line the sea.
But as prices are pushed to the highest south of the highway, many Hamptons house hunters are avoiding the rights of ocean boasting for quiet, calm landscapes that attracted society here in the first place.
“Oceanfront has become a very limited class of assets,” notes Michael Cantwell i Bespoke Real Estate. “There are only a small portion of trades per year, so the barrier to the entrance is extremely high.”
That is why he is seeing values to rise north of the highway in communities once outside the radar. “People like to have these large properties, of farm containers in Watermill North, BridgeHampton North,” he says. “They want these extraordinary aquatic properties in the North Sea, North Haven and Noyck.”
He is currently selling a 6.2 hectare “Cabin” in 137 Great Hill Road in the North Sea for $ 8.5 million. There are five bedrooms and four full baths spread over 4,200 square meters.
Built in 2013, it was created by architect Jasmi Singh Rangr with the wood dress that reflects the landscape and the bold, bold boxing oodles. It comes with an 80 -foot fiery pool, an outdoor dining, as well as a kitchen area and tennis field.
“These areas are getting a large number,” Cantwell says. “Everything rises with the wave.”
In the Long Island Sound, a property of a kind is in the market at 24 in Bluff in North Haven, a land that enters into Noyck Bay (where you catch the ferry on the Island Shelter). Built in 2002, it is a rare architectural masterpiece by William Reese, inspired by modernist design masters like Tadao Ando and Rudolf Schindler (of course appeared in Elle Decor).
Geometric, clean and simply composed of four materials, steel, glass and mahogany-this three-storey house has 5,800 square meters, five beds and five full baths. It also comes with all the toys: a gym, lit pool, sauna, tennis and a hay complaining. On the market with Laura White to Saunders for $ 19.99 million.
“People love North Haven because it’s quieter,” White says. “They can make purchases without issues. They can ride their bicycles. There is a beautiful front -beach beach and boat hiking. The area is really spectacular.”
Further to the east, at the northernmost point of the northwestern port in the hidden enclave of the Earth’s waters is another architectural stretcher, known as Butterfly House, at 6 Masthead Lane.
It is a masterpiece of the Midcenturi modeled in the famous Le Corbusier roof model (also seen in the Geller House of Marcel Breuer in Lawrence; Razed in 2022).
Full of gifts of the 1970s, but recently renovated, the house has 2,400 square meters, two bedrooms, three bathrooms, a swimming pool and access to a private beach in the Gulf of Gardiners. This northern star is on the market for $ 2.75 million with Jack Pearson of Compass.
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Image Source : nypost.com