Courtesy of CorcoranĪt 19 feet wide, the narrow townhouse comes with a south-facing garden. Courtesy of Corcoran A fireplace-equipped bedroom. Courtesy of Corcoran The perks also include built-in shelves. Courtesy of Corcoran A view of the layout. Courtesy of Corcoran A home office space. The home has room for plush seating areas accented with fireplaces. Schafer, and features a new elevator and reclaimed pine floors, along with the original staircase. The three-story, Greek Revival-style home is 3,850 square feet.īuilt between 18, the home was recently renovated by G.P. Courtesy of Corcoranīut Rudin is also known for his allegedly over-the-top cruel, abusive and even violent behavior to staff, as per a 2021 expose, “Bully,” in The Hollywood Reporter. In the thick of the COVID-19 pandemic, members of the city’s theater community also marched down Broadway in protest of Rudin’s alleged improprieties. Courtesy of Corcoran Floor-to-ceiling windows let sunlight in. Courtesy of Corcoran With warmer weather approaching, a new owner can have space for al fresco entertaining. Rudin is one of the world’s rare EGOTs - he has won all four top awards: an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony - and he is known for producing films like “The Social Network,” “No Country for Old Men” and “Lady Bird.” Scott Rudin. The then-seller was Toronto-born editor Graydon Carter, the current founder of Air Mail, and the legendary former editor of Vanity Fair who famously received an interest-free mortgage to buy the Bank Street townhouse from his then-employers at Condé Nast. Rudin and Barlow bought the four-bedroom, 19th-century townhouse on the street - named for the Bank of New York, founded by New York Post founder Alexander Hamilton - for $17.42 million in 2019. This $13.8M NYC townhouse is the oldest on its blockĪward-winning film and Broadway producer Scott Rudin and his husband John Barlow, a former theater publicist, just listed their historic home at 22 Bank St. in the West Village for $26 million. Las Vegas Raiders defense tackle in contract to buy NYC penthouse South Florida welcoming its first new golf club in decades Russian billionaires seek to sell more than $100M in trophy NYC homes
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