Press
Web hits: the month in review – Corcoran brokers, teams rank in top 200
12/1/2008 – The Real Deal
Eleven brokers and teams from The Corcoran Group were ranked in “The Real Estate Top 200,” a national ranking and awards event that took place last month. Five Corcoran brokers were named among America’s top-selling individuals by sales volume, including Susan Breitenbach, Timothy Davis and Gary DePersia of the East End offices, and Dennis Mangone and Lauren Muss from Manhattan. The six broker teams that were ranked were all from Manhattan, including the Deanna Kory Team; the Carrie Chiang team; Robert Browne, Gregory Sullivan and Chris Kann; Deborah Grubman and Carol Cohen; and teams headed by Barrie Mandel and Sharon Baum. Corcoran was the New York City brokerage with the most teams on the list. The event took place on Nov. 7 at the National Association of Realtors Conference and Expo in Orlando, Florida, and was sponsored by the Wall Street Journal, Lore Magazine and Real Trends.
Whos News
11/26/2008 – Brokers Weekly
Eleven brokers and teams from The Corcoran Group were ranked in “The Real Estate Top 200,” a national ranking and awards event. Five Corcoran brokers were named among America’s top selling individuals by sales volume, including Susan Breitenbach, Timothy Davis and Gary DePersia of the East End offices, and Dennis Mangone and Lauren Muss from Manhattan. The six broker teams who were ranked were all from Manhattan, including the Deanna Kory Team; the Carrie Chiang team; Robert Browne, Gregory Sullivan and Chris Kann; Deborah Grubman and Carol Cohen; and teams headed by Barrie Mandel and Sharon Baum. Corcoran was the New York City brokerage with the most teams on the list. The event was last Friday at the National Association of Realtors Conference and Expo in Orlando, Florida, and is sponsored by the Wall Street Journal, Lore Magazine and Real Trends.
Realty Takes
11/19/2008 – The Independent
Yes, well, if it’s true that it happened, congratulations to Simon and Janet. But I am in tears that Nichols Restaurant on Montauk Highway in East Hampton may have been sold. I began going there because I could get there and home without making a left turn. But then I would have been willing to make a left If I had to because the ambience was so warm, the food so good, and the people so very nice. Good luck to everyone on both sides of the deal . . . if there is one.
Lori Barbaria deserves attention again on these pages. Yes, she is doing business, besides raising interesting questions about commission rates. Always among the top producers for Prudential Douglas Elliman, Bridgehampton Office, Ms. Barbaria writes: “Had two closings this month and did two big rentals. But it is a very weird time in the world. Glad to wake up to birds instead of . . . [cable news] . . . .”
As to brokers lowering their commissions to make the deal or get the exclusive listing, Ms. Barbaria has this to say. “Personally I find it ridiculous for brokers to be taking major reduced commissions right now, especially when there is more inventory coming on everyday along with competitive price reductions on listings. This is the time sellers really need to be listing with the most aggressive brokers, the ones with the track records. At these times they should pay higher commissions to entice getting their houses sold and I have recently noticed bonus’s offered if sold by the New Year.”
The Corcoran Group sent out this item: “The Corcoran Group received distinctive honors for including eleven of America’s top-ranked teams and brokers by sales volume amongst its ranks, according to “The Real Estate Top 200” – a national ranking and awards event sponsored by The Wall Street Journal, Lore Magazine and REAL Trends.
“Five Corcoran agents were named among America’s top-selling individuals by sales volume, including Susan Breitenbach, Timothy Davis and Gary DePersia from the East End and Dennis Mangone and Lauren Muss from Manhattan.
A real estate gift announced by John V.H. Halsey, President of the Peconic Land Trust, told about the donation of Bridge Gardens, a 5-acre garden on Mitchells Lane in Bridgehampton, by founders Jim Kilpatric and Harry Neyens. Kilpatric and Neyens founded Bridge Gardens over 20 years ago, and the donation represents a generous gift by them to the Trust as well as to residents and visitors of the East End.
Giving back to the community is an old East End tradition,
Lastly the people in best shape (slimmest, healthiest) and with the most college degrees live, we are told, in Burlington Vermont. The most overweight people live in Huntington, West Virginia. (And I thought they lived on Blue Jay Way!) And we didn’t make the top ten beaches in the world! The only American one was in Hawaii. I got excited for a moment when I saw Gardners Bay Beach, but not our Gardiner, and not in East Hampton, but in Ecuador.
East End real estate could be stranger than it already is
Corcoran brokers, teams rank in top 200
11/13/2008 – The Real Deal
Eleven brokers and teams from The Corcoran Group were ranked in “The Real Estate Top 200,” a national ranking and awards event. Five Corcoran brokers were named among America’s top selling individuals by sales volume, including Susan Breitenbach, Timothy Davis and Gary DePersia of the East End offices, and Dennis Mangone and Lauren Muss from Manhattan. The six broker teams who were ranked were all from Manhattan, including the Deanna Kory Team; the Carrie Chiang team; Robert Browne, Gregory Sullivan and Chris Kann; Deborah Grubman and Carol Cohen; and teams headed by Barrie Mandel and Sharon Baum. Corcoran was the New York City brokerage with the most teams on the list. The event was last Friday at the National Association of Realtors Conference and Expo in Orlando, Florida, and is sponsored by the Wall Street Journal, Lore Magazine and Real Trends.
The Real Estate Top 200
11/8/2008 – The Wall Street Journal
The eagerly anticipated Real Estate Top 200 rankings were announced today at the National Association of REALTORS(R)’ Conference and Expo in Orlando, Fla., attended this year by more than 20,000 real estate professionals from throughout the world.
The Real Estate Top 200 honors the top 50 residential sales professionals and team professionals in four categories:
— Individual Sales Professionals — Sales Volume
— Individual Sales Professionals — Transaction Sides (in each transaction, there are two sides that can be represented by an agent: a buyer’s and a seller’s.)
— Team Professionals — Sales Volume
— Team Professionals — Transaction Sides
This year’s winners were chosen from more than 1,000 submissions from real estate sales professionals representing hundreds of markets nationwide. A special advertising feature that includes the names of the entire Top 200 will appear in The Wall Street Journal and lore Magazine on November 8. Both publications are being distributed at the NAR conference. Information on the winners also can be found online at www.loremagazine.com.
Greg Norman’s Ex-Wife Buys Hamptons House
11/7/2008 – The Wall Street Journal
Flush with a $100 million-plus divorce settlement from golfer Greg Norman, Laura Andrassy is buying an estate in New York’s Hamptons.
Ms. Andrassy is in contract to pay $7.55 million for a 0.92-acre property on Southhampton’s leafy Wyandanch Lane, near the ocean, and plans to tear down the nearly 3,500-square-foot house, people familiar with the situation say. The property, with a pool, was listed a month ago for $8.75 million with Tim Davis, of Corcoran Group. She’s upgrading from a Southampton house that she bought last year and that’s farther from the water.
Mr. Norman, a native Australian, spent many months in the 1980s and 1990s as the world’s No. 1-ranked pro golfer. The Normans waged a bitter public divorce battle that ended this year when Ms. Andrassy won $103 million in assets, court records show. This past June, Mr. Norman married former tennis star Chris Evert.
Corcoran Sunshine Top Broker Event at Idea House
11/1/2008 – Mann Report Residential
Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group hosted an exclusive broker event at the Idea House in Sagaponack, NY.
Over 100 top brokers from The Hamptons and Manhattan gathered for a private tour of the designer showhouse and a cocktail reception to celebrate the launch of “Look Inside”, a printed digest of six of the world’s most desirable new addresses.
Pamela Liebman, President and CEO of The Corcoran Group, and Kelly Kennedy Mack, President of Corcoran Sunshine Marketing Group, hosted the evening.
They were joined by sales and marketing representatives from the six participating properties: Dellis Cay, Soho Mews, 40 East 66th Street, The Laurel, Five Franklin Place, and 535 West End Ave.
Reconfiguring Two Trees
10/14/2008 – 27 East
A new twist was added to the intrigue regarding the fate of Two Trees Farm in Bridgehampton this week as the owner of the farm, David Walentas, submitted plans to reconfigure a portion of his property in order to include his tennis court on the lot that his private house is on.
This summer, the Planning Board gave preliminary approval to the plan for a 19-lot subdivision on a 114-acre parcel that comprises the majority of the farm, but Mr. Walentas also owns two other properties, totalling 73 acres, on Hayground Road that comprise part of the farm and his private home.
Mr. Walentas, a Brooklyn-based developer whose management companies, Two Trees LLC and Two Trees Farm Inc., have owned the properties since 1992, put the 114-acre section of the farm on the market for $95 million in August. His real estate agent, Tim Davis of The Corcoran Group, said at the time that Mr. Walentas was not planning to seek final approval for the subdivision and instead hoped to sell the property with all of the potential options for a future owner intact.
Town Planner Matthew Briones, who is managing the application, said that Mr. Walentas is now simply reserving the right to reconfigure his other two properties on Hayground Road. The house lot is just over 44 acres and the second lot is nearly 28 acres. If the reconfiguration is approved, Mr. Walentas would have the right to transfer roughly half an acre of land to the larger property.
The second parcel includes Two Trees Stables and the Bridgehampton Polo Club, as well as a series of turnout rings and fields that are an integral part of the farm’s operation. The Mercedes Benz Polo Challenge is held during the summer on the grounds there, and many of the visiting teams keep their horse trailers and house trailers on the smaller lot.
It costs a Fordune
10/9/2008 – New York Post
It’s not all doom and gloom out there in the high-end market.
In fact, Hamptons brokers are already gearing up for what they hope will be a robust rental market by the time the Panic of ’08 subsides.
One of the Hamptons’ premier properties, Fordune, will be listed for rent, probably for the first time since Henry Ford II owned the 42-acre oceanfront Southampton estate.
And it’s going to cost a cool $600,000 to use it from August through Labor Day next year. If you throw in July, that’s an extra $400,000.
Featuring 33,000 square feet of space, the renovated mansion has 12 bedrooms, 12 bathrooms, a game room, a library, a large formal dining room, staff rooms and a commercial kitchen. The extensive grounds include a 60-foot pool with a Jacuzzi, a tennis court, three ponds and more than 1,000 feet of beachfront.
Tim Davis of The Corcoran Group has the exclusive listing.
Water Mill estate listed for 2009 summer rental for over $1 million
10/9/2008 – Newsday
Despite the recent economic downturn, there’s already a 2009 summer rental listed in the Hamptons for more than a million dollars.
Sources tell REAL LI a 12-bedroom mansion on 42 acres in Water Mill is being listed with The Corcoran Group for $400,000 for July 2009 and $600,000 for August 2009. The property, called Fordune, was once part of Henry Ford 2nd’s estate.
Fordune once comprised over 200 acres and according to published reports was awarded to Ford’s first wife, Anne McDonnell after the pair divorced. She reportedly sold the property in 1975 and it has since been subdivided.
Rick and Kathy Hilton, parents of Paris Hilton and Nicky Hilton, own property in the area.
Listing agent Tim Davis could not be reached for comment.
The Cottage: Presented by The Corcoran Group’s Tim Davis
9/4/2008 – Hamptons Magazine
So You Want to Live with the Horses …
8/15/2008 – Dan’s Papers
It’s mid-August in the Hamptons and that means horses. Along so many of the back roads north of the highway in Bridgehampton, Water Mill, Southampton and East Hampton, are the horse farms, with their white fences, green pastures, riding circles and steeple chase courses. All summer long, appropriately attired equestrian participants are practicing or just enjoying the day with their mounts. Who doesn’t enjoy driving the back roads along a pasture filled with beautiful horses? It’s as American as apple pie. So, amid the doom and gloom of some sectors of the real estate market, a peek at what’s available around the Hamptons in terms of horse properties presents the opportunity for those who are having problems with $4 plus gas and the bills on that desk at home to fantasize.
Paying a visit to some of the many friendly, local real estate offices, finding help wasn’t really that easy. With business not great, no one had the luxury of time for something that wasn’t sales related. But at Brown Harris Stevens, agent Dawn Brophy took some time to point me in the right directions of what is available in terms of horse properties in the Hamptons.
As expected, there were some listed for over $30 million, which, of course, I might need a small loan to purchase. Of course, if it’s stables you’re interested in, Rita’s Stables in Montauk is maybe headed for the market, but if she couldn’t make it work, who can? Perhaps it’s going to be Paddock Estates right there on Route 27 and West Lake Drive in Montauk soon.
If you have a mere $19.9 million to spend, what can you get? In East Hampton there’s Stone Meadow Farm, represented by Gary DePersia of Corcoran: 18,000 square feet of living space on 8 acres, and “a stable for up to five horses in an attractive barn framed by ample riding fields.” It makes you feel like picking up the phone and calling a mortgage broker.
Of course, should you feel the need to spend a bit more cash, you could go for a $30.5 million gem, represented by Prudential’s Yvonne Velasquez, Robert Kohr and Lori Macgarva – a 24 acre property. “Property includes a 8,650 sf state of the art barn with professional kitchen … Ideal location for a spa facility, corporate retreat, or equestrian property. ” Now, honestly, if you had the dough and love horses, it is tempting.
In horse country, Sagaponack, there’s a respectable $10.8 million property represented by Melissa Osborne of Prudential, with an “1850s classic Victorian farmhouse… a beautiful old barn that has been lovingly maintained, with stalls, wash rack and a heated tack room with laundry and half-bath.” I almost feel like saying Rochester, where is my riding crop?
Now, what if you want to be close to horses but aren’t into cleaning up the manure or brushing down the horses? Here’s one for you in Bridgehampton for a mere $4.3 million, listed with Cathy Tweedy of Corcoran. “On a builders acre with big open views of a 29-acre horse farm this is the perfect spot to retreat …… laze around the heated pool while you watch the horses graze in front of you.”
There’s another spot for ponies in East Hampton: the Dune Alpin Farm. According to the association web site, “Dune Alpin Farm is a distinctive, private and comfortable place to live and play in East Hampton, NY.” When 135 acres were purchased for $1.6 million in the 1970s by Stanley Harte, by 1981 it had, among other things, fifty acres that include the buildings, that once housed horses, being rehabilitated into what will be a ”deluxe riding and boarding facility. And 50 acres have been dedicated to the town or village as scenic easements,” according to a New York Times article from 1981.
Many of houses on the development overlook an equestrian reserve, and owners may be able to board their own horses if space at the barn permits. Right now there are three properties available on Dune Alpin’s Horse Meadow Lane with views of the reserve: a 3,000 square foot traditional built in 2005 for just under $2.9 million (listed by Corcoran’s Cathy Tweedy); a brand new construction, 3,000 square foot barn type house on close to an acre for $2.5 million (Beth Troy, Town & Country); and a six year old 3,000 sf traditional for just under $2.4 million (Bryan Midlam, Prudential).
Now, finally, if you want to be in charge of it all, The Two Trees farm and its 114 acres in Bridgehampton has been put on the market for $95 million, represented by Tim Davis and his team at Corcoran. Now we’re talking serious coin. Even horse enthusiast Bruce Springsteen would have to go back to work full-time to buy this baby.
Of course, many equestrians bring their horses out to the Hamptons for the summer and board them. During the 1930s, a young pre-teen Jacqueline Bouvier kept her favorite horse, Danceuse, at Martin Aylward’s stable in the winter (now ABC building) in Manhattan and in his stable on Henry Street in Southampton in the summer to prepare for big events. Hundreds of people still do it today, paying anywhere from $2,000 a month and up.
So, next time you turn down that back road and see those horses grazing, think of those listed prices and remember that at one time they hung horse thieves but never anyone who stole a car.
Money Does Grow on Trees
8/13/2008 – Hamptons Magazine
In a move that’s sure to raise Hamptons eyebrows, David Walentas is selling Two Trees Farm after years of struggling to get subdivision approval.
Fifteen years ago, New York developer David Walentas bought this 115-acre equestrian mecca for $2 million. Today, sources say, he’s selling it for $95 million. Why the price increase? It’s a new century, for one; but more important, Walentas has renovated and added on to what was once a lonely dairy farm, and branded Two Trees as Long Island’s choice destination for horse training and polo. In the years since, he’s gained preliminary approval from Southampton Town’s Planning Board to divide the land into 20 lots – two of which already have houses on them – leaving the remaining 61.5 acres as a natural reserve. The new owner will have the choice of keeping the 115 acres intact or inheriting what will be the most talked-about East End development for years to come. Mercedes-Benz Polo fans needn’t worry, though. The Polo fields lie in the protected area. Listed by Tim Davis, Corcoran Group, Southampton, 283-7300.
Middle East End?
8/7/2008 – New York Post
Hamptons brokers are buzzing about a possible mega-deal on the East End.
Sources say a Middle Eastern investor, who’s been traveling with an entourage, is considering the purchase of both the 115-acre Two Trees Farm in Bridgehampton (featured in this column last week) and the adjoining 60-acre Three Ponds Farm. The two properties have a combined price tag of $163 million.
“Residents in the area were surprised by the motorcade of black SUVs carrying the men in their native garb,” says one insider.
Two Trees, listed at $95 million and owned by developer David Walentas, is the site of the Bridgehampton Polo Club, while Three Ponds, featuring a private USGA-approved golf course, is owned by Cheryl Gordon Krongard.
Two Trees broker Tim Davis denied such a deal was afoot; Three Ponds agent Susan Breitenbach had no comment.
Two Trees Farm up for sale for $95 million
8/7/2008 – 27 East
The iconic 114-acre Two Trees Farm in Bridgehampton has been put on the market for $95 million.
Tim Davis, a senior managing director at The Corcoran Group’s Southampton office, is the listing agent.
The farm is currently the site of the annual Mercedes Benz Polo Challenge, but the future of that event is in question. The current owner of the farm, David Walentas, received preliminary approval last week from the Southampton Town Planning Board to subdivide the property into 19 lots with an agricultural reserve of 68 acres. If he completes the subdivision, however, the town insists that public polo matches will no longer be allowed.
The historic dairy farm, where cows grazed up until the 1950s, was known for generations as the Carwytham Farm. It was run by the Baldwin family until Daniel Baldwin, a potato farmer who had added some stables and riding rings to the property, sold the land to Mr. Walentas for $2 million in 1993.
Mr. Walentas, a Brooklyn-based developer, raises polo ponies and is a regular competitor at matches held on the farm, which he has kept as a country home.
The property currently includes two houses, an eight-unit apartment building, three barns, two indoor riding arenas, two polo fields, a pool and a tennis court.
Mr. Davis said that Mr. Walentas is “absolutely not” planning to complete the subdivision and sell the individual lots.
“It’s being offered for sale as a total package,” he said, adding that the two existing houses and the potential for 17 more house lots of up to 2.5 acres each, six of which are pondfront properties, could make for a unique investment.
“It’s a very interesting opportunity for a user or a developer,” he said. “That’s the backside of it being developed as a potential trophy property to use it as it is.
“They could be the owner of the farm and never develop it,” he said. “It’s an ideal property for a developer to come in and plan out an equestrian community. It wouldn’t be a tough sell.”
Pony Up
7/31/2008 – New York Post
One of the Hamptons’ largest – and best-known – tracts of privately held land is now available for $95 million.
Two Trees Farm, the site of the rollicking Bridgehampton Polo Club and its celebrity-studded, champagne-swilling crowd, has just been put on the market by owner David Walentas.
Included in the north-of-the-highway spread are 115 acres – which have preliminary approval for 18 “estate parcels” – as well as two houses, an eight-unit apartment building, three barns, two indoor riding arenas, two polo fields, a pool, a tennis court and many more than just two trees.
When contacted, Corcoran Group listing broker Tim Davis would only say, “It’s the most important equestrian facility on Long Island, or it’s the most unique opportunity for an investor.”
Walentas, reportedly bought 100 acres of the property 15 years ago for $2 million and added more acreage a few years later. He then embarked on a three-year renovation.
Tongues and other appendages have been wagging among the horsey set about the future of the annual six-week Mercedes-Benz Polo Challenge, which wouldn’t be allowed to continue under the proposed subdivision plan.
Beach Bound: The List
7/25/2008 – Hamptons Magazine
Going for brokerage: A look at the movers and shakers of East End real estate
7/15/2008 – Hamptons Magazine
Trophy Properties
7/14/2008 – Haute Living
Originally built in 1902, this residence, designed by architect Grosvenor Atterbury, has just been returned to its original splendor after a three-and-a-half year restoration. The sumptuous interior of the nearly 18,000-square-foot country home contains the most elegantly intimate rooms-many boasting fireplaces, a testament to the attention paid to comfort and the finest of details during the renovation. The main living room entails impressive window views overlooking 9.11 acres of extraordinary landscaping. Mature trees, flowering shrubs, and graceful rose gardens decorate this evergreen-lined panorama. A paneled library boasts a leather frieze with hammered nails and a sophisticated stucco ceiling, and leaded glass windows host the impressive Lloyd family crest. The England-imported pool house, reached via breezeway from the main house, has a state-of-the-art indoor pool maintenance system, steam room, and sauna, while a beautiful mural decorates the walls. An extraordinary indoor pool, outdoor pool with a pavilion, paddle court, tennis court, bocce ball court, gymnasium, billiard room with fireplace, antique sculpture fountain, carriage house, and four-car garage add to the resort-like nature of the breathtaking summer estate. The outdoor kitchen with built-in barbeque is perfect for outdoor dining. A separate caretaker’s apartment is reachable through the back stairs, and has its own sitting room, bedroom, and bath.
Located within one of the prime estate sections in Southampton, this beautifully refined home offers a unique opportunity to own a historical and world-class residence.
Price: Upon Request
Location: Southampton, NY
Realtors: Tim Davis / Felicitas Kohl
Phone: 631.283.7300 x 211/ 631.283.7300 x 247
Realty: Corcoran Group
Southampton Ox Pasture Hits Market at $67.5 Million
7/1/2008 – PlumTV.com
Apparently lightning can strike twice, or at least as far as the price point on Hamptons real estate. For anyone who missed the opportunity to buy the $65 million spread on Gin Lane this spring, a pedigreed Ox Pasture estate “Linden” hits the market at $67.5 million.
Tim Davis of Corcoran, who has the exclusive listing along with Felicitas Kohl, describes the property as “like having your own resort.” The 25,000 square-foot 12 bedroom, 14 full and 4 half bath house sits on 9 acres in Southampton Village where recessions need not apply. Forget pesky things like traffic; you can fly into the village helipad. Even Marders can’t accomplish landscaping like this with centuries old trees and mature rose gardens. Your five star resort comes with an outdoor and indoor pool, grass tennis court, paddle court, fitness room, carriage house, and wine cellar (wine not included). And just as everything old can be new again, the house originally constructed in 1902 has undergone a major 3-year renovation to update it to its youthful self with modern amenities.
It has often been rumored that listing agents have a great deal of power over who ultimately gets these prized homes. A few high-end agents who felt their “price is no object” clients didn’t get a fair shake at the Gin Lane property may be redeemed with the chance to win this trophy home. Ironically, although the architect, Grosvenor Atterbury, was known for designing lavish weekend homes for wealthy industrialists when he was at McKim, Mead & White, he is most famous for developing a construction method using standard pre-cast panels, the start of the pre-fab movement.
With the value of the US dollar plummeting and Wall Street more moody than a woman with PMS, the question for this estate might be, “How much is that in Euros?”
Greener pasture
6/26/2008 – New York Post
One of Southampton’s grandest properties has just gone on the market for a show-stopping $67.5 million.
The 12-bedroom residence of nearly 18,000 square feet on more than 9 manicured acres was built in 1902 and designed by Grosvenor Atterbury. It has just undergone a 3«-year renovation overseen by architect Francis Fleetwood.
Listing broker Tim Davis of The Corcoran Group tells us that owner Juergen Friedrich, who ran the European division of Esprit sportswear before his retirement, “spent tens of millions” bringing the Ox Pasture Road estate back to (and beyond) its original grandeur.
The mansion includes several public rooms with fireplaces, a gourmet kitchen, a media room, servants’ quarters and a master bedroom of almost 3,000 square feet. It also has the latest bells and whistles, including an Evian-quality water-filtration system.
“It’s truly like a private resort,” Davis says.
The home isn’t on the water, but there’s an indoor pool and a separate outdoor pool with a pavilion, a grass tennis court, a paddle court, a bocce court, a half-court basketball area, a hot tub, a sauna and a gym.
The property also features a carriage house, rose gardens and a 50-foot water fountain.
Southampton estate selling for $67M
6/26/2008 – The Real Deal
A newly renovated 12-bedroom Southampton home is selling for $67.5 million. The nearly 18,000-square-foot home, built in 1902, sits on nine acres. The seller of the Ox Pasture Road estate is Juergen Friedrich, the former European chief of Esprit sportswear. As The Real Deal reported, Friedrich paid $25 million for a Plaza Hotel condo last fall. Brokers Tim Davis and Felicitas Kohl of The Corcoran Group said Friedrich “spent tens of millions” restoring the estate, in a renovation done by architect Francis Fleetwood.
Power 600
6/9/2008 – Hamptons Magazine
Tim Davis Senior Managing Director, Corcoran Group Southampton