Friday, December 28, 2012

Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: The 10 Priciest Properties to Hit the Market in 2012

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: The 10 Priciest Properties to Hit the Market in 2012
Dec 28th 2012, 23:00

Screen%20Shot%202012-12-28%20at%204.39.59%20PM.png

The courtyard swimming pool at the $100M Casa Casuarina, the former home of late fashion designer Gianni Versace, which was initially listed for $125M in June.

For the world of ultra high-priced listings, 2012 was a stellar year, with three $95M New York apartments listed within a month of one another, three pocket-listed L.A.-area mansions whispering $150M price tags, and the return of Gianni Versace's epic Miami Beach pad. Find all of the year's most expensive listings on the map below.

· All Year in Curbed 2012 posts [Curbed National]

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Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: Year-End Wrap-Ups Around the Curbed Universe: Day 3

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: Year-End Wrap-Ups Around the Curbed Universe: Day 3
Dec 28th 2012, 22:00

This week, sites across the Curbed Universe will fête the best, worst, and, in some cases, ugliest real estate wheelings and dealings of the year, from celebrity blockbusters to ingenious measures of urban planning to the most outlandish architectural renderings. Here's a quick and easy roundup of today's best posts:

Screen-Shot-2012-12-28-at-10.36.12-AM.jpg

L.A.'s most thrilling rendering reveals · L.A.'s development highs and lows · L.A.'s public parks, public transit, and pedestrians · Boston's coolest rendering · Boston's most expensive home sales · Nantucket's hottest brokers and ugliest listings · Cape Cod's Taylor Swift, great white sharks, more! · Martha's Vineyard $92M listing · NYC's ugliest listings of the year · Philly's best real estate photos of the year · Boston's meatiest debate · Atlanta's most nonsensical boondoggle · San Francisco's best waste of everyone's time

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Curbed National: Craigslist Chorales: It's tough to be a renter...

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Craigslist Chorales: It's tough to be a renter...
Dec 28th 2012, 22:30
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Curbed National: Curbed Cup 2012: Do check out the nail-biting Neighborhood...

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Curbed Cup 2012: Do check out the nail-biting Neighborhood...
Dec 28th 2012, 21:00

curbedcup2012.jpgDo check out the nail-biting Neighborhood of the Year death matches happening right now across the Curbed universe; polls are live and will remain open until Wednesday: Atlanta, Chicago, Miami, Cape Cod, New York, the Hamptons, and Washington DC. [The Management]

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Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: The Year in Nonsensical Verbiage: 2012's Best Brokerbabble

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: The Year in Nonsensical Verbiage: 2012's Best Brokerbabble
Dec 28th 2012, 21:15

Real estate brokers are the avant-garde poets of the 21st century. Sure, they may be misunderstood now, but some day everyone will look upon their writings with joy and wonderment. Well, okay, to be fair, everybody kind of already does that. Here now, the best brokerbabble to grace listings this year.
· The Brokerbabble Glossary [Curbed National]
· All Year in Curbed 2012 posts [Curbed National]

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Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: Tall Towers, Skinny Houses, and Other Superlatives of 2012

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: Tall Towers, Skinny Houses, and Other Superlatives of 2012
Dec 28th 2012, 20:30

Screen%20shot%202012-12-27%20at%203.35.55%20PM.pngPhoto via Construction Week Online

Of the architects not busy drafting plans for dog houses, condos torn asunder, or McMansions on shopping malls, the most brazen occupied their time designing the planet's most extreme spaces, from Earth's thinnest abode in Poland to the longest home in the forests of Thailand. Perhaps the craziest of the crazy—or the coolest of the cool, however you please—is Sky City Tower (above), the 2,749-foot skyscraper which stands to be the tallest on earth, beating out Dubai's Burj Khalifa by a scant 30 feet. What's even more extreme? The developers, Broad Sustainable Building, announced—then recanted, then affirmed again—that the world's future tallest tower would take just 90 days to build, more than 20 times speedier than the construction of the Burj. Work began in November, technically, so we'll just see what happens. Below, find four more superlative structures.

thinnest.jpgPhoto via Facebook

↑ Polish architect Jakub Szczesny designed the much-anticipated Keret House, the thinnest home in the world, which measures four feet at its widest point and 28 inches at its narrowest. Szczesny's creation, a steel frame sandwiched between two buildings in Warsaw, Poland, contains the necessary amenities—a kitchen, bathroom, sleeping space, and office—stacked on top of each other, accessible via ladder.

longest2.jpgPhoto via Arch Daily

↑ The sort-of inversion of Keret House? The self-professed "world's longest home," which measures 492 feet long and 36 feet wide. The 150M Weekend House, designed by Shinichi Ogawa & Associates, crests a hill in the forest of Khao Yai, Thailand, and has a lap pool on the roof—just as obvious as it is genius.

7472965110_0d3be72743_z.jpegPhoto via BMW Guggenheim Lab/Flickr

↑ The world's smallest house—uh, provided the definition of the word "house" is up for debate—is this abode by Berlin-based architect Van Bo Le-Mentzel. One-Sqm-House, which measures, uh, one square meter, was at one point rentable for €1 ($1.30) a night on Airbnb.

Screen%20shot%202012-12-24%20at%208.06.35%20PM.pngPhoto via Curbed National

↑ Timeshare baron (and mild nutcase) David Siegel started—and, when the real estate market imploded in 2007, ultimately had to abandon—construction on this 90,000-square-foot mansion in Windermere, Fla., now the largest private residence in the country. (North Carolina's Biltmore is larger, though it's no longer a single-family residence.) Filmmaker Lauren Greenfield chronicled the saga of Siegel, his wife Jackie, and the palatial estate that never was in a boom-and-bust documentary titled, oh-so-appropriately, The Queen of Versailles.

· All Sky City Tower coverage [Curbed National]
· All Keret House coverage [Curbed National]
· A Look at the 'World's Longest House,' Measuring 492 Feet [Curbed National]
· Behold the World's Smallest House, Totaling One Square Meter [Curbed National]
· All The Queen of Versailles coverage [Curbed National]
· All Year in Curbed 2012 posts [Curbed National]

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Curbed National: House of the Day: Huge Equestrian Estate Offers Texas' Best 'Game' Room

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
House of the Day: Huge Equestrian Estate Offers Texas' Best 'Game' Room
Dec 28th 2012, 19:00

Have a nomination for a jaw-dropping listing that would make a mighty fine House of the Day? Get thee to the tipline and send us your suggestions. We'd love to see what you've got.

Location: Celina, Texas
Price: $15,000,000
The Skinny: This 314-acre property, located 45 minutes outside Dallas, can only be described as an equestrian amusement park: there's not one but two arenas (one competition-size), a ranch manager's home, a stall barn, an equipment barn, and a mare motel. Then there's the 15,000-square-foot brick-and-stone main house, built in 1995, with its seven-car garage, wine cellar, and truly extraordinary living room decked with more than 40 mounted busts. One finds throughout the house the expected quantity of wood-beamed ceilings, stone hearths, imposing leather armchairs, and Native American-inspired fabrics and furnishings (that dining room set is the true pièce de résistance.), and taxidermied animal statues (like the two black bears presiding over the master bedroom). Also on the grounds? A heated, lagoon-like pool and three stock ponds: just perfect for lazy-Sunday gone-fishin' types with $15M lying around.

· 8496 County Road 97, Celina, Texas [Zillow]

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Curbed National: Sold Stuff: Michael Eisner, who served as CEO...

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Sold Stuff: Michael Eisner, who served as CEO...
Dec 28th 2012, 19:45

Screen-Shot-2012-12-28-at-10.14.26-AM.jpgMichael Eisner, who served as CEO of Disney from 1984 until 2005, has dropped $8.2M on his neighbor's home in Bel-Air, Calif. The 4,000-square-foot five-bedroom has a stucco façade, much like Walt Disney's old Los Angeles home, and Tudor details, much like the elaborate "Magic Kingdom" one former Disney senior designer built for himself in La Canada Flintridge, Calif. [Trulia Luxe Living]

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Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: The 10 Most God-Awful and Ill-Advised Listing Pics of '12

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: The 10 Most God-Awful and Ill-Advised Listing Pics of '12
Dec 28th 2012, 18:15

From blood stains to faceplants, snakes to piles of trash, with some ever-so-topical 50 Shades of Grey tossed in for good measure, 2012 was a mighty glorious year in terms of awful listing pics. By pure coincidence, three of the 10 homes featured above were listed for at or around $70K: the going rate these days for a truly baffling marketing strategy, apparently. Have a look.

· All Year in Curbed 2012 posts [Curbed National]
· All Broker Fail posts [Curbed National]

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Curbed National: SPONSORED POST: Enter for a Chance to Win the 2013 HGTV Dream Home

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
SPONSORED POST: Enter for a Chance to Win the 2013 HGTV Dream Home
Dec 28th 2012, 17:00

This year's HGTV Dream Home is located on Kiawah Island, 21 miles from Charleston, SC, alongside a tranquil tidal marshland and pristine beaches, in the island's first sustainable neighborhood, Indigo Park. This nature-lover's paradise is a 3,000-square-foot-stunner, featuring three bedrooms, a double-height great room, a large gourmet kitchen with adjacent pantry and laundry room, multi-purpose loft space overlooking the great room, a spacious rear deck, and a plunge pool.

Check out the drool-worthy gallery above and enter at HGTV.com/dreamhome up to twice daily through February 15, 2013. Don't miss out on this. >>

No purchase necessary. Open to legal residents of the U.S., age 21 or older. Void where prohibited. Sweepstakes ends at 5 p.m. ET on 2/15/13. Odds of winning depend on number of entries received. For full official rules, visit hgtv.com or send a self-addressed stamped envelope to: "HGTV Dream Home Giveaway" - RR, P.O. Box 51412, Knoxville, TN 37950. Main Sponsor: Scripps Networks, LLC d/b/a Home & Garden Television. HGTV and HGTV Dream Home are trademarks of Scripps Networks, LLC. Photos © 2012 Scripps Networks, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Curbed National: Controversies: Another day, another questionable Barack Obama...

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Controversies: Another day, another questionable Barack Obama...
Dec 28th 2012, 17:30
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Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: Doggie Mansions, $100K Coops: Animal Architecture in '12

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: Doggie Mansions, $100K Coops: Animal Architecture in '12
Dec 28th 2012, 16:00

Does anybody remember an era—five years ago, maybe?—when conspicuous consumption was limited to handbags, Ghost Chairs, and absurdly opulent mansions? Well, it seems nowadays one isn't truly wealthy without the in-house nightclub, private island, or posh pet real estate to prove it. Yes, in many ways, 2012 was the year of high-design and ludicrously extravagant animal homes, with some of the world's most influential designers and architects whipping up plans for the cats, dogs, and chickens of the megarich and/or design-obsessed. Even The New York Times had much—309,483 words, to be exact—to say about the influx of luxe (and oft unlived-in) dog houses: "The average price of their doghouses is about $5,000 or $6,000 [...] though it's not unheard of for people to spend north of $25,000 ... But the sole resident is a stuffed squirrel."

Is it indulgent? Absolutely. But, hey, if you're going to spend lots of time or cash on something frivolous, pampering a favorite animal friend is not the worst way to go about it, right? Above: 11 fancy-pants pet abodes that made news this year, from wooden igloos by Japan's Kengo Kuma to midcentury modern dog homes designed by none other than Frank Lloyd Wright.

· All Year in Curbed 2012 posts [Curbed National]

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Curbed National: Comments Wire: The architect and the owner of...

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Comments Wire: The architect and the owner of...
Dec 28th 2012, 16:30

latimerhousesmall.jpgThe architect and the owner of the house dubbed by Curbed Philly as "the most hated Philly house of the year" left a gracious comment about the matter: "As an architect we build for others; rarelly [sic] we have a chance to express our own understanding of space. I am delighted that it created so many points of view. It means that architecture is not yet dead even if I did not built a breackfast [sic] nook." [Curbed Philly]

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Curbed National: Celebrity Real Estate: Zillow has named Miranda Lambert and...

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Celebrity Real Estate: Zillow has named Miranda Lambert and...
Dec 28th 2012, 15:15

BlakeMiranda.jpgZillow has named Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton as this year's most "desirable celebrity neighbors." The royal couple of country music eked out a win over Elle Decor cover star Reese Witherspoon and new Cape Cod property owner Taylor Swift. Interestingly enough, Twilight star Kristen Stewart—who just bought an "architectural potpourri" of a home—was ranked No. 7 on the most and least desirable lists. [Zillow Blog]

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Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: Here Now, the Most Stirring Shelter-Industry News of 2012

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: Here Now, the Most Stirring Shelter-Industry News of 2012
Dec 28th 2012, 14:30

Shelter-Year-End.jpg

After a rather sleepy 2011, 2012 proved mighty active on the shelter-industry front, one filled with launches, re-launches, acquisitions, joint ventures, mergers, and expansions. Sure, there were plenty of cute occurrences—an 8-year-old girl gave Dwell her two cents about the gender implications of Architect Barbie, and for that matter Dwell got a fun little shout-out on The Simpsons—but as far as actual news goes here's a look at the heavyweight stories, in no particular order:

Condé Nast Revives Domino, Sort of:

In January, rumors started swirling about the rebirth of the beloved decorating magazine, which folded in 2009; in February, Condé Nast officially announced its intention to revive the brand in a newsstand-only iteration that would publish seasonally and sell for $11 a pop. About a week before its debut date in April, early shipments of Domino Quick Fixes started cropping up on newsstands around the country (Manhattan, Charlottesville, Va., Houston), creating a flurry of Twitter activity from crazed fans and sending many, including Curbed, on a near-impossible quest to score an advance copy. Sadly, though, the service-y new publication was filled with much recycled from the magazine's first, much more robust life, and although some readers were still delirious, many felt as though Quick Fixes fell short. As one Curbed commenter put it, "Lame... Domino in name only, a cynical shadow of it's [sic] former self." The Washington Post's Terry Sapienza agreed, writing that the product "lacks the personality, innovation and insider design info the magazine was known for. Instead, Quick Fixes reads like a Decorating 101 primer, one we've already read." And former Domino 1.0 editor Deborah Needleman Tweeted, "Interesting to see how far they can go w recycled content. No domino people involved!"

Lonny Gets Bought and Sort of Saved

37.jpgEarlier this year, WWD dropped some hints that the fate of Lonny hung in the balance: what in the devil was happening? About a month later, all fears about the original and grande dame of digital shelter magazines were quelled when Lonny, sticking it to naysayers and skeptics, announced its plans to increase its circulation from a bimonthly to a monthly format. In July, though, Lonny was finally acquired by Zimbio Inc., a digital publisher whose portfolio consists of Zimbio.com, covering entertainment and pop culture, and Stylebistro.com, a fashion and beauty vertical helmed by former Racked National editor Danica Lo. A press release from the Zimbio reps stated that the deal includes "the founding editorial team, the Lonny website, its library of past issues, and an archive of thousands of original photographs." Shortly after Hurricane Sandy, Zimbio took Lonny off Issuu, the PDF-powered site that had hosted the magazine since its 2009 debut, republishing its pages on its own, more efficient platform and soft-launching a site that will be updated daily once the brand staffs up its editorial operations (which it's been looking to do since September). At the moment Lonny.com looks rather uninspired, full of placeholder content and dull roundups, so let's hope the infusion of cash and resources will allow the team to reconfigure its vast photo archives into an innovative, fresh, and compelling supplement (and literal traffic-driver) to the magazine itself.


Hearst Consolidates its Shelter Pubs Into One Group


Many moons have passed since Hearst acquired Hachette Filipacchi media, thereby adding Elle Decor to its magazine portfolio, but just this year the publisher consolidated its shelter titles into one herculean group under one editorial directorship. Newell Turner—fomerly the editor in chief of House Beautiful—has become editor in chief of the whole shebang, with Michael Boodro and Dara Caponigro remaining in their roles as editor in chiefs of Elle Decor and Veranda, respectively. (HGTV Magazine, also published by Hearst and officially greenlit for more issues in March, is not considered a shelter magazine and is therefore not part of the crew here.) Anyway, each Hearst Design Group brand now has its own design director, interiors editor, and senior writer, but they share market and features editors, a photo department, and publishers. Fewer editors doing more means that some were let go, of course, and an insider tells Curbed that many casualties were given help finding their next gigs from high-ranking editors who were saved. The merger, which didn't affect the Web editors of any of these brands, presents an interesting post-recession print-publishing model.


New York Launches Standalone Design Title


NYMag.jpgNew York magazine has always produced spectacular biannual Design Issues, shedding light on unusual urban environments, extreme and superlative spaces, and all sorts of families with all sorts of trappings, from all-Lego staircases to walls covered in 2,398 pieces of colored paper. In short: design editor Wendy Goodman approaches everything with a city-dweller's sensibility, favoring the curious and eccentric over anything too precious. So after the magazine announced a once-yearly standalone design title once a year, indeed, the 220-page debut issue covered a conversion of a 375-square-foot dentist's office into a studio; chocolatier Jacques Torres' houseboat on the Hudson River; and one show-stopper with a multi-colored striped staircase. Goodman's philosophical bent—while some 8.3M people take the unified stance that New York City is home, there's no such thing as a unified type of home there—paid off: New York Design Hunting will publish twice next year, fulfilling publisher Larry Burstein's belief that it "fills a void in the marketplace."


Cottages & Gardens Expands With a New York Title


Screen%20Shot%202012-12-28%20at%208.11.01%20AM.pngLook what's happened with Cottages & Gardens, a publisher of regional high-end design magazines (and alma mater to many a Curbed employee): the group got hit hard by the recession, laid off a bunch of people, shuttered its Palm Beach edition, and eventually got sold to a Connecticut-based publisher a couple of years ago. This year, though, C&G launched New York Cottages & Gardens, covering NYC, Westchester County, the Hudson Valley, and Long Island's Gold Coast, indicating that shelter media, and in particular these regional, self-published brands, has pulled itself out of the dark ditch of 2009/2010. Since debuting in February, NYC&G has featured the country home of Marian McEvoy, former editor of House Beautiful and Elle Decor, a colorful Park Avenue project by Amanda Nisbet, and many other impressive projects, and published five full issues in its fledgling year.

· All Year in Curbed 2012 posts [Curbed National]
· All shelter media coverage [Curbed National]

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Curbed National: Linkage: A Log Cabin on Wheels; Herman Miller Reimagined; More!

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Linkage: A Log Cabin on Wheels; Herman Miller Reimagined; More!
Dec 28th 2012, 13:45

eamesillustration.jpgIllustration via Co.Design

· Broadcaster Harry Smith the new owner of an Edge penthouse. [Curbed NY]
· On the market: a home designed by the architect of DC's airport. [Curbed DC]
· Frighteningly colorful Chelsea co-op asks $719K. [Curbed NY]
· Design Milk's year in review: best of architecture and interiors. [Design Milk]
· Here, a log cabin on wheels in the Netherlands. [My Modern Met]
· 2012: the year of the home office. [Apartment Therapy]
· Best of home design on television. [Apartment Therapy]
· More iterations of the tricycle mobile home. [Arch Daily]
· Tips for preparing to buy in 2013. [Zillow]
· Celebrities selling homes scrub off the star dust, hide identities. [NYT]
· Contemporary illustrators reimagine Herman Miller classics. [Co.Design]
· 2012 celebrity real estate losers. [Trulia Luxe Living]
· Halloween decorations from Kmart contain quite a surprise. [Gawker]
· Ten real estate moves that were gamechangers this year. [WSJ]
· Lisa Lampanelli snags beachside getaway. [The Real Estalker]

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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Curbed National: Year in Curbed 2012: Live Like a Pro: Designers' Homes That Hit the Market in '12

Curbed National
Interior Design, Decor, and Real Estate
Year in Curbed 2012: Live Like a Pro: Designers' Homes That Hit the Market in '12
Dec 27th 2012, 22:30

lonny-hadley.pngPhoto by Patrick Cline/Lonny

For interiors enthusiasts, few things indulge the itch of spending time in rooms completed by the pros: those who get paid to undertand the complexities of proportion and light, color and texture, beauty and function. While that's most often a pleasure limited to showhouses and the like, this year saw many a designer home actually hit the market, providing ample opportunity not only to tour these spaces but to actually lay down money for them. Take the Manhattan pied-à-terre listed by Albert Hadley a couple of months before he passed away in March. Hadley, éminence grise of American decorating, counted Jackie O. and Al Gore among his clients and famously once said, "decorators should always remember that letting a client see too many beautiful things is a pitfall." In that spirit, he filled the two-bedroom flat, located around the corner from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, with "a lifetime of exquisitely curated art and furnishings," as Lonny put it when it published the home in Dec. 2010. Sadly, these priceless pieces do not come packaged with the petite apartment, but some of the unique finishes are sure to stay, including the pearly ceiling in the living room. Perhaps the folks who just signed a contract on the place, which was originally asking $1.3M, are looking to follow Hadley's credo of "classic sensibility and editorial restraint."

↑ While the 11,300-square-foot Beverly Hills estate Kelly Wearstler shares with her husband, real estate developer Brad Korzen, didn't first hit the market this year, for the purposes of this roundup the property was hugely repackaged, re-photographed, and listed publicly on the MLS this year. The 1926 house, remodeled into a Hollywood Regency beaut in the '30s, was first shopped around as a $46M pocket listing in Oct. 2010 and was PriceChopped to $39M a year later. That's the price tag it sported when it appeared on the MLS in March, accompanied by a fresh crop of photos—the ultra-glam, extremely particular decor that's made Wearstler so famous was replaced with suitably pared-down interiors. Thankfully, the estate's maximalized glory was eternalized in the Oct. 2009 issue of Vogue, which recorded her signature look: "horn-legged tables, black-lacquer-and-brass furnishings and objets, ebony leather Chesterfield sofas, and an alarmingly overscaled nude sculpture (torsos, busts, and other statuary abound in the house." Despite the make-under, the interior designer may have given up: she PriceChopped the manse by $3M in August, bringing its ask down to $36M, and then de-listed it around Thanksgiving.

↑ While Sister Parish wasn't technically the last soul to reside in this maisonette in Manhattan, the interiors queen, a partner of Albert Hadley, used the first-floor flat as a pied-à-terre to maintain close contact with potential city clients while she kept a permanent residence in New Jersey. Since Parish died in 1994, the apartment has been modified by the current owner, with decor by Mario Buatta, and few remnants of Parish remain. Listed for $3.5M in February, the apartment was PriceChopped to $3.295M in April and taken off the market in July. Perhaps someone's having second thoughts about letting go of this decorating pedigree?

↑ Egyptian-born industrial designer Karim Rashid has turned out thousands of off-beat designs over his career, and seems to have included most of them in the design of his Manhattan loft. Purchased by the designer in 2008 for $2.475M and featured in a 2010 issue of Interior Design magazine, the austere space is currently set up as a one-bedroom with office, and absolutely stuffed full of furniture conceived by Rashid. The furnishings aren't included in the $2.795M asking price, but the Rashid-designed "faucets, sinks, mirrors and tiles" are part of the sale. Living in the middle of a Karim Rashid retrospective might not be for everyone, but at least the famous designer isn't going for an outrageous flip, asking just $320K more than he paid for the unrenovated space.

↑ In April, Jeff Lewis, the saucy designer of the Bravo reality show Flipping Out, snatched up this Los Angeles home for $1.35M from a client who had, luckily for Lewis, already paid for its renovations, then put it back on the market six months later for $1.45M. Other than the reality TV connection, the 2,368-square-foot "all systems upgraded" home is, well, nothing extraordinary, with three bedrooms, a media room/office space, and a "walk in diva closet." The exterior is coated in a shade of gray that probably has some sort of fancy name like "graphite shavings at high noon" and white trim, a paint combo that seems to be the general M.O. of L.A. house flippers. Rightfully so: the property sold for $1.45M on the nose just after Thanksgiving.

↑ In July, designers Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch—who operate professionally as Roman and Williams and who have had a hand in projects like the Ace Hotel, various restaurants, and Gwyneth Paltrow's "fuzzy nap zones"relisted their Manhattan home for $3.3M. The one-bedroom full-floor loft was first put on the market for $3.5M about a year before that and had been subsequently delisted in March. Unlike most, this dashing apartment was on offer with all the furnishings; as Alesch joked, "empty it's 2.2—filled with stuff its 3.3. Thats 1.1 worth of sweet stuff. No shortage of lite contemporary drywall boxes at 1000 - 2000 a foot for most folks to buy, go get one before its too late!" Did sarcasm sell? Unclear: the listing was removed, yet again, in late October.

· The Legendary Albert Hadley Lists Much-Published NYC Flat [Curbed National]
· Kelly Wearstler's Toned-Down Estate Finally Hits the MLS [Curbed National]
· Live in the Former Digs of Legendary Decorator Sister Parrish [Curbed National]
· Designer Karim Rashid Lists Loft Full of His Own Designs [Curbed National]
· Flipping Out's Jeff Lewis Aims for Teeny Profit on L.A. Abode [Curbed National]
· Design Duo Roman and Williams Relist Their $3.3M NYC Loft [Curbed National]
· All Year in Curbed 2012 posts [Curbed National]

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