
"What appears to be the estate of the late Pop artist Allan D'Arcangelo comes with a primary residence - a lovely, lived-in three-bedroom farmhouse - two barns, three tiny homes, and a greenhouse spread out over 92 acres. In the 2,600-square-foot main house, there are three baths, three bedrooms, and an open chef's kitchen with tin ceilings and terra-cotta tiles I would leave as is, personally. There's also a wood-burning stove. As for the rest of the property, the painting barn is a standout, but the extra little houses are ideal for guests or an artist's residency or two."
""NEVER BEFORE ON THE MARKET!" reads the write-up for this two-bedroom in Rochester. "A MODERN MASTERPIECE DESIGNED BY ARCHITECT CHARLES LEWIS FOR CURRENT OWNERS." The place was built in 1976 and the owners seem to have left well enough alone in the years since - thank God. It's an airy little midcentury number with double-height ceilings in the open living room, walls of windows, and wood finishes throughout."
Two commuter-accessible upstate New York properties are presented: a 92-acre former Pop artist estate in Kenoza Lake listed at $1,395,000, and a modernist Rochester cube priced at $459,000. The Kenoza Lake property includes a 2,600-square-foot three-bedroom farmhouse with three baths, an open chef's kitchen with tin ceilings and terra-cotta tiles, a wood-burning stove, two barns, three tiny homes, a greenhouse, and a painting barn. The Rochester home, built in 1976 by architect Charles Lewis, offers two bedrooms, three baths, double-height ceilings, walls of windows, and original wood finishes, with the living-room carpet likely needing replacement. Commute from Kenoza Lake is about a two-and-a-half-hour drive.
Read at Curbed
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]