A converted firehouse in Manhattan’s West Village with an underground jazz club has been sold for $19 million.
The 25-foot wide brick home on Morton Street was built as a firehouse in 1864 and retains its generous proportions, steel-framed windows and a spiral staircase that spans three floors. The home totals 7,281 square feet across five levels, with more than 2,000 square feet of outdoor space, split fairly evenly between a back garden and a rooftop terrace.
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The station was built for the “Howard Engine Company No. 34,” a volunteer firefighting unit that was eventually absorbed by the Fire Department of New York, according to the Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation. It was decommissioned in the 1970s and stood vacant for decades until it was converted to a single-family residence in 2012.
The seller, who purchased the property in 2020 for $19.92 million, gave the home a full makeover with original art, mirror installations, a custom kitchen featuring kaleidoscope cabinetry, and an underground speakeasy with an attached stage, according to the listing with Jeremy Stein and Kat Trappe of Sotheby’s International Realty.
The home also has a dining room with 26-foot ceilings, two bedrooms in addition to the primary suite and a fire engine-sized garage that can double as a gallery. A glass-paneled wall divides the kitchen from the garden, making al fresco dining simple, and the secondary bedroom on the top floor has access to a private terrace as well as the rooftop.
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The townhouse came to the market in April for $21 million and went into contract in October at its final asking price of $19 million, slightly below what the sellers paid for it. They could not be identified.
The buyer was an LLC with a Madison Square Park Tower address, according to property records. The deal closed Friday.