The most talked-about style icon of 2026, Carolyn Bessette, was the ultimate 90s cool girl. Over 26 years since her tragic death, the publicist has found a new generation of admirers, thanks to FX/Hulu’s limited series: Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. & Carolyn Bessette. With the show comes a revival of intrigue about her life around New York City – starting, most prominently, with her homes.
Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy grew up primarily in Greenwich, Connecticut, an affluent suburban town just outside NYC. However, her urban property portfolio began in the late 1980s, when she moved to Lower Manhattan to work at Calvin Klein. From there, her footprint around the city expanded to Greenwich Village and, later, TriBeCa, with John F. Kennedy Jr.
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John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette Kennedy standing in front of their apartment in TriBeCa on October 6th, 1996.
(Image credit: Jon Naso/NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
Where Did Carolyn Bessette Live in NYC?
Carolyn began her NYC chapter in Lower Manhattan. Her first home was a ‘modest’ East Village apartment on Second Avenue, a small doorman building that offered a downtown grit and urban charm. She lived there while starting her career as a publicist at Calvin Klein.
By the mid-1990s, she had moved to a stylish Greenwich Village address on Waverly Place, joining an artsy, fashion-minded enclave. As paparazzi attention increased, she often stayed temporarily with friends in the West Village. These early homes, pared-back yet carefully curated, hinted at the minimalist sensibility that would become her signature.
After meeting John F. Kennedy Jr. in 1992 and becoming engaged in 1995, Carolyn moved into their Tribeca loft, the home they would share until 1999.
JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette Kennedy returning to their apartment after an evening out on March 9th, 1999.
(Image credit: Arnaldo Magnani/Liaison via GettyImages)
The couple’s TriBeCa apartment was the most famous of Carolyn’s homes and is remembered as the only home they shared during their relationship. It’s believed that the top-floor industrial apartment reflected her minimalist sensibility, with clean lines, neutral tones, and a carefully curated, understated aesthetic. A reconstruction from the Love Story set (below), imagine it as a trove of 90s design trends, including a forgotten staple of the decade: Glass bricks.
The kitchen from JFK Jr.’s Tribeca loft in FX’s ‘Love Story’ featuring a glass brick wall.
(Image credit: Courtesy of FX Networks and Hulu)
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Light-filled and uncluttered, the space was said to have offered a quiet refuge from the media frenzy surrounding the couple.
Carolyn and JFK Jr. walk to the subway after leaving their loft on October 10th, 1996.
(Image credit: Allan Tannenbaum via Getty Images)
It remained their home until their death in July 1999, when a plane crash off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard claimed the lives of Carolyn, John, and her sister Lauren Bessette.
Though her life was tragically short, Carolyn’s taste and restraint continue to influence style lovers, especially in this new dawn of appreciation for her taste. From her early Lower Manhattan apartments to the iconic TriBeCa loft, she demonstrated that minimalism can be effortlessly chic, timeless, and always personal.