![]() The new listing mentions a gut renovation, and the photos show an apartment with more luxurious features than the original listing had: herringbone floors versus standard hardwood ones, full-on landscaping and brick pavers versus a terrace with potted plants, a kitchen with a Lacanche range and North Star fridge compared to the previous stainless-steel appliances and granite countertop. He wouldn’t say who bought it, but apparently they did some work. The current and former listing broker, Nick Gavin of Compass, said that there were multiple bids at the time and that it went for over ask. Back then it was asking $3.5 million - a third of its current listing price. Fixing up old things was something Shrady did often: “He never saw an old wreck of a house or boat or car that he didn’t love,” his wife wrote in his obituary. Besides being actually on top of the building, it’s rather grand in its own way - with a double-height living room in the duplex, the cottage, and a landscaped rooftop surrounding it that, at least from the listing photos, resembles something you might find in Martha’s Vineyard. While penthouse creep is a real phenomenon, with third- and fourth-floor walk-ups being marketed as such, this one lives up to the name. The last owner - Shrady’s widow - said her son lived in the cottage through college and it was rented out thereafter. ![]() The downstairs neighbor told the paper that Shrady bought the building in a decrepit and vacant state back in the 1980s, renovated it, and kept the top two floors for himself along with building the Cape Cod–style cottage on the top. It’s an unusual real-estate package dreamed up by the late Henry Merwin Shrady III, a sculptor, artist, and “neighborhood improvement activist,” according to the New York Post, which wrote about the place when Shrady’s widow first listed it back in 2017. Together the properties add up to some 3,000 square feet. The listing at 72 East 1st Street is really a two-for-one the cottage is a stand-alone studio with a kitchenette and full bathroom, but the sale also includes the top two floors of the building, a duplex with two wood-burning fireplaces (and a third gas fireplace). ![]() Except, that is, for a Cape Cod–style shingled cottage atop a red-brick building on the corner of 1st Street and First Avenue, which has just returned to the market for $9.75 million. The East Village’s gritty bohemian charm has little in common with coastal New England delights. Penthouse publishes 6 issues per year, but reserves the right to change the number of issues in an annual term, including discontinuing any format and substituting and/or modifying the manner in which the subscription is distributed.The landscaped rooftop with the cottage, as shown in the listing photo, is part of an unusual property that also includes an apartment on the top two floors of the building. Other male indulgences like great scotch or premium cigars are frequent topics of discussion, as are hunting, fast cars, and sports. Full Frontal, a monthly featured column, covers entertainment including gaming and movies. Buying guides help you find the best electronics, toys, and man-themed gifts. Men will also find technology and fashion well-covered throughout each month's issue. Penthouse magazine is not all about sex, though. Other articles include interviews with Penthouse Pets, longer articles about sex-themed topics like sex museums and the BDSM world, and sexual adventure stories. A centerfold and accompanying pictorial features that month's Penthouse Pet. Several explicit pictorials run every month, some focusing on a specific model and others featuring several models around a theme like women with all-natural bodies or women from the military. The famous Penthouse Forum, which publishes explicit letters from readers, is still a monthly feature. In the 1990s, it went through a change to a harder-core format, but since 2005 has come back to its roots of soft-core pornography and erotica.Ĭolumns in Penthouse magazine feature lots of sexually-explicit content and pictures of women designed to delight men. Penthouse magazine has entertained men since 1965 with its pictures of beautiful, scantily-clad (if at all) women and hot articles.
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