Foreign Property News | Posted by Shwe Zin Win
Kate Moss lived inside this New York compound while dating Johnny Depp -- and now the assemblage is for sale.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group / WireImage Back in the 1990s — long before Kate Moss testified in support of Johnny Depp’s successful defamation case against Amber Heard — the supermodel, while dating the actor, lived in a fairy tale-style West Village carriage house that was, once upon a time, a theater.
That little house is part of a compound less than a block from Washington Square Park that also includes a charming 19th-century brick townhouse. Now both residences, at 112 Waverly Place, are on the market for $15.5 million.
Moss lived in the carriage house during the years she dated Depp, from 1994 to 1998, sources said.
Built in 1826, the Federal-style brick home is 22 feet wide. The assemblage comes with four rental homes total. All of the units have large windows, woodburning fireplaces and outdoor spaces. Original details include hardwood floors, mahogany molding, exposed brick and high ceilings.
(The property has been home to a number of creatives over the years — and with these interiors, it’s easy to see why.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(Features inside include massive ceiling heights and exposed brick.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(A close-up of the kitchen and dining area.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(The carriage house’s exterior.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(A bedroom.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
The skylit carriage house triplex — the fourth rental — is 1,800 square feet and features a mezzanine level. In the early 1900s, it served as the Little Theatre. It features 17-foot-high beamed ceilings, a woodburning fireplace, exposed brick, a copper ceiling in the kitchen and an outdoor terrace.
In the 6,321-square-foot townhouse, a ground-floor, garden-level duplex features a living area with a fireplace and oversize windows — while a second-floor unit includes two bedrooms, a kitchen, a living room and a bathroom. There’s also a duplex penthouse with a rooftop deck showcasing city views, including the Empire State Building. This main house has four bedrooms, and just as many fireplaces total.
This compound has long attracted creatives drawn to its architecture and “rustic village feel,” said a source familiar with the property. Other notable residents over the years who have called it home include the actors James Spader and Fisher Stevens, the painter Everett Shinn and the playwright Lorraine Hansberry, who wrote “A Raisin in the Sun” and was the first black playwright whose work was on Broadway.
(The main property’s exterior, seen from the street.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(A number of fireplaces adorn the interiors.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(Another view inside.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(A bedroom.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(Private outdoor space.Courtesy of The Corcoran Group)
(A lush outdoor roof hangout with views.Courtesy of The
Corcoran Group)
Hansberry also wrote the Tony-nominated play, “The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window,” which is currently on Broadway.
The listing brokers are Corcoran’s Randy Baruh and the Blumstein Team, the husband-and-wife duo of Meris and Kenny Blumstein.
Ref: Kate Moss and Johnny Depp’s former NYC love nest asks $15.5M (nypost)