Irish comedian Graham Norton recalls that he examined Manhattan’s real estate listings a couple of decades ago and was beaten by the photos of a charming garage located in a small meow in Murray Hill.
The house, in 6 sniffen Court, which later learned that the model Claudia Schiffer was sold by the model Claudia Schiffer, where she lived and worked at that time. “I couldn’t stop thinking about that,” said Mr. Norton, who receives “the Graham Norton program” at the BBC, in an email, “and finally gave up and flew about to see it.”
Upon arrival, he showed other properties in the city, he said, “but none of them captured my heart of the way the court resolved.
Mr. Norton bought the house of the mid-nineteenth century in 2002 and used it as a Pied-à-terre, except for a period of letter, in 2004, when I was in New York organizing the “Ny Graham Norton” interview program. He is a hero on the property and recently completed an intestinal renewal, thinking that one day he could retire in New York. But the plans changed, he said, after marrying Jono Mcleod, a Scottish filmmaker, in 2022.
The house is now back in the market for $ 5,595 million, according to the listing corridor, Chris Kann of the Corcoran group. Property taxes are $ 40,156 per year, and annual fees paid to a resident association are $ 1,800.
The house is part of the historical district of Sniffen Court, right next to East 36th Street, near Third Avenue. It is one of the 10 brick carriage houses, previously stable of horses, built between 1863 and 1864. Private stone maullids had been the home of composer Cole Porter and musician Lenny Kravitz.
“I don’t think many people know about this little Maullide,” Kann said. “When passing through the entrance door, it attracts you immediately to another moment. It is, with much, one of the most charming and picturesque environments that one can experience in New York City. It is very European.”
Three floors of height and around 20 feet wide, Mr. Norton’s house, in an early Romanesque Renaissance style, has approximately 2,500 square feet and has a rampptop cover that measures approximately 465 square feet. There are two bedrooms and two middle bathrooms. However, the interior space there are wooden floors and restored crown moldings and sockets.
The interior was updated by John and Christine Gachot, the husband and wife who directs Gachot Studios.
The front of the house is opened to the great room of 17 by 19 feet, where there are 15 feet ceilings and a row of trifor windows that bring an abundance of light. On a wall, there are seats just below a large image window, and in another, a made of made wood or lilac stone.
Beyond the Great Room There is a library with an area of bar and shelves and cabinets incorporated, along with a formal dining room adorned in red and with an Andy Warhol print of actress Jane Fonda. The nearby kitchen with windows is equipped with stainless steel countertops and splashes, green wooden cabinets and a narrow breakfast bar. The lower level also includes a dressing table with a personalized dressing table in Emerald Quartcita.
The stairs in the large room lead to the second floor, where there is a large guest bedroom with a bathroom and suite bathroom.
The main bedroom suite, with a marble bath and a lot of space in the closet, is at the upper level. Includes a house den/office with a skylight outside the sleeping area and a morning bar/kitchen with window banquet seats. A set of stairs is directed to the irrigated roof deck lined with coverage plants and in a pot. There are carved to rest, eat and entertain.
“It is a great house to entertain yourself with the terrace of the ceiling for the summer and the chimney that works in winter,” Norton said. “There are many legs of legs, large and small, over the years.”
Mr. Norton will miss the house of carriages, which calls “a jeweler.”
“I love the ceilings of the living room and I adore the small den,” he said. “To be honest, I love everything equally.”
He and her husband would ever consider another place in New York? “London is still where my job is and where we spend most of our time,” Norton said. “Never say, but that’s not the current plan.”