A Real-Estate Heir’s Beekman Place Duplex
Beekman Place is just two blocks long — squeezed between the United Nations and Sutton Place, perched over FDR Drive and the East River. River views are endless, and through traffic doesn’t come — a combination that has drawn celebrities, including Irving Berlin and Greta Garbo, and Gloria Vanderbilt and William Paley, whose townhouse sold last year for $27.5 million. The novel Auntie Mame imagines the aunt living at the most glamorous address imaginable in 1955: the fictional 3 Beekman Place.
By Adriane Quinlan, an Emmy Award–winning Curbed writer
Everything in the apartment is either an antique or custom-made. John Landrum Bryant designed the newel post (far left) to resemble stacked green umbrellas — a symbol of royal honor that he designed after “the late King of Thailand, whom I admired and with whom I shared a tailor,” he wrote.
Details
Price: | $5.75 million ($11,238 monthly maintenance fee) |
Specs: | 5 beds, 3.5 bathrooms |
Extras: | Private courtyard, private entrance, private elevator, dining room, home office, two foyers, four walk-in closets, laundry room, pantry, chef’s kitchen with dining area. |
10-minute walking radius: | The River Club of New York, U.N. Plaza Grill, Japan Society |
Listed by: | Linda Sebastian at Starling Realty, Craig Roth at NextStopNY Real Estate |
Beekman Place is just two blocks long — squeezed between the United Nations and Sutton Place, perched over FDR Drive and the East River. River views are endless, and through traffic doesn’t come — a combination that has drawn celebrities, including Irving Berlin and Greta Garbo, and Gloria Vanderbilt and William Paley, whose townhouse sold last year for $27.5 million. The novel Auntie Mame imagines the aunt living at the most glamorous address imaginable in 1955: the fictional 3 Beekman Place.
Today, the most prestigious, old-money building on the block is 1 Beekman Place, a 17-story, white-glove co-op with only 39 units. It was built in 1929 when the architects of Rockefeller Center, financed with Rockefeller money, replaced an empty lot with a brick tower, designed around river views. (The project was headed by a Rockefeller son-in-law, who took a triplex.) Amenities included a pool, tennis court, and a tearoom on a terrace; the typical unit was a duplex with views on four sides. There was no financing allowed; there still isn’t. Original tenants included a senator’s widow and a son of Teddy Roosevelt, followed by diplomats and heirs — like the A&P scion Huntington Hartford II, whose 1991 biography is titled Squandered Fortune.
Patricia Bauman and John Landrum Bryant in 2011. Photo: Amy Sussman/Getty/NRDC
In 2007, the building drew another heir, Patricia Bauman. Her father was a real-estate investor who owned what was once the St. John’s Terminal, now Google’s New York headquarters. He left behind a foundation that gives $6 million in grants every year to address economic inequality and social-justice issues. Patricia, who had a law degree from Georgetown, led the foundation for 35 years, juggling that work with seats on the boards of the National Resources Defense Council and the Brennan Center for Justice. But she also had an early career studying art history and working at MoMA. And in her 40s, she married John Landrum Bryant, a jewelry and furniture designer who ran a gallery on East 57th Street with a niche selling cast-bronze faucets and sconces that resembled animal heads. His range encompasses anything fabulous and fun, including gem-encrusted earrings resembling computer chips, an Art Deco armchair upholstered in python, and a coffee table whose surface shows a diorama of gold-colored waves. Clients included socialites in Bauman’s set, like Sweet’N Low heiress Barbara Tober. (Bryant, who sometimes attends events in a royal sash, signs emails as Prince John, a title he has claimed derives from Monteagudo, a town in Spain.) Bryant eventually helped Bauman grow a collection that included old European masters and enough art from China to fill an actual book.
An office upstairs looks out over the East River. The standing lamp against the window (right) is one of the animal-inspired decorative items that Bryant became known for. The walls are hung with Asian art.
The pair bought a duplex at 1 Beekman Place for $7.1 million with plans to install a jade fireplace and turn the apartment into a “showcase” for a collection of bronze animals from prewar France and Japanese art from the Meiji era, as Bryant told the New York Observer. The double-height, 42-foot-wide-foot living room was grand enough to display tenth-century solid-gold regalia from the Liao dynasty. But the centerpiece was the first piece that Bryant made for their home and the last to be installed: an eight-foot-long ellipse-shaped glass sculpture, lit from behind, that showed what he described as “water creatures cavorting in the waves.” “I set myself a goal that anything in the apartment was either an antique or a piece created and designed by me,” Bryant wrote in an email. What he created stands out from staid traditional décor in other units upstairs — like a $6.25 million four-bedroom listed with plush settees and impressionist art, or a $3.999 million three-bed with a floral bedroom and a stuffy, wood-paneled library.
Bauman died this spring, leaving behind a home that, thanks to her husband’s taste, is more Auntie Mame than William Paley. Bryant’s broker, Linda Sebastian, says the apartment is set up for grand parties with an oversize chef’s kitchen and an immense, double-height living area that can fit up to 150 people — and has. “They were a very opulent couple,” she said.
Still, Bryant remembered how they typically spent evenings reading — anything else would disturb a pair of Caique parrots that Bryant said were put to bed by singing the lyrics to military taps (“Day is done. Gone is the sun. Sleep well”). Upstairs, the couple slept under the watch of a sculpture of a Baku — a mythical Japanese creature said to eat nightmares. Their bed, with ear-shaped side tables, was nicknamed “the elephant bed.” As Prince John remembered, “We had a life together of fantasy and fun.”
The entry foyer. The couple moved here from an apartment at the Ritz Tower at 465 Park Avenue — a one-bedroom that gradually devoured two neighboring units. As Bryant remembered in an email, there was never enough storage, and when Patricia sang a “Cantata of Inadequate Closet Space in Manhattan Apartments” to a friend, she was pointed to a listing at 1 Beekman Place.
The couple collected Chinese art, and sculptures on either side of the fireplace are from the Tang dynasty. A vintage folding screen connects the space with the second floor and is decorated with the writing of a 19th-century Japanese poet.
Bryant had particular difficulty sourcing an antique rug big enough for the 42-by-24-foot living area. At its center, he designed an elliptical table that was painted by hand and left to oxidize. On one side of this great room is a library where they kept Caique parrots in an oversize cage; on the other is a formal dining room that leads to a chef’s kitchen.
The primary bedroom contains a bed modeled after an elephant — with the ears forming side tables. “We’ve been to Africa a few times,” Patricia Bauman told a reporter. “We snorkel a lot, and one of the things our foundation supports is an elephant sanctuary.” The window looks over the East River, and any sounds of traffic on the FDR sounded to Bryant “like gentle tide hitting the shore,” he wrote.
The couple’s art collection even made it into the bathroom. The figure riding a fish is by Andre Blaise.