Historic Homes on Long Island: What Buyers Should Know Before Falling in Love With an Old House
Long Island historic homes have real charm and real complexity. Here’s what every buyer needs to know about landmarks, inspections, and hidden costs.
Long Island historic homes have real charm and real complexity. Here’s what every buyer needs to know about landmarks, inspections, and hidden costs.
The craftsmen who built Long Island’s Gold Coast estates brought rare trades from Europe and America’s workshops. Here’s what they built, how they built it, and what survives.
Inheritance taxes, carrying costs, and postwar subdivision pressure dismantled the Gold Coast. Here’s what happened to the estates that survived demolition — and what it means for North Shore real estate today.
Harbor Hill was demolished in 1947. More than two-thirds of Long Island’s Gold Coast estates are gone. What their loss tells us about wealth, maintenance costs, and what preservation actually requires.
It was built for horses. Now it has radiant heat and a waiting list of buyers. How Long Island’s converted carriage houses became the North Shore’s most coveted outbuildings.
Behind every Gold Coast mansion lies a second, parallel house. What the servant stair reveals about historic service wings — and how today’s luxury buyers now covet them.
As Gold Coast mansions fell to demolition or institutional conversion, their carriage houses survived — and now command prices that challenge the main house they once served.
Oheka Castle was stripped bare by vandals and abandoned for decades. Here’s the story of its restoration — and what it means for buyers who want historic North Shore properties.
The gardens are immaculate. The house is magnificent. But the real archaeology of Old Westbury is underground — in the systems that made effortless elegance possible.