If you have a hankering for ’80s pop culture, the Christmas Story house isn’t your only option: The Astoria, Oregon, home showcased in Steven Spielberg’s 1985 classic The Goonies has just hit the market for $1.65 million.
Astoria still holds a Goonies Day celebration every June 7, so the buyer “has to be someone who appreciates…the history of this movie and this beautiful town,” listing agent Jordan Miller told KOIN-TV.
Constructed in 1896, the two-story abode offers a wraparound porch, white wood siding and breathtaking views of the Pacific Ocean.
Ivana Trump’s lavish NYC town house asking $26.5 million
Four months after her passing, Ivana Trump’s glitzy Lenox Hill town house is on the market for $26.5 million.
Dating from 1879, the six-story residence has five bedrooms and five full baths, plus over-the-top flourishes like crystal chandeliers, pink onyx bathrooms, a leopard-print office, a Swedish sauna, and a Versailles-inspired dining room that overlooks the private courtyard.
She bought the house for $2.5 million in 1992, the same year her divorce from Donald Trump was finalized. The space had previously served as a dentist’s office and required extensive renovation.
Today, the home is “designed for luxurious living and the highest-caliber entertaining,” according to the listing, shared by J. Roger Erickson of Douglas Elliman and Modlin Group’s Adam Modlin.
Duke lived there from 2007 to 2009, when he sold the house to the current owner.
Related Companies has officially opened Coterie Hudson Yards, its first senior residence in New York City. Designed by Handel Architects, Coterie is home to 126 individual assisted-living and memory-care units, as well as a private medical facility with an on-site emergency room. The ratio of residents to employees will be nearly one-to-one, with concierge medical service provided by Sollis Health.
The pair’s goal, Elliot March said in a statement, was to create a space that mirrored “the most distinguished five-star hotels.”
A San Francisco sibling, Coterie Cathedral Hill, welcomed residents earlier this year. Two additional West Coast locations—in Santa Clara and Cupertino—are on track to open by 2025.
Pricing at Coterie Hudson Yards starts at $11,100 per month for a studio ($15,000 per month for a memory-care residence), $15,600 for a one-bedroom, and $25,500 for a two-bedroom.
Austin supertall could be Texas’s tallest
Plans have been shared for a residential tower in downtown Austin that could become the tallest building in Texas.
Construction on Wilson Tower, a multifamily high-rise at the former site of Avenue Lofts on Fifth Street, is expected to start in 2023. The 80-story building will house 450 apartments and reach a breathtaking 1,035 feet.
That’s taller than the current record holder—Houston’s 1,002-foot JPMorgan Chase Tower—and would also overshadow Waterline, the 1,022-foot-tall mixed-use skyscraper under construction on Austin’s Red River Street.
Wilson Capital president Taylor Wilson told the Austin Business Journal his company “did not set out to be the tallest tower.” In fact, earlier blueprints had the building laid out at just 54 stories.
“The tower you see today is the most efficient building design we explored that met program requirements and complied with site restrictions,” Wilson says.
Wilson Tower residences will range from studios to three- and four-bedroom penthouses, with four full floors of amenities—including a pool deck, movie theater, cocktail lounge, pet spa, and coworking space—and restaurants and retail on the street level.
The Tribeca concept space by ASH Staging
ASH Staging unveils concept space and Upper West Side model residence
ASH Staging has opened its first New York City concept space. The spacious three-bedroom Tribeca loft gives Andrew Bowen and his team free rein “to create a fully immersive, layered, and sensory environment,” according to a release.
Last year, ASH opened a similar concept home in Los Angeles’s Hollywood Hills—one with its own tarot-card reading room.
In the Tribeca space, the centerpiece is a 1970s Italian travertine marble coffee table in the living room that’s flanked by Milo Baughman Cube Chairs, Senufo stools from West Africa, and a steel-and-Naugahyde Quebec 69 Spider Chair from Les Industries Amisco.
A nude oil-on-canvas room divider in the corner completes the enveloping conversation space.
This content was originally published here.