House for sale the Berkshires

 

Berkshires Real Estate

Cheshire MA Rental

Lee MA

Lenox Condos

Victorian House for sale in NY

Local Lodging

Berkshire MA Inns

Home buying articles

 


House is for sale

 

Berkshire-realestate.com


Victorian House for Sale in NY
New Baltimore, New York

"PAINTED LADY"

5 minute walk from the Hudson River, 17 miles south of downtown Albany, NY

Three-story, 3300 square feet, 18 rooms. One full bath, 2 halves. Currently two bedrooms, but a couple other rooms could be bedrooms --- and there is the whole third floor to be redone if you want to --- 7 rooms currently as unheated storage. Full basement under most of the house. On half an acre, additional adjacent acre available.

Now, here is the real scoop: This is an 1874 or thereabouts Victorian, probably the manor house of the small hamlet of New Baltimore in those days. In 1988 it was in great disrepair. Current owners saved the building and did a great deal of work, always with an eye to period feel.
The bottom line is, this house is habitable, still has work to be done. THE BIG, EXPENSIVE PARTS OF THE RESTORATION HAVE BEEN DONE. This includes repair or rebuilding of foundation, roof, mansard, entire south side. Hot water radiator system, electricity, insulation, plumbing, all modern installation. First two storeys are finished inside.

WHAT HAS BEEN DONE:
Foundation and sills have been completely rebuilt and restored where needed. On the north side of the house, a 20-foot section of the stone foundation was on the ground, with the house sagging accordingly. This was jacked back up and rebuilt in stonework by a master mason. He continued around the basement and house, rebuilding or reappointing as needed. The forest of jacks were all able to be removed.

The south side of the house had been stripped down to the sheathing. Frame rebuilt, new plywood sheathing applied and finished with tyvek and cedar clapboard.

The mansard and "Philadelphia gutter" were repaired or rebuilt as needed. Dormers were flashed and covered with roofing rubber, mansard finished in hand-shaped, stained cedar shingles, gutters lined with rubber. The roof itself was redone in 2005. About half the sheathing was replaced, the rest turned and trimmed, and the surface is Whatchacallit. Top of chimney was rebuilt.

House was wired, plumbed, and hot water old style radiator system installed. Most of the plaster walls were decayed and had to be replaced with sheet rock. Three original plaster medallions remain, and an ornate, large mirror with marble shelf remains in the parlor.

First two floors are finished and decorated. Floors are wide board. Kitchen was gutted from crawlspace to ceiling joists. New floor is wood from a barn bunkhouse. Ceiling is antique tin. Stove sits in a large dutch oven with added brick facade (same mason). One counter is a church pew, the other granite. Window over the granite is a Victorian storm door insert. Cabinets were salvage and after 100 hours of sanding off a dark stain, proved to be book-matched pecan (or something --- no two observers agree).

There is a full bath on the second floor, also a half-bath. A half-bath was added under the stairs in the ground floor center hall.

The entire north side of the ground floor is the "Ballroom," 13' x 32'.

WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE:

Some of the exterior is ready for repainting. You will want to improve the gutters, but they do not leak into the house. Downspouts need to be added. The front porch roof wants to be repaired. You could rebuild it entirely, but that is not necessary.

There are places, mostly on the back of the house, needing finishing --- soffits, trim, window woodwork. Some of the old scrollwork remains, much could be replaced if you want to continue in the spirit of restoration.

Third floor is currently unfinished, unheated storage. There are seven more rooms up there if you want to expand your living space. You'd want to gut it, sheet rock, refinish floors, and so forth. Current owners planned an extensive master suite on the third floor, and access has been left to get the plumbing and wiring up from the basement.

Actual move-in things needing to be done are replacement of the faucets in the bathroom sink [the old ones worked fine but some misguided realtor thought they should be replaced.....new ones don't work so good!], and whatever you want to do about a shower. Current owners installed a footed tub with shower curtain and a tub spigot that can switch water up to the shower head. After 15 years the spigot wore out, and was replaced with a used one from the Historic Albany warehouse --- which also wore out. You can buy such a rig new for too much money, or plumb in another set of nice copper pipes with separate faucets for the shower.

 

The house is being presented on half an acre, including an orchard of a dozen antique variety apple trees and a GOOD pie cherry tree. There is a copse providing privacy beyond the orchard.

AN ADJACENT ACRE IS OFFERED FOR ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATION. This amounts to two possible building lots within the hamlet --- "downtown" New Baltimore. That will be valuable in the future, or will provide for your space and privacy. The additional land goes through to the street behind, where, for instance, a garage could be built.

If you are ambitious about this sort of thing, you could have a tennis court and 4-car garage, and the entire property could be a park. At a minimum, you have a lot of buffer space.

Current heat is oil. You want to think about switching to wood or corn! Electric water heater.

williamstown, MA home
 
 

 

 
Berkshires Real Estate - Cheshire MA Rental - Lee MA - Lenox MA Condos
Berkshire MA Inns - Putnum County NY Rental - Berkshires House for sale



Copyright 2007 Berkshires-RealEstate.com, All rights reserved

Please bookmark this site for easy return
and information on western MA, real estate and vacation rentals.