Real Estate

Modernist homes in upstate NY

1 of 6
043_fenimore_rd–500×380.jpg
This Paul Rudolph-designed, seven-bedroom house in Larchmont, built in 1954, is on the market for $2.488 million. Agents: Katie McLoughlin, Houlihan Lawrence, 914-522-3521 and Holly Mellstrom, McClellan Sotheby’s, 914-738-5150
2 of 6
048_pleasantville–500×380.jpg
PLEASANTVILLE 3-BR, $690,000 Tobias Goldstone originally designed this 4,000-square-foot residence, built in 1955, and Aaron Resnick worked on an addition in the 1980s. The house includes three baths, a walk-out playroom, a laundry room, two stone fireplaces, vaulted ceilings, walls of glass, two flagstone patios and a wraparound deck. It’s set on a 1.25-acre plot. Agent: Helene Miller, Prudential Holmes & Kennedy, 914-238-3988
3 of 6
048_bedford_corners–500×380.jpg
BEDFORD CORNERS 5-BR, $1,275,000 This 1965 hillside house, designed by Matthew J. Warshauer (and known as the Sachs Residence after its first owners), measures 5,100 square feet and sits on over 4 acres of land. It has 4½ baths, an eat-in kitchen, three stone fireplaces and an au pair suite with a separate entrance. The home also comes with lake rights. Agent: Todd Goddard, Houlihan Lawrence, 914-406-0588
4 of 6
049_harrison–500×380.jpg
HARRISON 4-BR, $1,599,999 Edgar Tafel, a disciple of Frank Lloyd Wright, designed this home, which was built on a 1.92-acre lot in 1956. The three-story, 3,850-square-foot house includes five baths, skylights, an updated kitchen, brick patios and a swimming pool. Agent: Marcia Rogull, Julia B. Fee Sotheby’s, 914-325-3618
5 of 6
049_goddard_mandolene–500×380.jpg
MOD MEN: Todd Goddard (left), a Houlihan Lawrence broker who specializes in Modernist houses, and his partner, Andrew Mandolene, purchased this Arthur Witthoefft-designed house in Armonk about two years ago. The home won an AIA First Honor Award in 1962. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Freelance
6 of 6
049_wright–500×380.jpg
FRANKLY, MY DEAR: The master himself, Frank Lloyd Wright, designed this 1951 “Usonian” house on what came to be known as Usonia Road, the heart of this Pleasantville community of Modernist architecture. The home is known as the Reisley House because it was built by physicist Roland Reisley, who has lived in the residence for nearly 60 years. Lorenzo Ciniglio/Freelance