The Fifth Avenue mansion was built during the Gilded Age but has been fully restored for a "21st-century lifestyle."
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
A Fifth Avenue mansion built during the Gilded Age just sold for $46 million.
The 11-bedroom, 10-bathroom home features ornate details and original features.
The mansion was designed by architect Stanford White and spans over 16,000 square feet.
One of the last remaining Gilded Age mansions in New York CityΒ was just snapped up for $46 million.
The 16,000-square-foot home β the only fully restored Stanford White-designed mansion on Fifth Avenue β has seven levels and looks out over Central Park and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The home was reportedly initially listed for $80 million in 2021. After multiple price reductions, it was relisted for $49.9 million by the Corcoran Group in February, and the property sold earlier this month for $46 million, city records show.
A representative for Corcoran told Business Insider earlier this year that $300,000 in new upgrades was spent in preparation to list the property "to enhance the current owners' $15 million renovation after their purchase of the mansion in 2012."
Not much is known about the new owner, but sources told The New York Post that it's a finance-industry family from outside New York.
Take a look inside this historic Gilded Age mansion.
The Fifth Avenue mansion "embodies the height of Beaux-Arts design and old-world European craftsmanship," according to its listing.
The front facade of the Gilded Age home.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
The home is located near the corner of Fifth Avenue and 79th Street in Manhattan. It occupies 25 feet of prestigious Fifth Avenue real estate.
Henry H. Cook, the original commissioner of the building, hired the architectural firm of McKim, Mead, and White to lead the project.
Construction on the building began in 1902 and was completed in 1907, two years after Cook's death in 1905.
There are only a few Beaux-Arts-style mansions still remaining in New York City.
Key characteristics of Beaux-Arts architecture, which was popular in the US in the late 19th century and early 20th century, include "a focus on symmetry," classical features like columns or pediments, and "highly decorative surfaces," such as carved doorways and crown molding, according to the Chicago Architecture Center.
The historic home was designed by Gilded Age architect Stanford White.
Architect Stanford White and Evelyn Nesbit.
Bettmann/Getty Images
White is one of the most famous architects in history. He is known for his style inspired by the Italian Renaissance and is one of the most famous architects to emerge from the Gilded Age in Manhattan.
He is also famous for his death, which was shrouded in scandal.
On the night of June 25, 1906, Pittsburgh millionaire Henry Shaw shot and killed White at Madison Square Garden because of a prior relationship between White and Thaw's wife, chorus girl Evelyn Nesbit, the National Park Service reported. Nesbit was just 16 when she met White.
White was 52 when he died, and much of his architectural legacy was tainted by the scandal in the years after his death.
However, he is now recognized as one of the most influential architects of the early 20th century.
The home is the only fully restored Stanford White-designed mansion on Fifth Avenue.
The mansion's limestone flooring and fireplaces have been restored to their original grandeur.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
In the decades following the Gilded Age β and amid financial challenges and changing tastes and values β many of the largest mansions in New York City were torn down or repurposed.
Corcoran's Andres Perea-Garzon β who listed the property with Carrie Chiang and Lesley Schulhof, also of the Corcoran Group β told Mansion Global that the home is one of only five mansions designed by Stanford White still in existence in New York City.
The floorplan has been updated from White's original design but retains many of his choices.
After its previous owners purchased it in 2012, the home underwent a multi-year restoration project.
The home has been updated to attract a modern buyer.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
The renovated morning kitchen, pictured above, has a Carrara marble waterfall island that reflects more modern trends.
The home has also been updated to reflect 21st-century living, with upgrades like a "modernized" elevator and nine restored wood-burning fireplaces, per the listing.
It was transformed into an entertainer's paradise.
The dining room features a marble fireplace.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
The home has five separate kitchens, including a family kitchen, a chef's kitchen, a butler's pantry, a staff kitchen, and a serving kitchen.
The scullery and butler's pantry also each have a dumbwaiter to accommodate service across the entertaining levels.
Despite the upgrades, the home has retained its Gilded Age grandeur.
The limestone staircase has been fully restored.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
Many of the home's most impressive features, including its limestone flooring and staircase with a wrought-iron railing, have been restored to their original condition.
The primary bedrooms have dressing areas and en-suite bathrooms.
The mansion has 11 bedrooms and 10 bathrooms.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
The mansion, which spans over 16,000 square feet and has 11 bedrooms, seven full bathrooms, and three half-baths, was cut from its original price of $80 million in 2021, The New York Post reported.
The home's details include French stained-glass windows and marble fireplaces.
The home is filled with original details and luxurious new additions.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
Inside the home's double grand parlors, there are 16-foot-high ceilings fitted with wooden beams as well as hand-carved marble fireplaces, according to the listing.
One living space features crown molding and floor-to-ceiling windows.
This parlor features a working fireplace and floor-to-ceiling windows.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
The home embodies upper-crust living with a climate-controlled wine cellar, a steam room, a linen room, and a silver and jewelry vault.
The mansion has also undergone more practical upgrades.
The home has a new HVAC system to service its seven floors.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
Every room across its seven floors has a separate HVAC zone, per the listing. Humidifiers and a water purification system were also added.
The home was marketed as a single-family home but the listing noted it could also be repurposed into an art gallery.
The home currently functions as a single-family residence.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
The listing states that the home can be used as a private residence, an embassy or mission, a nonprofit foundation office with a limit of 50 employees, or a non-commercial art gallery.
One of the home's most jaw-dropping features is its views of Central Park and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The home has sweeping views of Central Park.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
The home is located on Cook Block, a zoning district that restricts buildings to six stories or fewer for a full city block. This prevents new construction from restricting the home's sweeping views.
The mansion also has a private courtyard for indoor-outdoor living.
The private courtyard overlooks the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Will Ellis/DDReps for Corcoran
"As one of the last private mansions of its kind, 973 Fifth Avenue is an irreplaceable masterpiece, fully restored to its original grandeur while discreetly integrating modern luxury at the highest standard," the listing read.
Alexander Nesbitt β The Preservation Society of Newport County
Marble House was completed in 1892 as a summer home for William K. Vanderbilt and Alva Vanderbilt.
Built with half a million cubic feet of marble, it features 50 rooms and spans 140,000 square feet.
Scenes from the HBO show "The Gilded Age" were filmed in the historic Rhode Island home.
Alva Vanderbilt's 39th birthday present from her husband was a 140,000-square-foot summer "cottage" on the shores of Newport, Rhode Island.
As heir to the Vanderbilt family fortune during the Gilded Age, William K. Vanderbilt spared no expense in building Marble House for his wife. It was designed by Richard Morris Hunt, the same architect who worked on The Breakers, another expansive Newport mansion. Construction cost around $11 million in 1892, or about $387 million in today's dollars. The home's 500,000 cubic feet of marble alone cost about $7 million, or around $246 million today.
The marriage didn't last, but Marble House remained in her possession after their divorce. In addition to throwing extravagant balls and dinner parties, Alva Vanderbilt also hosted women's suffrage rallies on the property and leveraged her wealth to champion the cause. She even wrote the libretto for an operetta about women's suffrage, which was performed at New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in 1915.
In recent years, the HBO show "The Gilded Age" has used Marble House as a film set.
I visited the expansive home in August 2024. Take a look inside this historic Newport mansion.
Completed in 1892, Marble House is a 50-room, 140,000-square-foot summer home that belonged to William K. Vanderbilt and Alva Vanderbilt.
Marble House.
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The Preservation Society of Newport Country acquired the home in 1963 and turned it into a museum open to the public. Self-guided tours cost $25 per adult ticket and can be purchased on the Preservation Society's official website.
During the winter months, the mansion is only open to the public on Saturdays and Sundays, with daily tours restarting in mid-February.
William K. Vanderbilt gifted the home to Alva Vanderbilt for her 39th birthday.
William K. Vanderbilt and Alva Vanderbilt.
NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images
William K. Vanderbilt was Cornelius Vanderbilt's grandson and heir to the family's railroad and steamship fortune during the Gilded Age. Alva Vanderbilt was a popular hostess in Newport.
When Alva Vanderbilt divorced her husband in 1895, she survived the scandal and kept Marble House and custody of their three children, Consuelo, William Kissam Jr., and Harold Stirling. She then married one of her neighbors in Newport, a financier named Oliver H.P. Belmont, in 1896.
After Belmont died in 1908, she became a leader in the women's suffrage movement, funding the National American Woman Suffrage Association and serving as president of the National Woman's Party.
Marble House's foyer featured walls, ceilings, and a grand staircase made of solid Italian marble, which Alva Vanderbilt chose for its warm hue.
The foyer and staircase at Marble House.
John W. Corbett β The Preservation Society of Newport County
"It would have been impossible to have used a pure white marble for the interior without having a mausoleum effect too cold for living comfort and joy," Alva Vanderbilt wrote of Marble House. "The soft gold brown fading off into delicate cream catches the sunlight by day or electric sparkle at night with a warm living glow."
The marble entrance hall led out to a portico overlooking the ocean.
A porch at Marble House.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The French doors in the entryway stayed open during the summer to provide a cooling ocean breeze.
The Dining Room was modeled after the Salon of Hercules at the Palace of Versailles.
The Dining Room.
Gavin Ashworth β The Preservation Society of Newport County
Alva Vanderbilt was born in Alabama and raised in France. Her French design sensibilities were evident throughout the house.
The purple marble used for the walls was imported from Algeria.
The marble walls of the Dining Room.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The walls were created from one solid slab of marble that was cut in half to create pieces with mirroring patterns, a technique called bookmatching.
Alva Vanderbilt commissioned dining-room chairs inspired by those used by King Louis XIV of France.
A dining-room chair.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Crafted from bronze and covered in gold, the chairs weighed 75 pounds each and required the help of a footman to be seated in.
The Gothic Room displayed medieval and Renaissance art that Alva Vanderbilt acquired from Emile Gavet, a French art collector.
The Gothic Room.
Gavin Ashworth β The Preservation Society of Newport County
The ribbed ceiling, stone mantlepiece, and wood floors were all imported from Paris.
Alva Vanderbilt purchased the art collection "en bloc," or all together in a set.
Stained-glass windows in the Gothic Room.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Buying art collections "en bloc" was popular during the Gilded Age as a way to quickly acquire a status symbol instead of taking generations to build a collection.
The Morning Room also functioned as a library.
The Morning Room.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The wooden bookcases, built in Paris by Allard and Sons, held books on architecture and European history that were original to the Vanderbilt family's collection.
The Grand Salon was also called the Gold Room because of the 22-karat gold leaf covering every wall.
The Grand Salon.
The Preservation Society of Newport County
"This room is really the epitome of the Gilded Age," Caitlin Emery, the research and interpretation coordinator at the Preservation Society of Newport County, said on the audio tour. "It is coated in gold and you have to imagine guests coming in on a summer evening with the sun going down. And the light picking up on all these gilded surfaces. The feel and the essence of the room would have been absolutely remarkable."
The Vanderbilts used it as a ballroom.
The Grand Salon.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
In 1895, the Vanderbilts hosted a ball to celebrate their daughter Consuelo Vanderbilt's engagement to Charles Spencer-Churchill, the ninth Duke of Marlborough. The party featured 300 guests and lasted until 5 a.m.
Consuelo Vanderbilt was secretly engaged to another man and resisted the arrangement, but she wrote that her mother "would not hesitate to shoot" her lover if she tried to run away with him.
"Alva wanted to secure for her daughter the one thing that money couldn't buy β a title," Emery said in the audio tour.
Theirs was a loveless marriage. After 26 years, Alva Vanderbilt testified that she had forced her daughter to marry the duke, which allowed her to receive an annulment in 1921.
The tour continued up the grand staircase on the second floor.
The second floor.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The mezzanine level featured two private studies, one for William K. Vanderbilt and one for Alva Vanderbilt.
Consuelo Vanderbilt's bedroom appeared as George Russell's room on the HBO show "The Gilded Age."
Consuelo Vanderbilt's bedroom.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Consuelo Vanderbilt moved to Marble House when she was 15. She described her room as "austere," writing that her mother had picked out every piece of furniture and "forbidden the intrusion of my personal possessions," according to the audio tour.
A wooden spiral staircase outside Consuelo Vanderbilt's bedroom led to the service areas at Marble House.
The servant staircase.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The Vanderbilts would never have used the servant staircase or gone into the service areas.
The Vanderbilts' youngest child, Harold Vanderbilt, was an award-winning sailor whose trophies were displayed in the Trophy Room.
The Trophy Room.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
When the Vanderbilts lived at Marble House, the Trophy Room was a set of two connected dressing rooms for Alva Vanderbilt and Consuelo Vanderbilt. The Preservation Society turned it into a room for Harold Vanderbilt's yachting trophies.
Decorated in the Louis XIV style, Alva Vanderbilt's bedroom featured a throne-like bed and silk wall hangings.
Alva Vanderbilt's bedroom.
The Preservation Society of Newport County
The carvings in the molding throughout the room featured nymphs and cherubs for a fairytale-like oasis.
The lilac silk wallpaper was an exact copy of the original.
Alva Vanderbilt's purple wallpaper.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The factory that made Alva Vanderbilt's original wallpaper is still in business in Lyons, France, and it kept the Marble House orders in its archives. In 1990, the Preservation Society ordered the exact same wallpaper from the factory to replace the room's existing fabric, which had faded to gold, according to the audio tour.
William K. Vanderbilt's bedroom was much smaller than his wife's.
William K. Vanderbilt's bedroom.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
His bedroom was decorated in the French Neoclassical style. After he and Alva Vanderbilt divorced, William K. Vanderbilt moved to France with his second wife.
The guest bed still featured its original 18th-century lace canopy.
The guest bedroom.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Marble House only had one guest bedroom because it was mainly built for family use.
The guest room was connected to a guest sitting room.
The guest sitting room.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The guest sitting room was furnished with 18th-century French art and furniture produced by Allard and Sons.
Downstairs, Marble House would receive deliveries of flowers, wine, and food through the service entrance.
The service entrance.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The stairs leading up to the rest of the house were locked to protect the Vanderbilts and their priceless possessions.
The Vanderbilts hired a French chef to staff the kitchen, which burned 30 tons of coal each summer.
The kitchen.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The Vanderbilts paid their French chef a salary of $10,000 per year, or around $375,000 in today's dollars.
Dishes were cleaned and stored in the scullery.
The scullery.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
The sink was made of a soft mineral called soapstone to prevent the Vanderbilts' silver from being scratched or damaged during washing.
Alva Vanderbilt made a set of china emblazoned with "Votes for Women" which she used at women's suffrage rallies hosted at Marble House.
Alva Vanderbilt's "Votes for Women" dishes.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Alva Vanderbilt hosted women's suffrage conferences at Marble House in 1904 and 1914.
She is quoted as saying in her speeches: "Just pray to God. She will help you."
Replicas of the "Votes for Women" china were available for purchase in the Marble House gift shop.
The gift shop.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
A "Votes for Women" teapot cost $28 at the gift shop when I visited in August. The large plates cost $14.95 and the smaller plates retailed for $12.95.
The grounds of Marble House featured beautiful views of the ocean.
Ocean views at Marble House.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Marble House is located along Newport's Cliff Walk, a scenic walking tour of the area's famous mansions.
The grounds also included a Chinese Tea House which Alva Vanderbilt commissioned after the death of her second husband.
The Chinese Tea House on the grounds of Marble House.
European copper beech trees dotted the property in another nod to the European palaces that inspired the design of Marble House.
European copper beech trees on the grounds of Marble House.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Imported from Europe, the trees can grow 35 to 45 feet wide.
Marble House is more than just an opulent Gilded Age mansion β it tells the story of Alva Vanderbilt's remarkable life.
Marble House.
Talia Lakritz/Business Insider
Built during a time of economic and technological advancement, Marble House symbolized the beginning of a new era where women could leave loveless marriages with their reputations intact and fight for the right to participate in America's democracy.