When Huguette Clark died in spring 2011, she left behind a massive
fortune, two conflicting wills, the mysterious aura of recluse, and some
of New York City's choicest real estate.
Now the fates of three
apartments owned by the famed philanthropist, who was last photographed
more than 80 years ago, are set to be settled: The residences are on
sale for $55 million.
As perhaps befits the homes of a noted recluse, the apartments are said to be frozen in time, stuck somewhere around the Gilded Age and therefore in need of "significant work," according to the Daily Mail.
Located at 907 Fifth Avenue, they include a total of 42 rooms and take
up 17,000 square feet.
Two of them together comprise the building's
eighth floor, while the third occupies half of the 12th and top floors.
Also among Clark's assets are a $100 million estate on the Pacific Coast
in Santa Barbara, Calif., and a $24 million country house in New
Canaan, Conn.
Clark's New York properties in the prewar limestone building are
described in the listing brokers' description as "a diamond in the
rough" -- presumably a polite reference to their eccentric provenance
and need of renovation. They command views of Central Park, in
particular the sailboat pond known as the Conservatory Water, near the
statute of Alice in Wonderland.
The New York Post reports that at the time of Clark's death, "real estate insiders gushed that her apartments ... could be worth $100 million." But the property is now appraised at $45 million to $60 million, since the apartments are unconnected and the building's co-op board has not yet decided whether the two eighth-floor flats can be combined.
Brokers told the Post these two units could command a total of $20 million to $35 million if sold unjoined; combined, they'd be worth more.
Clark, who was born in Paris in 1906, was the second daughter of former U.S. Sen. William A. Clark, a Montana businessman involved in mining and railroads. Following his retirement, the family moved to a Fifth Avenue mansion that boasted 121 rooms.
Huguette moved with her mother to 907 Fifth Avenue after the death of her father in 1925; they occupied the 12th floor, which had been marketed as "the finest apartment in the world." She was involved in music and art -- her mother gave her a Stradivarius violin for her birthday, and she exhibited seven paintings at Washington, D.C.'s Corcoran Gallery of Art in 1929 -- but grew increasingly suspicious that others, even relatives, were after her money. She is said to have lived in hospitals since leaving 907 Fifth Avenue in an ambulance in 1988.
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