Back in the 1970s, Bill DeSeta and his then-fiancée and now wife, Donna Lazzara, doled out a mere $170,000 for a charming yet rundown Elizabethan Renaissance Revival townhouse in Manhattan that was formerly a single-family residence but had been chopped up and left to squatters. The showbiz couple—he a Broadway producer and director, and she a casting director and the sister of Bernadette Peters—subsequently embarked upon an extensive renovation of the six-story property, converting it into a multifamily building with an owner’s duplex on the second and third floors and several rental units above and below that have welcomed the likes of actress Mary-Louise Parker and Cabaret star Joel Grey.
The DeSetas first put the limestone-and-brick structure, located on West 80th Street in the Riverside-West End Historic District, on the market in 2017 for $20 million, and considered a $15 million offer, but decided they weren’t ready to sell at the time. They put it up for sale again in 2020 for $12 million, after new laws protecting renters in multifamily buildings had just passed and caused the value to plummet, and then reduced it to $10 million before removing it from the listings.

The dining room fireplace has been converted into a wine rack.
Will Ellis
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Last year, after making a permanent move to Florida, they doubled down on their efforts to offload the place, asking $7 million. Though that elicited a bidding war and a $7.8 million contract, the deal fell through. Now, in a bit of a déjà vu moment, the building has once again returned to the market with the same exact $7 million asking price.
When coming up with a design plan at the outset, Bill and Donna pursued a “medieval castle fantasy” vibe, according to Curbed. The result? A conglomeration of gothic, moody interiors featuring hand-laid parquet floors, dark wood-paneled walls, period wallpaper, stained-glass windows, arched doorways, and secret panels. There’s also a grand staircase complemented by an elevator, a full basement, a rare private garage with a curb cut, and a sprawling rooftop garden overlooking the Hudson River.

A bed and wall unit in the primary bedroom were hand-crafted by the owner.
Will Ellis
Designed and built in 1897 by noted developer and architect Clarence True, the historic spread clocks in at 43 feet wide and roughly 11,600 square feet. It offers a total of 14 bedrooms and 14 bathrooms, the standout of which is a 3,000-square-foot owner’s duplex that is centered on a double-height salon with an ornate stone fireplace and a built-in cocktail bar. Other highlights include a bookshelf-lined study, a coffer-ceilinged dining room sporting a fireplace-turned-terracotta wine rack, and a primary suite with a separate sitting room.
Per Mark Jovanovic and Scott Hustis of Paradigm Advisory at Compass, who hold the listing, the infrastructure offers limitless potential to be reimagined as a colossal single-family residence or a luxury investment property.
Click here for more photos of the Manhattan building.
Authors
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Wendy Bowman
Wendy Bowman is a real estate writer at Robb Report. Before that, she was a freelancer for Modern Luxury and several other media outlets, where she primarily covered luxury properties for…



