
Bob Dylan's former NYC townhouse asks $3M — with design by a famed Gilded Age architect
A handsome Upper Manhattan property that Bob Dylan once called home has listed for $3 million, the Wall Street Journal reported.
The megastar musician lived in the five-story residence, designed by an iconic Gilded Age architect, for 14 years until 2000.
12 The five-story townhouse along Harlem's Strivers' Row.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
12 Bob Dylan, pictured in 2015.
WireImage
12 A spacious living room in the well-preserved townhouse.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
The 'Like a Rolling Stone' singer arrived in New York City from Minnesota in the 1960s.
Dylan initially lived in a third-floor Greenwich Village walkup. That apartment, and its entire building, also listed for sale in July for $8.25 million.
Less than three decades after arriving in the Big Apple and becoming a household name, Dylan bought himself a home in Harlem. The neighborhood's famed jazz and blues traditions inspired Dylan throughout his career.
The Nobel Prize-winning songwriter spent years at the 4,500-square-foot property, but there's little to show for it beyond a deed. The intensely private singer lived a quiet life in the townhome-lined community, a historic district called Strivers' Row.
12 Strivers' Row is located on both sides of West 138th and West 139th streets in Harlem.
Chestnut Productions/Yuri Semenyuk for Sotheby's International Realty
12 Original features of the home include woodburning fireplaces and crown molding.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
12 A sitting area on an upper floor.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
12 The large eat-in kitchen blends old-world details with modern amenities.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
12 The home's original range stove.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
12 A formal dining room on the parlor floor.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
12 The private carport.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
The two-block tract is lined with historic townhouses, but Dylan's former home comes with a special degree of architectural cachet. It was designed by the prolific Gilded Age architect Stanford White, whose Renaissance Revival-style defined the luxury buildings of his era.
The spacious property includes a 19-foot salon, a large eat-in kitchen and a massive parlor floor.
The well-preserved five-bedroom's classical details, like period moldings, hardwood floors, pocket doors and soaring ceilings, are balanced out by the modern luxuries of Gaggenau appliances and heated floors.
Colin Montgomery and Stan Ponte of Sotheby's International Realty hold the listing.
The current owners of the townhome, Isam Salah and Elaina Richardson, purchased it for $3.17 million in 2018, according to city records. Salah, a retired attorney, and Richardson, the former editor in chief of Elle magazine, are selling to focus on their lives upstate, the Journal reported. Richardson runs a nonprofit artists' retreat in Saratoga Springs.
12 Detailed millwork on the stairs.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
12 A large bedroom.
Allyson Lubow for Sotheby's International Realty
Their home's discounted sale price, the pair told the Journal, meets the market where it's at. Interest in high-end Harlem townhomes, either as family homes or portfolio investments, has lagged since the pandemic.
But the married couple told the Journal that the memories created in their townhome make up for the loss. They purchased the home in part because they admired its well-preserved details, including an original range stove and a 4-foot-tall safe, which they use as a bar.
The connection to Dylan is not lost on the couple, however. Richardson told the Journal that small tour groups occasionally stop outside the home, but said that the dedicated fans are pretty sedate.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
3 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia gets a street named after him in San Francisco
On what would have been Jerry Garcia's 83rd birthday, San Francisco officials, musicians and fans gathered Friday morning to rename a street in honor of one of the city's most iconic native sons. Mayor Daniel Lurie led the dedication ceremony at the intersection of Mission and Harrington streets in the Excelsior District — just steps from the modest yellow house where Garcia lived with his grandparents and first picked up a guitar. 'Jerry gave San Francisco and its people lasting memories and music,' Lurie told the crowd. 'He created something out of nothing. Jerry had the spirit of a rock star, an innovator and a futurist.' Born Aug. 1, 1942, Garcia attended Monroe Elementary and Balboa High School — each just blocks from his childhood home — before serving in the U.S. Army. After returning to the city, he immersed himself in the local music scene and, in 1965, co-founded the Grateful Dead. The band's fusion of rock, folk, bluegrass and psychedelia became a cornerstone of 1960s counterculture and cultivated one of the most devoted fanbases in music history. Trixie Garcia, the musician's daughter, spoke of the personal significance of the tribute. 'Jerry was a magical person,' she said. 'He was humble, he was generous, he was talented. It's truly an honor, on behalf of Jerry Garcia's family, to witness this historic street naming.' District 11 Supervisor Chyanne Chen, who authored the renaming resolution passed in April, celebrated the moment as a source of neighborhood pride. 'District 11 is the most diverse district in the world,' she said. 'We continue to celebrate that diversity through Jerry's music — and now through his name on this street.' The ceremony kicked off a weekend of festivities marking the Grateful Dead's 60th anniversary and commemorating the 30 years since Garcia's death on Aug. 9 in 1995, just days after his 53rd birthday. More than 100,000 fans are expected to converge on San Francisco for a series of commemorative events, including a three-night run by Dead & Company in Golden Gate Park from Friday to Sunday, August 1-3. The street renaming also coincides with the 23rd Annual Jerry Day, a free community celebration at McLaren Park's Jerry Garcia Amphitheater. Founded in 2002, the festival honors Garcia's life and seeks to unify the diverse communities around the park through music and art. This year's Jerry Day, held Saturday, Aug. 2, features performances by Melvin Seals and JGB, Grammy-winning fiddler Mads Tolling and Stu Allen & Mars Hotel. In addition to the live music, the amphitheater will host free livestreams of Dead & Company's Golden Gate Park shows. Jay Pham, a local small business owner and longtime supporter of the Jerry Day movement, expressed gratitude during the ceremony. 'You guys are at one of the best neighborhoods in San Francisco,' he told attendees. As the ceremony drew to a close, the crowd spontaneously began singing 'Happy Birthday' to Garcia. Mayor Lurie noted that attendees had come from every U.S. state and 38 countries. 'This is how our city carries his legacy forward,' he said. 'Forever remembering someone who defined it.'


Los Angeles Times
4 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
Paula Deen abruptly closes restaurant that launched her to celebrity chef status
In the late 1990s, Paula Deen was an independent restaurateur whose family-operated restaurant had just received a glowing review from USA Today. Her life and career were permanently changed. Now, over 25 years later, the Georgia native has announced the closing of the Lady and Sons — the iconic restaurant that made her a star of Southern cuisine and a household name in the cooking world. Opened in downtown Savannah, Ga., in 1996, the Lady and Sons boasted a menu of local classics like fried green tomatoes, banana pudding and hoecakes. The signature dish, Southern fried chicken, was enough to draw lines wrapping around the block — and the restaurant came to be viewed as an embodiment of the indulgent and buttery flavors that characterize Southern cooking. 'There in Savannah, Paula Deen's homestyle Southern menu at the Lady and Sons turned me into a ravenous beast, unmindful of manners, cholesterol, North-South diplomacy and the dropped jaws of my companions,' USA Today, then the nation's most-read daily newspaper, wrote on Dec. 17, 1999. Earlier that year, the popularity of the Lady and Sons caught the attention of Food Network journalist Gordon Elliott. Deen appeared on Elliott's short-lived show 'Door Knock Dinners' that led to her own Daytime Emmy-winning Food Network program, 'Paula's Home Cooking.' On her website and social media accounts, Deen bid farewell to the Lady and Sons and its longtime fans. Also closing is her newer restaurant, the Chicken Box, which opened in 2023. 'Hey, y'all, my sons and I made the heartfelt decision that Thursday, July 31st, was the last day of service for The Lady & Sons and The Chicken Box,' Deen said in the statement. 'We will now focus our attention on the four Paula Deen's Family Kitchen locations across the country.' The announcement came without warning, especially as the restaurant continued to draw tours and lines of customers. Three weeks prior to the announcement, the Lady and Sons posted on Instagram that it was hiring for all positions. Over the years, some of Deen's other restaurants have also closed suddenly. In 2014, employees at Uncle Bubba's Seafood and Oyster House — a Savannah eatery she co-owned with her brother, Earl W. 'Bubba' Hiers Jr. — reportedly arrived to work to find the doors locked and the appliances removed. A sign on the door said, 'Thank you for 10 great years. Uncle Bubba's is now closed.' The Panama City, Fla., location of Paula Deen's Family Kitchen also closed abruptly in 2019, laying off 30 employees without advance notice. Several former employees told local news channel WJHG that they were left without their main source of income following the closure. Uncle Bubba's closure came a year after controversy began to surround Deen after a former manager at the restaurant sued Hiers, alleging sexual and racial discrimination. Food Network canceled 'Paula's Home Cooking' after Deen admitted to using a racial slur during a deposition for the 2013 lawsuit. Lawyers asked Deen if she had ever used the N-word, to which Deen replied, 'Yes, of course,' later adding, 'It's been a very long time.' Since then, the 78-year-old has focused on her restaurants. The Lady and Sons, as her core establishment, was the result of a litany of personal struggles and ambition. Both of her parents passed away when she was in her early 20s and Deen, then a young mother, struggled with depression and agoraphobia, or fear of going outside. With only $200 left, Deen founded a catering company out of her kitchen called the Bag Lady. Her handmade bag lunches were delivered by her sons Jamie and Bobby and earned Deen a local reputation for her homestyle cooking. After one attempt at a restaurant, the Lady in 1991, the follow-up, the Lady and Sons, co-owned with Jamie and Bobby, would be her success.


Elle
6 hours ago
- Elle
Brunello Cucinelli Transformed the Hamptons Into an Italian Piazza for a Night
The threat of rain didn't deter guests—including Christie Brinkley and Alexandra Daddario—from donning their finest Brunello Cucinelli and heading to the Wölffer Estate Stables in The Hamptons last night. Upon arrival, they were immediately and perhaps unexpectedly transported to an Italian piazza, where two long, winding tables circled a fountain and a makeshift mercato was set up, stocked to the brim with tomatoes, cheese, and charcuterie. Dressed in the quiet luxury brand's signature shades of beige, cream, and brown, attendees mingled during cocktail hour, chatting about the looming storm and their end-of-summer plans out east. 'I brought sunglasses too, but where's the sun?' joked Kelly Turlington Burns. Next, the evening gave way to a seated dinner with an Umbrian-style menu of rigatoni pomodoro and gelato with fresh fruit, serenaded by live acoustic guitar, and naturally paired with Wölffer Estate Chenin Blanc and Cabernet Franc. 'This was a tiny little farmhouse on a potato field,' co-host Joey Wölffer told the crowd, gesturing around the space. 'It's spectacular. It's way more than I could ever imagine.' Brunello Cucinelli CEO Riccardo Stefanelli flew in for a quick 24 hours to make an appearance. 'I'm not complaining—being in such a beautiful place with such beautiful people,' he said. 'There are many words—beauty, dignity, craftsmanship, attention to detail—but what we have here is not just a winery or a cellar, it's a community.' Scroll through below for an inside look. Claire Stern Milch is the Digital Director at ELLE, where she oversees all content and strategy. Previously, she was Deputy Editor at ELLE. Her interests include fashion, food, travel, music, Peloton, and The Hills—not necessarily in that order. She used to have a Harriet the Spy notebook and isn't ashamed to admit it.