Glen Tonche

Glen Tonche

Glen Tonche - Allaire Studios
Alternative names Allaire Studios (20012007)
General information
Status Extant
Type Private family estate
Architectural style Tudor
Location Ulster County, near Shokan, New York
Country United States
Coordinates 42°00′11″N 74°11′19″W / 42.00306°N 74.18861°W / 42.00306; -74.18861Coordinates: 42°00′11″N 74°11′19″W / 42.00306°N 74.18861°W / 42.00306; -74.18861
Completed 1928 (1928)
Owner   Raymond Pitcairn and later the Pitcairn family (19281998)
  Randall Wallace (since 1998)

Glen Tonche is an American estate atop Mount Tonche, in Ulster County, near Shokan, New York.

The estate's house was built in 1928 as the summer family compound of American businessman Raymond Pitcairn, whose family founded PPG Industries.

Design

Under Pitcairn ownership the 18,740-square-foot (1,741-square-metre) compound on 22 acres (9 hectares) was largely made up of two main wings connected by a covered walkway. The balance of Mount Tonche  over 1,000 acres (4.0 square kilometres)  is under restrictive preservation.

The property as a whole reflects a blend of Tudor-style architecture with some Arts-and-Crafts-movement influences. The south wing was a pentagon configuration housing the main kitchen, two servants' quarters, six guest bedrooms, six full baths, and a massive glass-enclosed mountaintop porch. The wing also featured a 29-by-36-foot dining hall capable of seating 100 or more guests. The north wing housed the library, eleven bedrooms, seven full baths and two-and-one-half baths, three-room servant's quarters, as well as a great room with 30-foot-tall (9.1-metre) floor-to-ceiling windows and 60-foot-high (18-metre) vaulted ceilings.[1]


Transfer from Pitcairn ownership

The estate remained in the Pitcairn family until it was put on the market in 1995 for $3.9 million, then $2.9 million, then in late 1998 down to $1.95 million,[2] at which time it was sold to photographer and musician Randall Wallace.[3]

Allaire Studios

After substantial renovation, it served from 2001 to 2007 as the commercial base of Wallace's Allaire Studios, where rock musician David Bowie recorded his album Heathen (2002).[4] In 2001, singer-songwriter Norah Jones recorded her debut album Come Away with Me (2002). During five weeks in late 2006, rock band Rush recorded the album Snakes & Arrows (2007).[5]

Resale offerings

Reconfigured from the Pitcairn ownership the main house includes nineteen bedrooms with three separate apartments on the property. The estate was listed on the market in 2007/2008 with an asking price of $13 million.[6] However, the property was removed from the formal market in the first quarter of 2008.

The property formally returned on the market in June 2009 at 22 acres (89,000 m2) for a price of $8,850,000[7] Unsold it was removed from the market. In a June 2012 preview article - 'Zeus of the Catskills' - with The New York Times, Wallace indicated that he would again be relisting the property for sale in the near future for $8 million.[8]

No longer a recording studio, Glen Tonche quietly returned to the market in March 2014 for $4,500,000 on 30-acres. [9] via Heather Croner Real Estate with annual taxes in excess of $74,000 year.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.