Pitched as "the suburb beautiful" by its developers, Park Hill in Yonkers offered early 20th century house hunters large digs just outside city limits.
Pitched as "the suburb beautiful" by its developers, Park Hill in Yonkers offered early 20th century house hunters large digs just outside city limits.
It requires looking past some caution tape, but for those not daunted by old-house challenges, this Catskill cottage offers the opportunity to bring some life back to a dwelling that spent decades as a Black-owned guest house.
Filled with enough visual delights to captivate any old house lover, this lovingly restored stone house in Kingston has centuries worth of history within its walls.
This Newburgh residence was involved in an interesting court tussle in the 1930s, but before that the Second Empire-style dwelling was the home of a 19th century dry goods merchant and his family.
Its picturesque stone exterior is charming enough, but the detail-filled interior of this 1930s Westchester County cottage adds even more to the fairytale-like allure.
If you want to revel in some Halloween fun while soaking fall colors and gazing upon a Gilded Age mansion, you may want to check out a pumpkin extravaganza on the grounds of the impressive Naumkeag.
Possibly built in the 1820s, this Westchester County dwelling got an early 20th century renovation that shaped its look and a 1970s restoration that rescued it from decay.
This Bronxville stone Tudor still has some of the amenities that would have attracted a 1920s house hunter, including a bathroom in the latest Art Deco style complete with a contraption that promised therapeutic benefits.
It is all serene Greek Revival on the exterior, but on the interior this Dutchess County house is bursting with surprising jolts of color.
Texturally delightful, with rows of cobblestones rippling across the facade, this former church in Ontario County is an intriguing bit of New York architectural history.