couple
Reading yesterday’s Habitats column in The Times, it was hard not to feel like a complete whimp, not only because we don’t take bourbon in our Sunday morning tea but also because we didn’t camp out with no heat or running water in our house while it was being renovated. After picking up their three-story wood-frame house on Dikeman Street in Red Hook for $360,000 two years ago, LeNell Smothers and Benjamin Peikes ran in to some unexpected problems. We had planned to live in one of the rooms while the work was going on, but we came home one day, and that room was gone, Ms. Smothers said. After the frequent sewage floodings drove them out of an illegal basement apartment on Pioneer Street, the couple starting camping out amid the construction in their new home, a situation that was only made bearable at first by the fact that they had the use of a shower and toilet at Ms. LeNell’s eponymous liquor store around the corner on Van Brunt Street. And now, with a wood stove and space heaters, things are relatively cushy. We were bummed that there were not more photos with the article. Perhaps LeNell and Benjamin will share some more photos with us?
Nothing a Shot of Bourbon Won’t Cure [NY Times]
Illustration by Douglas B. Jones


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  1. I personally would never buy anything from that wine store after i heard the owner make a racist remark about the people in the projects. I guess bad thing do happen to bad people.

  2. We looked for houses in Red Hook starting in early 2005, and found nothing like this for under $800k.

    So, $375k for this in 2005?

    What’s with the 2002 prices, 3 years later in 2005?

    Did they know the owner directly, or something (and was the owner grossly uninformed about prices)?

    It is LeNell, however, so whatever the case, I’m happy this great deal went to good people.

    If you haven’t yet had the pleasure of visiting her store, you will be hooked (so to speak) the minute you walk in, and doubly so the moment you speak with her or anyone else there.

    Anyhow, just stunned that anything could be found there in 2005 for those prices.

  3. I lived in my renovation long enough to get my wilderness badge and a good collection of stories, but not long enough to get fired from my day job as my dress for success look gradually began to deteriorate. It is a damn good thing I didn’t take up drinking bourbon because that would have been the end of me.

    I wish them luck.

  4. I enjoyed it too. It makes the steel shelving unit with my power tools, paint, denatured alchohol and sandpaper, among other things, which seems to be a permanent kitchen fixture now, look positively glam.

    Maybe I should break out that bottle of over-proof Jamaican rum I’ve been saving for a special occasion. Strong spirits seem to allow you to put up with quite a bit. I lived with a horribly scary bathroom that defied description, but it was usable (barely). Don’t think I could rough it as long as this couple is doing. Good luck to them!