Author Emily Kies Folpe lists $4.25M NYC ‘cottage’ duplex

Real Estate

Art historian Emily Kies Folpe, 80, author of “It Happened on Washington Square,” is selling her Greenwich Village duplex that comes with its own rooftop “cottage” — for $4.25 million.

The three-bedroom, two-bath co-op, at landmarked 2 Fifth Ave., overlooks Washington Square Park and Stanford White’s iconic Washington Square Arch. It boasts a landscaped roof deck with that cottage-like structure, which features 10-foot-6 ceilings, French doors and transom windows.

The cottage is currently used as an office, but can be converted into another bedroom, a den or an art studio.

The apartment features a main bedroom and a living room, both with park views. The living room also opens to a terrace.

There’s also a separate dining room, and lots of closet and storage space.


An exterior view of the cottage-like perk -- itself an unusual city amenity.
An exterior view of the cottage-like perk — itself an unusual city amenity.
Michael Muchnij

The cottage is now used as an office.
The cottage is now used as an office.
Michael Muchnij

It opens to a good chunk of outdoor space.
It opens to a good chunk of outdoor space.
Michael Muchnij

Enjoy views of Washington Square Park.
Enjoy views of Washington Square Park.
Michael Muchnij

The home itself has cozy country-like aesthetics.
The home itself has cozy country-like aesthetics.
Michael Muchnij

Plenty of space for entertaining and book storage.
Plenty of space for entertaining and book storage.
Michael Muchnij

A bedroom.
A bedroom.
Michael Muchnij

It’s at the top of a five-story red brick Emery Roth-designed portion of a 20-story midcentury building overlooking the north side of the park. It has more than 350 units.

That portion was designed to blend in with the red brick townhouses that line part of the square, at developer Robert Moses’s request.

Building amenities include a library, a gym, a private driveway, a library, a residents’ lounge, a children’s playroom and a garage.

Kies Folpe, who serves on the board of the Washington Square Park Conservancy, bought the unit in 1993. She published her book about Washington Square in 2002.  

“The massive roof terrace and the ‘cottage’ are so unexpected. To be up there and see the arch and the treetops is magical,” said Compass broker Bill Herbst, who shares the listing with Ralph Gilmartin, also of Compass. 

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