Sold – $625,000 – Inn at Hillcrest Manor – Cairo NY

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Turn-Key Bed & Breakfast. Inn at Hill Crest Manor, an historic resort in the foothills of the Catskills high peaks, includes two houses, a two-car garage with workshop, and outbuildings set among twelve acres with woods, meadows, streams and a pond.

The Inn at Hill Crest Manor is a restored Victorian grand manor house with 6 bedrooms and 6 full/2 half baths. In addition to the large chef’s kitchen, formal dining room, and elegant library/living room with gas fireplace, a grand parlor, billiard room, and spacious four-season porch with pellet stove round out the ground floor. A large sunny private office is also located on the second floor, and topping it all off is the third floor Tower Room,” with 360-degree panoramic views of the stunning countryside. Outside, the manor is ringed by covered porches and a large deck with 8 person hot tub and hot/cold outdoor shower. The Henry House, also on site and included in the sale, is a 4 bedroom, 4 bath fully restored Victorian farmhouse. 

3 Parcels with five structures. Fully restored Manor House, The Inn at Hillcrest Manor and Henry House a fully restored two-unit farm house, along with a detached 2 car garage with workshop and a vacant buildable lot with dug well and electricity. In addition there are two other unrestored structures which could be for future expansion, a huge bunk house/barracks and a two room 50s/60’s style motel/pool house on the pond. Property is zoned for commercial or residential use, and the current owners have operated both houses as vacation/event/ski rentals.  This one-of-a-kind historic compound is a must-see with endless possibilities!

See the full listing HERE

State Street – Large Lot – Gutted and Ready for You to Make Your Mark

SOLD

Come and Be My Neighbor!

One of the last bargains in Hudson.

Currently gutted house, ready for you to make it yours. Legal multi-family or turn it back into a wonderfully scaled single family house. On 1.5 city lots (37.5′ x 120′), so plenty of room to expand.

New electric service brought to building. Needs work but there could be major upside here. By appointment only. Broker must accompany.

$150,000 See the full listing here

Grand Victorian – One of the Best Blocks in Hudson. $399,000

SOLD: $375,000

Centrally located at 5th Street and Union, just one block from Warren Street and near everything.

House has tons of original details, 3 sets of pocket doors on the main floor, gas fireplace with original mantle. 4 Bedrooms upstairs with a full bath. Master bedroom has a small attached room which is screaming out to be an en-suite bathroom or a nursery for a little one. Main floor has a living room and family room with 3 sets of working pocket doors, large eat in kitchen with some updates and a 1/2 bath.

The house has been recently painted and the mechanicals have been recently updated. Navien hot water on demand unit. Original cast iron radiators plus radiant floor heat in kitchen and upstairs bath off gas boiler. Newly refinished floors and more. Some small cosmetic work still needs doing, but this is a great solid house on one of the best blocks in Hudson.

$399,000. See the full listing here

Historic Hudson Fishing Shacks to be Preserved

[et_pb_section bb_built=”1″ admin_label=”section” _builder_version=”3.0.47″ custom_padding=”57px|0px|0px|0px”][et_pb_row admin_label=”row” _builder_version=”3.0.47″ background_size=”initial” background_position=”top_left” background_repeat=”repeat” custom_padding=”28px|0px|0px|0px”][et_pb_column type=”4_4″][et_pb_text _builder_version=”3.0.85″ background_size=”initial” background_position=”top_left” background_repeat=”repeat” background_layout=”light”]

William Shannon, a local reporter who got his start writing for the Register-Star here in Hudson, has lately been writing for The New York Times. His latest piece for the Times is on the preservation and restoration of the Fugary Shacks in Hudson’s North Bay.

Written by ; Photographs and Video by TONY CENICOLA

HUDSON, N.Y. — In the city of Hudson, known to tourists for its antique shops and fine dining, a cluster of century-old fishing shacks from the Hudson River estuary’s once prosperous shad fishery teeters on the waterfront.

You can read the full story at the New York Times

[/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section]