Dumpster-diving Village artist asks $1.3M for zero-bedroom, half-a-kitchen apartment
https://homes.yahoo.com/blogs/spaces/dumpster-diving-village-artist-asks--1-3m-for-zero-bedroom--half-a-kitchen-apartment-004248794.html
On the one hand, you've got a prewar apartment in a fantastic location: right in the heart of Manhattan's Greenwich Village, on Thompson Street between Bleecker and Houston. There are a couple of exposed-brick walls, if you like that sort of thing, and the floors are aged hardwood. The artist who lives there, Stuart Ross, has also filled the apartment with installations, most prominently a kitchen/workspace clad in antique redwood salvaged from a torn-down rooftop water tower nearby. Ross and his home were profiled in a Village Voice shelter article about 10 years ago, when he was subletting the place for $1,100 a month....
The apartment has zero bedrooms, and what we'll generously call half a kitchen (mini-fridge, microwave under the sink, no stove). Ross' artistic niche is "guerrilla artist": He's an "avid Dumpster diver," "wildebeest in the jungle of Manhattan," and "self-proclaimed engineer and inventor without even a day's worth of formal art training," according to promotional material for a 2008 feature-length documentary about him, "The Survival of the Wildebeest." The Village Voice profile was overly generous in deeming the unit 400 square feet; it's really more like 300, the listing agency tells Yahoo Homes.
Asking price: $1.3 million...
We asked Ross' listing agency, Sotheby's International Realty, about the ambitious ask. "The art installations are all included, which accounts for the price," the brokers said. "A buyer would really be purchasing a piece of art by a noted artist."