New York Post

BILLION DOLLAR $TREET

It’s a rat race for real estate status on this superrich sliver of Southampto­n

- By ZACHARY KUSSIN

EVEN billionair­es have to keep up with the Joneses — and they’re spending the GDPs of small nations to do it.

Last year — during the uncertaint­y of the pandemic — the superrich clung to the Hamptons like a toddler with a security blanket. But one salubrious Southampto­n street saw more outrageous spending than ever before: Meadow Lane.

Consisting of roughly 100 homes (more than half of them head-turning mega-mansions), the narrow two-lane street runs from the tip of Southampto­n’s barrier island, all the way to the ultra-exclusive, members’ only joint, the Meadow Club.

Since the start of the pandemic in March 2020, only 11 of those homes, roughly 10%, have flipped. But the ones that did packed a wallop. The total value of those transactio­ns (five last year and six so far this year) weigh in at more than $350 million, according to data from listings portal Out East.

But billionair­e residents of the street — longknown as one of the East End’s toniest with Atlantic Ocean views to the back and bay views to the front — such as private equity titan Henry Kravis and Dallas-based financier Gerald J. Ford, will soon need to do ever more five-star entertaini­ng.

Some 10 properties are now for sale along Meadow Lane — including an incomplete, nearly 18,000-square-foot oceanfront mansion at No. 1320 that hit the market in June for a sky-high $85 million — with a combined asking price of nearly $425 million.

The Hamptons heat can be felt throughout the market — whose luxury sector saw its median sales price jump 11.6% to $6.5 million in Q2 of 2021 from the first, according to Douglas Elliman. Closed sales climbed to 68 from 44 year-overyear. But Meadow Lane benefitted from fresh opportunit­ies.

“Some of the listings … have been in the families for decades,” said Saunders broker Mark J. Baron, who last year sold cosmetic titan Adrien Arpel’s 9.75acre estate at 1995 and 2020 Meadow Lane for $21 million, Now, he reps the 11-bedroom 1950 Meadow Lane, asking $24.49 million, It’s been in the same family for nearly 40 years.

Baron noted that just 17 homes Hamptons-wide sold for more than $20 million in the first half of 2021 — an outside percentage of which went down on Meadow.

Among the Meadow Lane deals so far this year: Billionair­e New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, splashed out some $43 million off-market for a modern, 7,000-square-foot spread at No. 40 in April. That same month, a contempora­ry six-bedroom at No. 1360 sold for $28.5 million. Also in the spring, a 3,727-squarefoot property designed and owned by the late fashion designer and Broadway performer Luba Marks traded hands at No.

1210 for $28.8 million.

It builds on momentum from 2020, when the estate at 1116 Meadow Lane, which previously belonged to late media and entertainm­ent mogul Robert F.X. Sillerman, sold for $36 million. (His other two former Meadow Lane properties, Nos. 1080 and 1100, now ask $78 million.)

But one deal stands out in particular: billionair­e hedgefunde­r Ken Griffin’s offmarket, $84.44 million purchase of Calvin Klein’s roughly 7-acre property at 650 Meadow Lane in March 2020.

“That was a sale that somebody could point at and say, ‘No one wants to be the first one to spend that kind of money for an asset, one that is considered part-time use.’ [But] he did it, and it was very good for the market,” said Corcoran broker Tim Davis. “[It] caused sellers to consider, ‘Is now the time?’ ”

Davis is representi­ng four Meadow Lane listings — one of which, at 840 Meadow Lane, asks $75 million for an 8-plus-acre estate with 512 feet of beach frontage and a 30-room Tudor-style mansion. (This estate is reportedly owned by a limited liability company tied to the family of late lawyer Julia Vance Carter, and has been in the family for decades.) More outrageous still: many of these recently sold mansions will face the wrecking ball. “The houses either need to be completely rebuilt, or [have] considerab­le renovation­s,” said Davis. “Very few things are turnkey.”

It may seem that the combinatio­n of listings and sales, plus the potential for the street to see a number of new-builds or renovation­s, would harm its long-held reputation as the East End’s Billionair­e’s Row. But brokers said the existing lots aren’t being subdivided, and the activity only strengthen­s Meadow Lane’s cachet. “It’s creating even more exclusivit­y,” said Baron. “When [a new-constructi­on home] comes on the market, that’s what buoys everything up.”

 ?? ?? Buy-happy billionair­es like Ken Griffin (inset) have spent more than $350 million on Meadow Lane mansions since March 2020. Griffin paid $85 million for No. 650 (right).
Buy-happy billionair­es like Ken Griffin (inset) have spent more than $350 million on Meadow Lane mansions since March 2020. Griffin paid $85 million for No. 650 (right).
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 ?? ?? The longtime home of cosmetics titan Adrien Arpel (inset), 2020 Meadow Lane (above), sold for $21 million. Robert
Kraft (below) just paid $43 million for his sumptuous 40 Meadow Lane playground.
The longtime home of cosmetics titan Adrien Arpel (inset), 2020 Meadow Lane (above), sold for $21 million. Robert Kraft (below) just paid $43 million for his sumptuous 40 Meadow Lane playground.
 ?? ?? The 30room, 8acre estate at 840 Meadow is listed for $75 million.
The 30room, 8acre estate at 840 Meadow is listed for $75 million.
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