Lifestyle entertainment mogul Martha Stewart was recently spotted looking at a posh property in Bedford Hills, a small town in the Westchester County, New York, according to the New York Post.
Apparently, the property is a $30 million home featuring large glass windows and doors. The property is a large 21.7 acre expanse with a beautiful glass main house, lush orchards, Japanese gardens, a tennis court, a pool house with a kitchen, a detached guest house and a large heated barn/garage. The property has two ponds, which earned it the moniker "The Twin Ponds" estate and also has a large koi lake surrounded by specimen trees and walkways.
Marvin Schwartz, managing director and portfolio manager at Neuberger Berman Europe, is the owner of the house. The listing of the estate lies with Sally Slater, broker at Douglas Elliman.
Martha Stewart has quite an impressive real estate portfolio. Some of her major investments include:
Skylands, a 35,000 square feet stone manse on Mountain Desert Island in Maine. According to Curbed, the compound includes a guest cottage, a play house with an indoor squash court, mechanics' garage, greenhouse, stable and a 200-seat Catholic church. It came completely furnished, right down to an "air-conditioned wine cellar fully stocked with a collection of 1982 Bordeaux."
Cantitoe Corners, a 153 acre Westchester farmhouse that she purchased in 2000. She expanded the estate in 2001 when she commissioned starchitect Allen Greenberg to redesign the place. According to Martha's blog "Martha Moments", the home is more like a small village, with a series of houses and out-buildings dotting the expansive grounds. Martha resides in the 1925 farmhouse (the Winter House), a three-story abode fronted by a long porch and dormer windows on the third level. Adjacent to the farmhouse is the property's original structure: a 1770 Colonial house, known as the Summer House. There is also a nearby tenant's cottage, where her daughter, Alexis, lives when she is visiting. The property also has a guest house known as the Maple Avenue House and a contemporary house deeper on the property.
Lily Pond Lane, a cottage in East Hamptons' neighborhood of Lily Pond Lane that she purchased after her divorce from publisher Andy Stewart in 1990.
173 Perry Street, three condos in the building combined just near the Hudson river in Manhattan.
Read more on Martha's real estate empire, here.