Bradley Darryl Wong, the former "Law and Order" star, has managed to find a buyer for his New York City pad for $3.25 million, according to real estate sources.
Rob Morea, the listing agent of the residence, told Curbed that the ground-floor home has gone under escrow and the deal is slated to be sealed soon.
Wong purchased the home in 2005 for $1.25 million.
Public records of the home state that the residence is a 2,950-square-foot co-op comprised of three bedrooms and two bathrooms. The duplex loft has unconventional interiors with "14-foot brick barrel vaulted ceilings," hardwood flooring, wood-framed glass windows and an open floor plan.
The lower level, which receives little sunlight, has a bedroom, a bathroom and a laundry. An interior staircase leads up to the top floor, which has a great room, a guest room, a living area with an open kitchen, a master suite featuring exposed brick walls and a powder room.
"Walking through the bronze, windowed doors (formerly from a Philadelphia bank) into this peaceful Noho/East Village loft gives you the rare feeling of entering a special space. This home has been renovated with great care and an attention to detail that makes it truly unique," the listing reads.
The residence appeared in a New York Times post in which Wong spoke candidly about the house.
"I'm basically nocturnal. This is not the place for a daylight queen," Wong said of his den.
Before being converted into a residence, the space housed a sweatshop as well as a pornographic theater.
Wong lived in the home with his producer partner Richie Jackson. However, they broke up after 18 months. During their relationship, they had twin sons through a surrogate mother. The older twin lived only 90 minutes. The other is now a healthy 12-year-old boy.
"Our house, this place, has become incredibly important, because I felt the disappointment and shame that my son was the fruit of a broken home. I felt a sense of being broken, and robbing him of a full family experience," he said of the strain in their relationship and the effect it had on the surviving child.