Ellen Pompeo Sells Hamptons Retreat for $2.99 Million

Ellen Pompeo’s modern farmhouse retreat is officially off the market. The Grey’s Anatomy star sold the 2,400-square-foot Hamptons home just ahead of the new year for $2.99 million, down a bit from the $3.79 million asking price she’d listed it for when it first hit the market back in 2017.

The five-bedroom, four-bathroom beach house spans three stories and is set on eight acres in Sag Harbor, a prime spot for summering New Yorkers looking to escape the city. The contemporary exterior is painted a rustic gray-blue, while inside the living spaces are simultaneously homey and sleek, with hardwood floors, paneled walls, marble accents, and entire walls of glass windows. The entryway opens to a double-height living room with a modern marble fireplace, and the formal dining room boasts equally high ceilings, plus white-painted wooden beams and a second sleek fireplace. The nearby kitchen is dazzling in white and off-white hues, with marble countertops and white wood cabinetry.

There are two master suites in the home. The first is located on the ground floor, and boasts a private living room, as well as its own bathroom. A staircase in the ground floor master suite leads up to an en suite guest room, as well as an additional master suite on the second floor with its own living room and office. Out back, a wooden deck steps down to a unique pool and generous lounging areas, as well as a lush lawn that runs the perimeter of the backyard.

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Pompeo told Architectural Digest back in 2017 that the original plan after buying the Sag Harbor property was to raze the existing cabin to build a guest house, and then build a larger main house nearby. Instead, she and husband Chris Ivery ended up abandoning the main house plan and turned the cabin into its own main house. “I loved the history of the property,” she told AD at the time. “There was a cabin, which was built by a woman who was a civil rights activist lawyer. She actually built it with her own two hands. Originally, I was given the advice to build on the original footprint of the cabin, because it would save time and money. Well, it didn’t save either!”

Originally Appeared on Architectural Digest