The Royal Tenenbaums NYC Mansion is for Rent for $20,000 a Month
Town & Country
1 / 11
The Royal Tenenbaums NYC Mansion is for Rent for $20,000 a Month
For the first time in decades, the mansion best known as the set of Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums is on the market. The 2001 film—starring Gene Hackman, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Stiller, Anjelica Huston, and more—is beloved not only for its captivating storyline, but for the sprawling 19th-century backdrop. Located in New York City’s Hamilton Heights, the home was built in 1899 and designed by Adolph Hoak. The 6,000 square-foot Flemish Revival mansion’s storied pedigree actually predates its appearance on the big screen, however. According to the listing, the home originally belonged to U.S. attorney Charles H. Tuttle—the Republican nominee for Governor of New York in the election against Franklin D. Roosevelt.
While The Royal Tenenbaums showcases the spectacularity of the home to an extent (Anderson’s signature aesthetic certainly helped), a look inside the newly-listed mansion offers fans of the film a whole new perspective. And if you’ve got $20,000 a month to spare, perhaps a potential new pad. Take a look inside the home, which is listed by Spencer Means and Paolo Sciarra of Compass, below.
Jonathan Artieda
Oops!
Something went wrong.
Please try again later.
Oops!
Something went wrong.
Please try again later.
Oops!
Something went wrong.
Please try again later.
Oops!
Something went wrong.
Please try again later.
Oops!
Something went wrong.
Please try again later.
Oops!
Something went wrong.
Please try again later.
Oops!
Something went wrong.
Please try again later.
The set of Wes Anderson's 2001 film hit the market for the first time in 22 years.
Five more alternate jurors were selected Friday following questioning from prosecution and defense lawyers, rounding out the 12 jurors and six alternates needed for the case against Trump to proceed.
Former New York Yankees left-hander Fritz Peterson died at the age of 82. He is probably best known exchanging wives with teammate Mike Kekich in the 1970s.
Fantasy baseball analyst Andy Behrens offers up a series of pickups to assist every manager, starting with a duo of Rockies ahead of a Colorado homestand.
Jake Mintz & Jordan Shusterman give their early season assessment of all thirty MLB teams at the three week mark, as well as discuss the long-awaited debut of Texas Rangers pitcher Jack Leiter.