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Gilded Age Mansion Changes Hands in Upstate New York for $6.5 million

A gilded age mansion that once doubled as a conference center has been picked up for $6.5 million by a.

A gilded age mansion that once doubled as a conference center has been picked up for $6.5 million by a nonprofit group with strong ties to a Chinese real estate website.

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The Arden House , a 100,000-square-foot mansion in upstate Harriman, NY, was sold by The Open Space Conservancy to the Research Center on Natural Conservation , a not-for-profit whose principals are part of SouFun Holdings , a Beijing real estate website.

In 2010, SouFun Holdings had purchased a training center formerly owned by the American International Group for $46 million.

Robert Freedman and Richard Warshauer of Colliers International represented The Open Space Institute in the sale. Charlotte Cheung of The Ariel Group Realty represented Research Center on Natural Conservation .

The Open Space Institute, the previous owners of the Arden House, had originally purchased the place from Columbia University for $4 million in 2007 with the plan of eventually selling the 450 acres of protected land to the state of New York.

Open Spaces soon decided to sell the asset because it no longer fit into their plans, said Mr. Warshauer . “They found that they had better uses for their resources,” he said .

He conducted a “difficult” international search, drawing interest from educational institutions, various nonprofits, and private buyers as well. The property had sale restrictions—it can only be sold to another nonprofit. Also, 400 of the property’s 450 acres had a conservation easement, protecting the land and its surrounding trees.

“So we had two strikes on us going out to the market, and it required a little creativity,” said Mr. Warshauer .

He and Mr. Freedman reached out to SouFun, which had just completed its purchase of AIG.

“I thought this would be a perfect adjunct, as this property has 97 guest rooms and various amenities on it,” said Mr. Warshauer .

SouFon first toyed with the idea of buying the land through an established non-profit. The company ultimately started the Research Center on Natural Conservation as its own non-profit.

“It’s the first time we’ve seen a foreign buyer – an Asian buyer – buying eased land, protected land,” said Kim Elliman, President and CEO of Open Space.

Arden House’s new owners intend to use the space as a conference center, said Mr. Warshauer .

The house was originally built by railroad magnate E.H. Harriman in 1909. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1966.

Gilded Age Mansion Changes Hands in Upstate New York for $6.5 million

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research center on natural conservation arden house

Arden House

Newburgh, Orange County, New York

research center on natural conservation arden house

This house is best associated with...

research center on natural conservation arden house

Edward Henry Harriman

"Ned" E.H. Harriman, of New York, Railroad Tycoon

research center on natural conservation arden house

Mary (Averell) Harriman

Mrs Mary Williamson (Averell) Harriman

research center on natural conservation arden house

William Averell Harriman

W. Averell Harriman, 48th Governor of New York; Ambassador to United Kingdom

research center on natural conservation arden house

Kathleen (Lawrance) Harriman

Mrs "Kitty" Kathleen Lanier (Lawrance) Harriman

research center on natural conservation arden house

Marie Norton

Mrs Marie (Norton) Whitney, Harriman

A wide corridor of colored marbles led into a giant room with a marble floor softened by rugs and bearskins... A fireplace (as tall as a man was) flanked by sofas, easy chairs, and two of three tables with stacks of magazines and newspapers. All the rooms at Arden were cavernous and bordered a central court with a fountain, shrubbery, and some statuary. Vases and tubs of flowers lined the corridors and spilled over into every room. A grand stairway of unpolished white marble led (guests to their) bedroom. The dinner was delicious... the servants well-trained and unobtrusive... The organ room was about the size of the Episcopal Church in Medina. Another huge fireplace dominated one end, and a giant loft concealing the organ stood at the other beneath a high, vaulted ceiling... The room could seat at least two hundred people. An immense bas-relief of an Indian hunting buffalo, done by Mary 's son-in-law, Charles Cary Rumsey , loomed above the fireplace.

research center on natural conservation arden house

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Research Center on Natural Conservation Inc

Profile Last Updated: 01/05/2024 Grant Information Last Updated: 09/03/1973

research center on natural conservation arden house

  • Harriman, NY, United States
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Purpose and Activities

TO CREATE, FORM AND ESTABLISH AN ORGANIZATION TO RESEARCH INNOVATIVE NATURAL CONSERVATION METHODS; TO HOLD, CONDUCT AND ORGANIZE MEETINGS, DISCUSSIONS AND FORUMS TO CONSIDER COMMUNITY OPINION OR CONTEMPORARY ISSUES PERTAINING TO THE PRESERVATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT; TO FOSTER AND ENCOURAGE INTEREST AND SUPPORT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ISSUES; TO STUDY THE EFFECTS OF GLOBAL WARMING ON THE ENVIRONMENT IN THE FUTURE; TO PROMOTE, FOSTER AND ADVANCE INTEREST IN THE PRESERVATION OF THE ENVIRONMENT FOR FUTURE GENERATION. NOTHING HEREIN SHALL AUTHORIZE THE CORPORATION TO OPERATE, MAINTAIN OR MANAGE A CHARTER SCHOOL, A NURSERY SCHOOL, AN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, A SECONDARY SCHOOL, A COLLEGE, UNIVERSITY OR TO ADVERTISE OR OFFER CREDIT-BEARING COURSES OR DEGREES IN NEW YORK STATE.

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America's 11 largest historic homes and what the estates look like today

Wealthy tycoons built some of the largest and most opulent historic houses of 50,000 square feet or larger in America, most of which are no longer used as private homes but have been adapted for reuse .

The sprawling estates, all built before 1950, now serve as research labs, country clubs, museums and educational centers — whether through endowment or outright purchase. Some remain in private hands while others are now publicly owned.

The homes are primarily located along the East coast, with the exception of Meadow Brook Hall in Michigan. Equipped with ballrooms, live-in quarters for staff and impressive square footage, these homes look straight out of a Clue game board. 

Here are America's 11 largest historic homes.

Biltmore Estate, Asheville, North Carolina

The Biltmore Estate was built between 1889 and 1895 for art collector and rich scion George Washington Vanderbilt II. Open daily for self-guided tours, the most massive of the outsized Vanderbilt homes covers nearly 179,000 square feet.

Learn more: Best travel insurance

Are you a mosquito magnet? It may be because of your smell, new study suggests

Oheka Castle, Huntington, New York

Funded by financier Otto Kahn between 1914 and 1919, Oheka Castle is now a privately-owned luxury hotel and event venue. Kahn built the 109,000-square-foot house after selling his country estate in Morristown due to antisemitism in that community.

Arden House, Harriman, New York

The Arden House on railroad tycoon Edward Harriman's estate covers more than 97,000 square feet. Now a conference center with 97 guest rooms, the house took five years to complete. It was donated to Columbia University in 1950 but is now owned by the Research Center on Natural Conservation.

Winterthur, Winterthur, Delaware

The former home of wealthy scion Henry Francis du Pont and his collection of American furniture and artifacts, Winterthur was expanded to nearly 97,000 square feet under DuPont, who inherited the estate in 1926. It became a full-time museum in 1951 and has since been further enlarged.

Great Hall, West Long Branch, New Jersey

The Great Hall at Shadow Lawn was a rebuild for Hubert Parson, the president of the F.W. Woolworth Co., after the site's manor burned in 1927. The roughly 90,000-square-foot house cost Parson $10.5 million. Monmouth University bought the property in 1955 for $350,000.

Meadow Brook Hall, Rochester Hills, Michigan

The largest home away from the Eastern Seaboard, Meadow Brook Hall at Oakland University covers about 88,000 square feet. Built between 1926 and 1929 for $4 million, it was once the home of Matilda Dodge Wilson. It is now open for tours and special events.

Lost villages, ancient ruins, WWII ships uncovered as water levels  plunge

Florham, Florham Park, New Jersey

The roughly 80,000-square-foot home of Florence Adele Vanderbilt and her husband Hamilton Twombly was built between 1894 and 1897. Fairleigh Dickinson University acquired the house in 1958 to be the centerpiece of a new campus.

Bourne Mansion, Oakdale, New York

Another massive Vanderbilt house, the Bourne Mansion covers about 75,000 square feet. The home was built between 1897 and 1900 for Frederick Bourne, the president of the Singer Sewing Machine Company. It is now an event venue.

What's everyone talking about? Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day

Idle Hour, Oakdale, New York

Idle Hour was built at the turn of the 20th century for railroad mogul and financier William Kissam Vanderbilt. Like the nearby Bourne Mansion, the roughly 70,000-square-foot house was once owned by a college. Unlike its fellow Vanderbilt mansion, however, it has suffered disrepair and is not open to the public.

Lynnewood Hall, Elkins Park, Pennsylvania

Built between 1897 and 1899 for industrial tycoon Peter Widener, Lynnewood Hall covers about 70,000 square feet. It was designed by Horace Trumbauer, who later hired Great Hall designer Julian Abele. It is now under private ownership and in need of repairs.

Woodlea, Briarcliff Manor, New York

Woodlea was built between 1892 and 1895 for Colonel Elliott Shepard and Margaret Vanderbilt Shepard by McKim, Mead and White, the architectural firm responsible for Florham. The roughly 70,000-square-foot house is now the clubhouse for the Sleepy Hollow Country Club.

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Research Center on Natural Conservation Inc.

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New York Military Academy to Reopen Under New Owners

research center on natural conservation arden house

By Joseph Berger

  • Sept. 30, 2015

POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. — The New York Military Academy , a 126-year-old boarding school whose graduates include the Republican presidential candidate Donald J. Trump , was bought on Wednesday for close to $16 million at a bankruptcy auction by a nonprofit group controlled by Chinese investors, who told academy officials that they would keep it open as a high school.

The Research Center on Natural Conservation, the successful bidder for the 113 scenic acres of buildings, barracks and land in Cornwall-on-Hudson, was formed in 2011 to buy another marquee New York property, the Arden House, in Harriman, N.Y. The property in that sale, a Gilded Age 452-acre estate, was built by the railroad tycoon E. H. Harriman. Records from the Internal Revenue Service and New York State indicate the nonprofit’s president is Vincent Tianquan Mo, of China and Great Neck, N.Y., who is the founder and chairman of SouFun Holdings, a Beijing-based real estate website that owns the former AIG building near Wall Street in New York City.

With its enrollment declining sharply in an age when military prep schools have fallen out of favor, N.Y.M.A. has struggled financially. In March it sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from its creditors. Despite letters assuring its incoming students, the school did not open in September as promised and went on the auction block.

Whatever the implications of foreign ownership of N.Y.M.A., the successful sale thrilled several alumni and faculty who attended the auction.

“I won’t quite believe it until the bidder tells me directly, but as James Brown says, ‘I feel good!,’ ” said Fletcher Bailey, a retired Army master sergeant who has served as a drill and marksmanship instructor at the school.

Lewis D. Wrobel, the academy’s bankruptcy lawyer, said the sale still needed the approval of Judge Cecelia G. Morris of United States Bankruptcy Court here, which he expected could come before the end of this month. The school, he suggested, could open soon after. Anthony Desa, the current president of the board of trustees would remain as president for the near future.

While it is unlikely that many students who had expected to attend N.Y.M.A. would return midsemester from the schools they are now attending, Randy Clark, the supervisor of the town of Cornwall, said the new owners might recruit Chinese students interested in studying in the United States.

Mr. Clark, who is familiar with the school’s negotiations and once organized a town bid for the property, said “China has always stressed the importance of getting their students into Western institutions.”

“It’s like a farm system in baseball,” he continued. “We’re very happy it’s a successful outcome.”

There were two bidders at the auction on Wednesday, with the winning offer of $15.825 million topping a bid by Global Preparatory Academies, a California-based firm also controlled by Chinese investors that had tried earlier to buy the school for $13.1 million but failed to come up with a down payment in time.

N.Y.M.A., which runs from the eighth through 12th grades, was founded in 1889 as a boys’ boarding school with military-themed training aiming to provide character building. It has produced soldiers and officers who fought in all of the nation’s wars since its founding and includes among its more celebrated alumni Stephen Sondheim, John A. Gotti and Francis Ford Coppola.

But like military academies across the country, N.Y.M.A. saw its allure dwindle as parents began to view such schools as draconian and military service lost cachet with contentious wars in Vietnam and Iraq. The academy is one of the few military schools remaining in the Northeast, a region where New York State alone once had more than 40.

Enrollment at the academy dropped from more than 500 in the 1960s to fewer than 100 last year. For at least five years, the school has teetered on the edge of closing, before finally seeking Chapter 11 protection.

Mr. Desa, a Las Vegas businessman, searched frantically for a buyer who could sustain the school, attracting the offer from Global Preparatory Academies. Mr. Desa, whose son is an alumnus, announced in late August that the school would open on Sept. 14, but then the would-be buyer did not produce the required 10 percent deposit.

Amy Lorigan, an English teacher at the school, said that 13 faculty and other staff members and their families were still living in on-campus housing, with another 12 or so living off campus. She said they were “all committed to returning to work at N.Y.M.A. as soon as that becomes possible.”

There was some hope among alumni in the days and weeks before the auction that Mr. Trump, a member of the graduating class of 1964, would, like the cavalry, ride to the school’s rescue with a big check. He described in a recent biography how his years at the academy had matured him after he was known for rowdy behavior at a preparatory school in Queens. The experience, he told the biographer, left him with the feeling “that I was in the military.”

But Mr. Trump, who obtained draft deferments during the Vietnam era, did not make a bid.

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  • Follow signs for NYS Thruway (I-87) South. Proceed on I-87 South for one exit, to Exit #16.
  • Exit the NYS Thruway at Exit #16. Bear right after passing through the toll booth and take the first exit (approximately 100 yards after booth). Make a left (South) at the traffic light at the end of exit ramp onto Routes 17/32.
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New & Custom Home Builders in Elektrostal'

Location (1).

  • Use My Current Location

Popular Locations

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  • Elektrostal', Moscow Oblast, Russia

Professional Category (1)

  • Accessory Dwelling Units (ADU)

Featured Reviews for New & Custom Home Builders in Elektrostal'

  • Reach out to the pro(s) you want, then share your vision to get the ball rolling.
  • Request and compare quotes, then hire the Home Builder that perfectly fits your project and budget limits.

Before choosing a Builder for your residential home project in Elektrostal', there are a few important steps to take:

  • Define your project: Outline your desired home type, features, and layout. Provide specific details and preferences to help the builder understand your vision.
  • Establish a budget: Develop a comprehensive budget, including construction expenses and material costs. Communicate your budgetary constraints to the builder from the beginning.
  • Timeline: Share your estimated timeline or desired completion date.
  • Site conditions: Inform the builder about any unique site conditions or challenges.
  • Local regulations: Make the builder aware of any building regulations or permits required.
  • Land Surveying

What do new home building contractors do?

Questions to ask a prospective custom home builder in elektrostal', moscow oblast, russia:.

If you search for Home Builders near me you'll be sure to find a business that knows about modern design concepts and innovative technologies to meet the evolving needs of homeowners. With their expertise, Home Builders ensure that renovation projects align with clients' preferences and aspirations, delivering personalized and contemporary living spaces.

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