An East Village rowhouse where the pop art legend Andy Warhol lived in the late 1960s has hit the market for $6.19 million.
The historic home, at 321 E. Sixth St., is an Anglo-Italianate brick building that was built in 1853. It was once owned by Warhol’s friend, filmmaker Paul Morrissey, and Warhol lived there, too, according to brokers.
The four-story, 20-foot-wide home is around 5,000 square feet and comes with eight bedrooms, eight bathrooms and two fireplaces. Design details include crown moldings, 13-foot ceilings, exposed brick and hardwood floors.
The home is currently divided into separate apartments but can be delivered vacant, said Leslie J. Garfield’s Thomas Wexler, who is co-listing the home with Tyler Wexler.
The sale also includes city and landmarks-approved renovation plans to transform it into a two-family home, with two triplexes, of three to four bedrooms each — along with an elevator, internal stairs, a rooftop penthouse, patios, a gym in the cellar and more.
The home also features a landscaped garden with a flagstone patio and a separate entrance. It was last asking $4.95 million in 2019.
The rowhouse was formerly owned by a Tibetan monk who had some “unusual” decor, a broker said, but it can now be a “blank slate.”