Designer life in the country

Luxury menswear designer Joseph Abboud (who got his start with Ralph Lauren before launching his own label) has dropped the price of his Bedford, NY, home from $3.65 million to $3.15 million. The historic carriage house, at 77 Pound Ridge Road (not far from Lauren and Martha Stewart), was built in 1849 and renovated in 2017. At 4,608 square feet, the residence features five bedrooms, four bathrooms, two half baths and details like vaulted, beamed ceilings; hardwood floors; an eat-in kitchen; a formal dining room; a wine cellar; and a porch, all on 3.71 acres. Abboud and his daughter Ari renovated the space in collaboration with Restoration Hardware. Everything in the home — from the furniture and art to the fine linens and Loro Piana cashmere accessories — is included in the sale. The property (with listing broker Angela Kessel of Houlihan Lawrence) also features a pool and a “writer’s cottage.”

A-list hairstylist trims $5M loft

Top celeb hair stylist/reality TV star Nick Arrojo and his wife, Lina, are listing their Hudson Square loft, at 505 Greenwich St., for $5 million. (Arrojo, who’s known for styling hair on TLC’s “What Not to Wear,” has salons in Williamsburg, Tribeca and a flagship in Soho.) The couple’s light-flooded, 11th-floor unit features three bedrooms and bathrooms over 2,761 square feet, including an open entertaining space and a chef’s kitchen with a walk-in butler’s pantry. The 14-story building, created in 2004 and near Hudson River Park and Pier 40, offers a doorman, cold storage, a bike room, a garden, a pet spa, a children’s playroom and a gym. The listing broker is Douglas Elliman’s Jason Walker.

Warhol’s muse lists her mansion

Former model and journalist Barbara Allen de Kwiatkowski, who was part of Andy Warhol’s inner gang at Interview magazine, has listed her 1 Beekman Place duplex for $11.5 million. The fifth-and-sixth-floor home is 5,200 square feet and comes with five bedrooms, five and a half bathrooms, a large eat-in kitchen with a walk-through butler’s pantry — and a hefty $14,370 monthly maintenance fee. There’s also a private balcony, a semi-private elevator landing, a red lacquer library, high ceilings, wood-burning fireplaces, a semi-circular staircase and East River views. The design is by Sister Parish’s Parish-Hadley Associates, which also decorated the Kennedy White House. The building has a tony pedigree — it was developed in 1930 by John D. Rockefeller Jr.’s son-in-law, David Milton, and its residents have included Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller and Prince Aly Khan, son of Sultan Mahommed Shah and third husband of Rita Hayworth. Building amenities include a pool, a full-size indoor basketball court, a golf simulator, a gym, on-site parking and a parking valet. The listing brokers are Michael Sarg, Josh Doyle and Nick Gavin of Compass.

ABC Carpet queen’s glass castle

Fashion-forward CEO Paulette Cole, the third-generation owner of beloved NYC institution ABC Carpet & Home, has bought the Taghkanic House (aka the Glass House) upstate. Cole, we hear, has big plans for the sprawling estate, which will incorporate guest quarters, wellness offerings and regenerative farming in the heart of the historic Hudson Valley. “She searched for the perfect property for more than a year to build her dream,” a friend tells Gimme. The award-winning glass and steel home, at 281 Old Route 82, was designed by Tom Phifer and Partners, and took 10 years to build. We’re told it sold for $7.21 million, which included the seven-bedroom main house, a three-bedroom renovated farmhouse and a three-bedroom guest house, for a total of 13 bedrooms on a whopping 414 acres. The main residence features an 1,800-square-foot glass pavilion built atop the 7,000- square-foot-home, complete with an indoor pool. Top modernist landscape architect Dan Kiley sculpted the grounds with ponds and an outdoor pool. There’s also a tennis court, bocce court, organic vegetable garden, riding and hiking trails, and three traditional red barns. The listing broker was George Langa of Berkshire Hathaway; Wendy Maitland, of Atelier by Wendy Maitland, repped the buyer.

We hear…

On Sept. 12, model Joy Corrigan and her sister Gina Smith will toast the launch of their streetwear clothing brand, Naked Species, at a splashy $14.5 million loft in Soho. The 16th-floor duplex, at 565 Broome St., is the first New York residential project by Pritzker Prize-winning starchitect Renzo Piano. The unit’s private elevator leads to a formal foyer, a corner great room, an open chef’s kitchen and a 2,200-square-foot private terrace with a heated saltwater pool and an outdoor kitchen. Building amenities include a 55-foot heated lap pool, a steam room, a sauna, a gym, a yoga studio, a playroom, a library and an indoor lounge with 92-foot ceilings and a live green wall — not to mention a private porte cochere (with automated parking for purchase). The listing brokers are Douglas Elliman’s Stacy Spielman, Andrew Anderson, Joshua Lieberman and Benjamin Glazer. As for the fashion line — designed by Corrigan — a portion of proceeds will go to the Wild Tomorrow fund, which protects endangered species and their own habitats.