Skip to main content

Revamped Damark’s Is Open

Revamped Damark’s Is Open

Bruce Damark and Michiko Damark in front of the wood-fired oven in their new and improved 11,000-square-foot Damark’s Deli on Three Mile Harbor Road in East Hampton.
Bruce Damark and Michiko Damark in front of the wood-fired oven in their new and improved 11,000-square-foot Damark’s Deli on Three Mile Harbor Road in East Hampton.
Durell Godfrey
Grandson of market owners adds new twist
By
Jamie Bufalino

In 1949, Mary and Joe Damark opened a small market in the front of their house on Three Mile Harbor Road. “You would sit at their kitchen table, and you could see the customers in the store,” recalled Bruce Damark, the couple’s grandson and the owner, with his wife, Michiko, of the now super-sized Damark’s Deli, which had a grand opening on Friday.

Mr. Damark took time this week to reminisce  in an office on the lower level of the more than 11,000-square-foot market, which contains a pizza oven, a lobster tank, two kitchens, an expansive display case for prepared foods, a dining area, wire shelving filled with snacks, condiments, and sundries, and a farm stand’s worth of fresh produce.

During the summer while growing up, Mr. Damark used to work in the deli, which was later run by his parents. Even then, he said he had ambitious plans for the family business. “I remember cooking egg sandwiches in the kitchen after college, and I would talk to my brother about expanding.”  

The dream persisted after he and Michiko bought the market in 2001, and a plan to transform the formerly cramped space into a megastore started to come together in 2009. The East Hampton Town Planning Board approved a site plan that included a second-floor apartment, in 2012.

“When we got a price for how much it would cost to build, we said that’s going to be too expensive, so let’s cut the apartment off, raise the ceiling. Let’s push it out a little more, and do this and do that,” Mr. Damark said, explaining the current configuration. The main floor is a 5,400-square-foot, loft-like space with a triple-high ceiling that lends an air of grandeur. 

As for the exterior, which some social media savants have compared to the White House and Buckingham Palace, Mr. Damark said he was inspired by both Sag Harbor’s architecture and wanting the building to serve notice that you are entering Springs. “Let’s make something that makes a mark,” he said. 

Construction began in October 2017 when his grandparents’ house was torn down to make room for the new store. “The house was so old, you couldn’t add on to it,” said Mr. Damark, who got emotional while discussing the demolition. 

On the day he reopened the deli, he wrote a Facebook post saying, “Don’t think our family won’t miss grandma and grandpa’s house. It wasn’t easy taking a bulldozer to the place we would [go] after school, eat Yodels and milk, and watch the Three Stooges on WPIX, and work summers as kids. The fact of the matter was that the building was shot.”

With demolition complete, the goal was to open the market in nine months.  However, Mr. Damark said a series of snafus, involving subcontractors, the Suffolk County Water Authority, and the PSEG utility, kept delaying progress. “First it was supposed to open on, like, Memorial Day, then Fourth of July, and it just went on and on and on,” he said. 

He and Michiko were “obsessive and hands-on” about getting all the details right, he said. “We went back and forth figuring out the footage between the pastry case and the coffee counter, and made painstaking decisions about the chairs and tables.” 

They also curated what the market would sell, seeking to appeal to a wide cross section of people.

“We looked at the stuff that Whole Foods, Provisions, and Wild by Nature carry,” he said. “That’s the kind of direction we wanted to go in. Plus we wanted to have the regular egg sandwiches, and you gotta do some down-and-dirty macaroni and cheese.” 

About 80 percent of the deli’s menu now was on the former one, he said, but people hadn’t stopped in before the renovation to see what was available, apparently put off by the previous parking lot‚ a sliver of asphalt from which drivers were forced to back into Three Mile Harbor Road traffic. “They didn’t want to take their life in their hands,” he said. A more ample, L-shaped lot is now along the back of the building.

In addition to sandwiches and standard deli fare — along with coleslaw and potato salad made from his grandmother’s recipes, Mr. Damark opted for a “take-no-prisoners” approach to the store’s offerings. He said that was why he put in the pizza oven and has stocked up on gourmet products and high-end prepared dishes, such as garlic and herb-crusted filet mignon. “Our underlying theme is ‘a little something for everyone,’ ” he said. 

Even though the new mix includes some fancy foods, he said prices are still reasonable. “I don’t want people coming in and going, ‘Oh, man, I’m not coming here. This place is too expensive.’ We don’t want to alienate the blue-collar community. They’re going to be the ones to carry us in the winter.”

On the day before opening, Mr. Damark said he and his wife were up late handwriting price cards. After three hours’ sleep, he said he welcomed their first customer and treated her to free coffee. 

As people continued to flow in over the following days, it dawned on him, he said, that the years of planning had finally paid off. “When the customers were in the store and buying pizzas, and you see the pizzas coming out of the oven, it was like, ‘Holy shit, man, this really worked out.’ ” 

Conversations with several patrons, many of whom seemed to be studying the market as if it were the Taj Mahal, made it clear they were impressed. “It’s more than I ever expected it to be,” said East Hampton Town Justice Lisa R. Rana, a Springs resident, who stopped in early the first day and excitedly pointed out the lobster tank. “I’m so glad they were able to do it, and they did it right.”

Mr. Damark said there were still some kinks to work out, such as cash register glitches and the system used to send orders to the kitchen.

But they haven’t stopped him from planning for the future. He expects to offer catering by summer, he’s looking into delivery options, and he eventually wants to add Asian dishes to the menu, firing up a five-wok stove he installed. 

Mr. Damark said his grandparents would be thrilled that he had transformed the market into a far more expansive enterprise than the one they started in 1949. “They were entrepreneurs so they would say, ‘Go for it man. Why didn’t you do it sooner?’ ” 

And even with all the changes, he said it still feels like the market he remembers from childhood. “I know it sounds really corny, but in the old deli I always felt like I was in my grandmother’s house, and that I can never shake.”

Keeping Account 10.25.18

Keeping Account 10.25.18

The Purist magazine’s Cristina Cuomo, Corcoran’s Gary DePersia, and Suzee Foster soaked in the atmosphere during a sunset cocktail party at Dick Cavett’s house in Montauk on Friday. Mr. DePersia has the listing for the house, known as Tick Hall, which is on the market for $48.5 million.
The Purist magazine’s Cristina Cuomo, Corcoran’s Gary DePersia, and Suzee Foster soaked in the atmosphere during a sunset cocktail party at Dick Cavett’s house in Montauk on Friday. Mr. DePersia has the listing for the house, known as Tick Hall, which is on the market for $48.5 million.
Jane Bimson
Local Business Notes
By
Star Staff

At the Archi Awards

A number of architectural firms with offices on the South Fork were among the winners of Archi Awards presented by the American Institute of Architects’ Long Island Chapter last Thursday at the North Hills Country Club in Manhasset. 

Blaze Makoid Architecture received an Archi Award commendation in the small project, under $3 million category for its Old Orchard pool house in East Hampton.

Bates Masi + Architects was the winner of four design awards. The firm took home an Archi Award of Excellence in the residential single family, under $1 million category for a Beach Hampton house, a commendation award in the new commercial, under $4 million category for its own office building on North Main Street in East Hampton, a commendation award in the residential single family, $1 million to $3 million category for a Georgica Close Road project in East Hampton, and a commendation in the residential single family, over $3 million category for a house in Annapolis, Md.

Stelle Lomont Rouhani Architects, which has an office in Bridgehampton, won an excellence in architecture award in the residential single family, over $3 million category for a project it calls House on the Bluff. “The main floor, constructed of mostly glass and concrete, is meant to be more pavilion-like, with the doors and screens disappearing into pockets,” the firm explained in a release, while the cedar-clad second floor contains the bedrooms and “semi-private spaces.”

The firm chose “a limited materials palette of glass, anodized aluminum, cedar, and concrete” for the “low-maintenance and sustainable characteristics.” The house also has geothermal heating and cooling, high-performance class and insulation, louvered sunscreens, and solar panels.

 

WordHampton Wins

Based in Springs, WordHampton Public Relations, earned three MarCom Awards for marketing and communications professionals, including the highest achievable, a platinum, for its work in connection with the launch of L&W Market in Bridgehampton earlier this year. 

The firm also won a gold award for a Washington Post placement highlighting two clients in a food-related story titled “Summering and Simmering in the Hamptons,” and honorable mention for a News 12 television placement showcasing the DOMA Land + Sea restaurant.

The MarCom Awards are administered by the Association of Marketing and Communications Professionals, an international organization for marketing, communication, advertising, public relations, digital, and web professionals. 

 

Kudos for Kombrink

Lisa Clare Kombrink Esq. of Twomey, Latham, Shea, Kelley, Dubin & Quartararo was honored as one of Long Island’s top 50 women in business by Long Island Business News. Leadership in their fields, initiative, and community involvement are “all core components of this recognition program,” according to a release.

Ms. Kombrink, a past Southampton Town attorney and former criminal appeals lawyer in New York City, has worked on the East End for 25 years and serves private and government clients in real estate, zoning, farmland and open space preservation, and land use litigation. She lives in Southampton.

Outside of her legal work, Ms. Kombrink serves on the board of directors of the Southampton Hospital Association, and is a member of the Stony Brook Southampton Hospital executive committee and quality assurance committee. She is a board member of the New York Higher Education Capital Improvements Matching Grant Program.

 

Home Sales Lukewarm

During the hottest days of the summer, the East End real estate market was decidedly lukewarm, according to a third-quarter report from Town and Country that found that overall home sales in East Hampton Town were down 10 percent compared to the same period last year, and sales in both Sag Harbor Village and Montauk dropped 21 percent. 

Countering that trend were East Hampton Village, which posted a 13-percent gain, and Southampton Village, which was up 60 percent. The market in the Bridgehampton area, which includes Water Mill and Sagaponack in the agency’s analysis, also continues to thrive, up 6 percent over all and 75 percent in the sale of homes priced between $2 million and $3.49 million. 

Judi Desiderio, the C.E.O. of Town and Country and the author of the report, said that the divergent numbers show that a divide had emerged during the quarter, with certain locations flourishing in a market that is largely remaining stable. 

A divide also exists at different price levels. East Hampton Town’s decrease in overall sales was, according to the agency’s numbers, primarily caused by a 36-percent decrease in the sale of houses in the $500,000 to $999,000 range. For houses priced between $1 million and $3.49 million, however, sales increased by 100 percent.

Recorded Deeds: 11.01.18

Recorded Deeds: 11.01.18

The prices below have been calculated from the county transfer tax. Unless otherwise noted, the parcels contain structures.
By
Star Staff

AMAGANSETT

T. Connors III (by executor) to Irving Eli L.L.C., 143 Marine Boulevard, .84 acre, Aug. 28, $10,350,000.

 

BRIDGEHAMPTON

E. Good (by executor) to 1076 Ocean Road, 1076 Ocean Road, 1.02 acres, Aug. 29, $5,695,000.

D. Beard to G. Garnica, 1526 Bridgehampton-Sag Harbor Turn­pike, 1.2 acres, Aug. 30, $600,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON 

T. Griffith and C. Booth to P. Lutkins, 23 Huckleberry Lane, 10.07 acress, Aug. 17, $970,000.

C. Collet to Glenn Valley at Second, 11 Second Avenue, .5 acre (vacant), July 25, $460,000.

R. Haime and E. McClain to I. Kara and S. Karaivanov, 8 Montauk Avenue, .72 acre, July 26, $875,000.

D. and E. Risinger to M. and T. Lupica, 4 Issac’s Path, .69 acre, Aug. 10, $1,800,000.

J. and H. Ridless to A. Loris, 194 Treescape Drive, Unit 3C, Aug. 28, $585,000.

C. and L. Schaeffer to Reichenstein and Fernand, 9 Anvil Court, .71 acre, Sept. 21, $1,250,000.

B. Rattray to A. Chantecaille, 57 Accabonac Road, .83 acre, Sept. 21, $1,250,000.

MONTAUK

A. Pikulik Trust to M. and K. Schoen, 33 Pinetree Drive, .17 acre, Aug. 25, $850,000.

D. Koehl to D. Schwed Trust, 44 Harding Road, .29 acre, Sept. 5, $1,440,000.

 

SAG HARBOR

R. and C. Marr to V. Lubatkin, 61 Walker Avenue, .29 acre, Aug. 29, $990,000.

J. and E. Ricker to A. Antreasyan and E. Dow, 127 Jermain Avenue, .11 acre, Aug. 30, $890,000.

 

SPRINGS

New Sunshine Custom Builders to M. and R. Christou, 39 Harbor View Drive, .48 acre, Sept. 14, $1,145,000.

 

WATER MILL

L. Larson Trusts to T. McGrath and K. Swolfs, 1041 Deerfield Road, .53 acre, Aug. 13, $1,665,000.

B. Ezrick and Dobrowolski to R. and S. Wilutis, 538 Deerfield Road, 1.39 acres, Aug. 29, $1,580,000.

R. and S. Wilutis to C. Barcoma, 93 Lower Seven Ponds Road, 1.22 acres, Aug. 27, $1,300,000.

68 Summerfield Lane to V. Wittman, 68 Summerfield Lane, .93 acre, Sept. 10, $4,300,000.

Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton.

Keeping Account 11.01.18

Keeping Account 11.01.18

Local Business Notes
By
Star Staff

For Martin Architects

Martin Architects, a Sagaponack firm headed by Nick Martin, was the winner of the American Institute of Architects Long Island Chapter’s award for outstanding achievement in the “residential, single-family construction over $3 million” category for a project on the outskirts of Baltimore. 

The project drew on “the essential organization and material quality of a pre-existing period house by selectively transforming” it from “a compartmentalized and introverted structure into fluid spaces which display qualities of shadows and light upon varied smooth and textured wall surfaces,” according to a release from the firm. “A large addition to the rear of the existing house provides rooms with transparent boundaries engaging a lush surrounding landscape.”

The firm specializes in high-end residential, commercial, and institutional design and has taken on projects in New York, Connecticut, New Jersey, Maryland, Costa Rica, Portugal, and the Caribbean. 

 

Food Drive at Saunders

Saunders and Associates is heading up a Thanksgiving food drive at its offices in East Hampton, Bridgehampton, and Southampton to help food pantries in each of those locations. 

The real estate firm is seeking donations of all manner of canned and nonperishable foods, from peanut butter and jelly to tuna fish, vegetables, applesauce, soups, fruits, pasta sauce, and juices. Donations can be dropped off between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. daily through Nov. 14.

Recorded Deeds: 11.08.18

Recorded Deeds: 11.08.18

The prices below have been calculated from the county transfer tax. Unless otherwise noted, the parcels contain structures.
By
Star Staff

BRIDGEHAMPTON

CVR First L.L.C. to D. Schwartz and A. Jaffe, 83 Birchwood Lane, .73 acre, Sept. 7, $2,995,000.

D., D., and E. Atkins, Butter Construction, 504 Butter Lane, .92 acre, Sept. 14, $1,920,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON 

A. Weiss (by executor) to A. and E. Sanfilippo, 36 Hampton Place, .63 acre, Sept. 14, $1,450,000.

S. Glinski and T. Cheng to A. and J. Figueroa, 44 Woodpink Drive, .55 acre, Sept. 21, $830,000.

J. and A. Grzyb to J. Hollander and S. Ducoff, 141 Swamp Road, 2.2 acres, Aug. 2, $2,085,000.

Whooping L.L.C. to C. Gorman, 53 Whooping Hollow Road, .46 acre, Aug. 30, $1,690,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON VILLAGE

85 Main St L.L.C. to Tulip Equities L.L.C., 85 Main Street, .04 acre, Sept. 14, $2,700,000.

Georgica Properties to K. Sutherland, 284 Georgica Road, 2.25 acres, Aug. 17, $5,100,000.

 

MONTAUK

R. and L. Reich to J. and J. Jamet, 99 North Greenwich Street, .33 acre, Sept. 6, $750,000.

Pumukel Inc. to 4 South Elmwood L.L.C., 4 South Elmwood Avenue, .18 acre, Sept. 12, $2,750,000.

NOYAC

P. Carlino to Wildwood Road L.L.C., 84 Wildwood Road, .44 acre (vacant), Sept. 11, $415,000.

 

SAGAPONACK

287 Parsonage Lane to King Arthur L.L.C., 287 Parsonage Lane, 1.8 acres (vacant), Sept. 12, $7,750,000.

 

SPRINGS

F. and E. O’Malley to M. Gordon and A. Friedman, 1117 Fireplace Road, .6 acre, Aug. 31, $695,000.

R. Pulaski Trust to J. and O. Reznik, 12 Salt Marsh Path and lot 1-17, .55 acre, Sept. 20, $821,000.

C. Rowan to C. Rao, 22 Babes Lane, .21 acre, Sept. 7, $1,275,000.

J. Williams (by executor) to Yardley and Samot-Yardley, 152 Woodbine Drive, .5 acre, Aug. 29, $427,500.

D. Dunn and M. Kelly to P. Stella and J. Cappadona, 18 Cedar Ridge Drive, .46 acre, Sept. 26, $640,000.

 

WAINSCOTT

3 Ardsley Road L.L.C. to S. Cagliostro and DiPaolo, 3 Ardsley Road, .51 acre, Aug. 13, $2,230,500.

Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton.

Sag Harbor Staple to Close

Sag Harbor Staple to Close

Vicki Nolan, center, helped customers at the Country Lane gift shop in Sag Harbor. With the sale of the building imminent, she is closing the shop after 20 years.
Vicki Nolan, center, helped customers at the Country Lane gift shop in Sag Harbor. With the sale of the building imminent, she is closing the shop after 20 years.
Durell Godfrey
A fixture on Main Street in Sag Harbor for 20 years
By
Jamie Bufalino

Vicki Nolan, the owner of the Country Lane gift shop, which has been a fixture on Main Street in Sag Harbor for 20 years, announced last Thursday that the store would be closing by the end of December. 

“As many of you know, our building has been sold and we are not going to be able to renew our lease, so we have no choice but to begin liquidating our inventory,” Ms. Nolan said in a post on Facebook. 

The shop is located in one of the buildings that makes up an assemblage of commercial and residential properties that is being purchased by Manhattan Skyline Management, a division of a New York City real estate development firm owned by Donald Zucker. The buildings contain six retail spaces with shops such as Palm Produce Resortwear, the Ethel and Row children’s store, and the Adornments jewelry store, which recently closed.

Manhattan Skyline Management also owns the Sag Harbor building housing Provisions Natural Foods Market and Cafe.

“You can see the trend here and I’m very upset about it, as are many business owners,” said Lisa Field, the owner of the Sag Harbor Variety Store and the president of the Sag Harbor Chamber of Commerce, referring to the closing of another owner-operated shop. “One of the things Sag Harbor is known for is its mom-and-pop stores.” 

The sale of the buildings has not yet been completed, but Ms. Nolan said that she made the decision to close “because of the uncertainty due to the change in ownership.” 

Country Lane is offering 50 percent off all of its products, including Christmas items, and Ms. Nolan said the closing date will arrive when the merchandise runs out. “It really has been a wonderful 20 years,” she said. “I can’t tell you how many customers I’ve had in here today who were in tears.”

WLNG Radio to Be Sold

WLNG Radio to Be Sold

The sale of WLNG 92.1 FM could be completed by mid-December, but features like the Rolling Roadcaster remote broadcasting bus that boasts the slogan “Radio, Only Bolder” are expected to endure.
The sale of WLNG 92.1 FM could be completed by mid-December, but features like the Rolling Roadcaster remote broadcasting bus that boasts the slogan “Radio, Only Bolder” are expected to endure.
Johnette Howard
By
Johnette Howard

WLNG 92.1 FM, the quirky Sag Harbor radio station that became famous for its reverb sound and oldies music, its stubborn defiance of consultants’ bleak view of its unique format, and for surviving a battering from Hurricane Sandy to keep airing live reports, seems poised to hurdle yet another challenge.

The family trust that has overseen WLNG and its parent company, Main Street Broadcasting, since the 2009 death of the owner Robert King has agreed to sell the station to Sandra Foschi, a Sag Harbor resident and owner of Health SOS, a chain of physical therapy businesses in New York, Long Island, and Connecticut. 

But loyal listeners concerned about the fate of the 55-year-old station need not worry. No sweeping changes are planned to WLNG’s mix of hyperlocal content, music playlists, and longtime on-air personalities like Gary Sapiane, Brian (the Cannon) Bannon, and the overnight host Big Tom Lawler. It’s an idiosyncratic combination that prompted Edison Research to call WLNG “one of the oddest success stories around” when 22 stations in the local market were first measured in 2005 and WLNG impressively finished number three. 

“We’re holding off on doing interviews until the closing becomes official, which should be by mid-December — and I think it’s going to be fine,” said Mr. Sapiane, who multitasks as the station’s president and general manager in addition to hosting the 6 to 9 a.m. weekday show and the 10 a.m. “Swap and Shop Hour,” which on Monday featured calls like this: 

“Hello, Gary . . . I’m looking for comic books to buy. And also, some man cave beer signs that light up.”

“Good morning, Gary. I have two scallop dredgers to sell. I’m in Aquebogue.”

The $3.9 million purchase of WLNG will be made by Ms. Foschi under her limited liability company Bark Out Loud Dogs Media, according to the trade website radioinsight.com. The sale includes $3.2 million for the station’s waterfront site on Redwood Road in Sag Harbor, $525,000 for WLNG’s license and assets, and $125,000 for the station’s Millstone Road tower (which station employees sometimes refer to as “Mount Sidney,” a fond nod to the longtime station president and on-air personality Paul Sidney).

Ms. Foschi has no direct background in broadcasting. But her husband, Bill Evans, is a longtime meteorologist for WABC-TV in New York who has consistently worked in radio since getting his start at age 13 at WDAL, a station in his hometown of Meridian, Mo. 

One of WLNG’s many signature moments over the years came during Hurricane Sandy in 2012. The station continued to broadcast and stream online using generator power even after its low-slung waterfront offices that hug the shoreline of Sag Harbor’s Morris Cove were flooded with ankle-deep water. Staffers eventually noticed a burning smell that persuaded them to briefly stop and check whether they should continue — which they did. The station was hailed for providing an important service to the community with its weather updates and live reports from staffers who worked by flashlight inside the office and ventured out in the storm’s aftermath.

In addition to hometown touches like community news, birthday shout-outs, and airing local residents’ funeral arrangements, WLNG is also famous for playing hits from the 1950s to the ’70s and its library of jingles, another throwback favored by Mr. Sidney that continues today, along with the reverb (or echo chamber) sound.

WLNG’s nightly programming currently features shows such as “Doo Wop Stop” with Cool Bobby B., “This Is the 60s” with J.J. Wilson, and “Sock Hop Saturday Night” with Mark Edwards.

One of the station’s jingles crows about how its signal reaches from “Mastic to Montauk,” but it can also be heard as far away as Connecticut and Rhode Island. The staff does hundreds of remote broadcasts a year as well from its boldly painted “Rolling Roadcoaster and Motor House” that is liable to turn up anywhere something is going on — a Memorial Day sale on Route 27, a food festival in Montauk, a parade in Southampton. 

Mr. Sidney, who was inducted into the New York State Radio Hall of Fame two years before his death in 2009, was particularly known for making as many as 250 stops a year when he served as an on-air host in addition to station president and general manager.

Over the years, WLNG’s style has also caught the attention of everyone from The New Yorker magazine to the recording star Billy Joel, a Sag Harbor homeowner who has twice in recent appearances on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” joked with Mr. Fallon, a Sagaponack homeowner, about making a surprise visit to WLNG and “crashing” the broadcast of a live show. 

“We gotta go at night,” Mr. Joel said. “When they least expect it.”

With WLNG’s future apparently set, Mr. Joel and Mr. Fallon still have the chance.

Recorded Deeds: 11.15.18

Recorded Deeds: 11.15.18

The prices below have been calculated from the county transfer tax. Unless otherwise noted, the parcels contain structures.
By
Star Staff

AMAGANSETT

S. and R. Frankel to G. and H. Blechman Trusts, 51 Shore Road, .17 acre, Aug. 9, $2,135,700

H. Landon (by executor) to Texas SUSU L.L.C., 23 Devon Road, .28 acre, Oct. 2, $2,700,000.

 

BRIDGEHAMPTON

D. and N. Meadow to E. and L. Gilbertson, 17 Aelfies Way, .57 acre, Sept. 7, $1,300,000.

157 Jobs L.L.C. to Job’s Lane Bridgehampton, 157 Job’s Lane, 1.89 acres, Sept. 10, $12,975,000.

SRK Bridgehampton Realty to Julian I L.L.C., 79 Surfside Drive, 1.26 acres, Sept. 18, $18,800,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON

M., A., and E. Kenigsberg to D. Israel and J. Hillman, 39 Sammy’s Beach Road and 02-041, .54 acre, Sept. 4, $2,600,000.

R. and E. Juster to C. and E. Matzen, 7 Old Hollow Lane, 1.84 acres, Sept. 11, $1,550,000.

M. and L. Singer to R. Jarrell and L. Eberle 196 Treescape Drive, Unit 5D, Cluster 3, Sept. 12, $635,000.

D. Talevi-Ward to D. Zenger, 38 Old Northwest Road, 1.56 acres (vacant), Sept. 5, $615,000.

C. Sanchez Tookes to S. Barber and M. Scarcello, 36 Barnes Avenue, .36 acre, Aug. 30, $650,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON VILLAGE

O. Junquera Trust to N. Rumbough Trust, 55 Egypt Close, 1.08 acres, Oct. 2, $5,940,000.

Pendant L.L.C. to Banana Putty L.L.C., 58 Jericho Road, .93 acre, Sept. 14, $7,200,000.

MONTAUK

351 East Lake Drive to 351 ELD L.L.C., 351 E. Lake Drive, 1.36 acres, Sept. 17, $3,575,000.

26 Brisbane Road, L.L.C. to M. and J. Watanabe, 32 Duval Place, .53 acre, Sept. 12, $1,240,000.

J. Gippetti to Montauk Mountain L.L.C., 1 Fort Lane, 1 acre (vacant), Sept. 28, $890,000.

 

SAG HARBOR

Fick, York, and Pluchino to 205 Division Street, 205 Division Street, .04 acre, Sept. 13, $760,000.

Water Street Development to 555 Paul’s Lane L.L.C., 21 West Water Street, Unit 2B, Sept. 13, $2,735,900.

 

SPRINGS

R. Laupot to K. and H. Dodge, 49 Sherwood Lane, .43 acre, Sept. 21, $485,000.

Tristate Capital to R. Mena and A. Rodriguez, 16 Eau Claire Street, .46 acre, Aug. 27, $490,000.

Webb Holdings L.L.C. to Sinche Chiqui and Zhizhpo, 21 Sandra Road, .46 acre, Aug. 31, $835,000.

 

WAINSCOTT

A. Comnas to P. and S. Tang, 484 Route 114, 1.12 acres, Sept. 17, $1,060,000.

5 Lee Lane L.L.C. to M. Evans and B. Mensch, 5 Lee Lane, .55 acre, Sept. 8, $1,800,000.

 

WATER MILL

W. Wallace to 12 Brennans Moor L.L.C., 12 Brennans Moor, .93 acre, Sept. 18, $3,000,000.

Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton.

Recorded Deeds: 11.22.18

Recorded Deeds: 11.22.18

The prices below have been calculated from the county transfer tax. Unless otherwise noted, the parcels contain structures.

AMAGANSETT

D. and E. Shields to M. Steele and K. Lia, 32 Railroad Avenue, .52 acre, Sept. 14, $615,000.

J. Archacki (by executor) to Buildair L.L.C., 180 Bluff Road, .54 acre, Sept. 25, $2,700,000.

P. Model and P. Krieg to D. Creighton and A. Meier, 95 Meeting House Lane, .5 acre, Oct. 1, $3,385,000.

 

BRIDGEHAMPTON

A. and J. Roberts Trust to J. MacArthur, J, 1415 Sagg Road, 5.17 acres (vacant), Sept. 17, $2,200,000.

P. Crone to S. Saide and S. Brown, 70 Hildreth Avenue, .62 acre, Sept. 24, $3,695,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON 

Lloyd Construction Co. to J. and K. DuPay, 17 Old Sag Harbor Road, .57 acre (vacant), Oct. 1, $400,000.

22 Owls Nest Lane Co. to L. and S. Levy, 22 Owls Nest Lane, 1.16 acres, Sept. 26, $3,300,000.

Forrester, et al. (by referee) to Deutsche Bank National Association, 408 Accabonac Road, .37 acre, Sept. 12, $868,985.

F, Diaz and C. Brown-Diaz to C. Fleiser and L. Golabek, 24 Horseshoe Drive North, .73 acre, Sept. 21, $910,000.

R. and A. Jones to M. and S. Santero, 52 Cooper Lane, .33 acre, Oct. 3, $1,525,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON VILLAGE

R. Haerle and T. Escobedo to J. Dillon, 1 Sherrill Road, .13 acre, Sept. 6, $740,000.

D. and K. Collins to L. Capozzi, 26 Pantigo Road, .28 acre, Oct. 5, $1,052,000.

P. West (by executor) to J. and E. Tintle, 8 East Hollow Road, .93 acre, Sept. 25, $2,500,000.

 

MONTAUK

35 Hoppin L.L.C. to L. and K. Griff, 35 Hoppin Avenue, .17 acre, Oct. 2, $1,380,000.

W. and J. Weimar to J. and C. McDonough, 31 South Gibson Place, .41 acre, Oct. 1, $1,225,000.

J. and M. Marchisotto to B. and S. Laiqi, 23 South Endicott Place, .34 acre, Sept. 28, $1,275,000.

NORTH HAVEN

22 Short Beach L.L.C. and Squires to S. Madden, 22 Short Beach Road, .92 acre, Sept. 17, $1,150,000.

 

NOYAC

E. Wade to J. Maltz, 114 Northside Drive, 1.05 acres, Sept. 26, $1,360,000

O. Watson to J. and G. Allen, 40 Poplar Street, .23 acre, Oct. 2, $1,150,000.

 

SAG HARBOR

SBC Eastville Associates to R. and R. Wong, 11 Eastville Avenue, .2 acre, Oct. 12, $3,075,000.

J. Kantor Trust to R. and J. Gilbert, 148 Redwood Road, .3 acre, Sept. 20, $2,400,000.

S. Heming Trust to S. Colleton, 52 John Street, .28 acre, Oct. 2, $3,650,000.

 

SAGAPONACK

134 Narrow Lane East to Lida's Ranch L.L.C., 134 Narrow Lane East, 2.94 acres, Sept. 21, $11,995,000.

 

SPRINGS

B. Minamora to D. Burke, 78 Waterhole Road, Sept. 28, $748,000.

 

WAINSCOTT

C. McDonald Trust to RNC Wainscott L.L.C., 12 Sachem's Path, .75 acre, Oct. 5, $1,714,000.

Westwood Wainscott to M. Sorkin, 43 Westwood Road, .46 acre, Sept. 13, $2,550,000.

 

WATER MILL

Wickapogue Realty L.L.C. to F. and S. Axelrod, 35 Wood Thrush Lane, .94 acre, Oct. 10, $2,250,000.

W., C., J., R., and A. Berkoski to G. Bauer, 55 Narrow Lane, 2.01 acres, Aug. 20, $2,400,000.

E. Martinez-Huet to J. Cucci, 88 Westminster Road, .57 acre, June 28, $3,000,000.

J. and A. Acierno to Sixteen Mecox L.L.C., 16 Wheaton Way, .97 acre, Sept. 24, $5,100,000.

Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton

Recorded Deeds: 10.18.18

Recorded Deeds: 10.18.18

The prices below have been calculated from the county transfer tax. Unless otherwise noted, the parcels contain structures.
By
Star Staff

AMAGANSETT

M. and M. Laspia to BC18 L.L.C., 6 Katie’s Lane, 1.38 acres (vacant), Aug. 22, $1,200,000.

 

BRIDGEHAMPTON

H. and P. Wakoff to M. Depero, 858 Old Sag Harbor Road, 4.59 acres, Aug. 20, $1,830,000.

CVR First L.L.C. to A. and C. Raleigh, 29 Barn Lane, .77 acre, Aug. 21, $3,450,000.

J. Buonasera Trust to Here to Stay Properties, 79 Osprey Way, 1.01 acres, Aug. 14, $3,000,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON 

R. and M. Post to J. and N. Pollina, 35 Ely Brook Road, 1.4 acres, July 14, $1,095,000.

E. Goldstein and C. Yu to A. Santos, A, 580 Hand’s Creek Road, 4.52 acres, Sept. 7, $2,100,000.

S. Glennon to C. Martin and J. Casey, 13 Shorewood Drive, .92 acre, Aug. 23, $750,000.

L. and P. Barnes to 47 Talmage Lane, 47 Talmage Lane, .21 acre, Aug. 21, $1,350,000.

 

EAST HAMPTON VILLAGE

Dilworth and Watson Turst to T. Kelly, 14 Huntting Lane, .3 acre, July 10, $2,535,500.

C. Tiedemann Trust to Zon II L.L.C., 23 Chauncey Close Road, 3.9 acres (vacant), Aug. 17, $6,720,000.

M. Tiedemann and Trusts to Zee I L.L.C., 19 Chauncey Close Road, 3.5 acres, July 17, $17,280,000.

 

MONTAUK

Rock Hill Development to Town of East Hampton, 269 Fairview Avenue, 1.1 acres (vacant), Aug. 7, $585,000.

Bank of America to P. and N. Ortiz, 47 North Shore Road, 1.9 acre, July 23, $685,000.

P. and D. Gibralter to G. Sullivan, 236 Edgemere Street, Unit 315, Aug. 16, $237,000.

Reece and Rosco Holdings to T. Martin and L. Katz, 29 Dewey Place, .32 acre (vacant), Aug. 9, $530,000.

 

NORTH HAVEN

M. Magner to Blue Sapphire L.L.C., 15 Ezekills Hollow, 1.84 acres, Aug. 9, $3,300,000.

 

NOYAC

P. San Filippo to J. and R. Martino, 21 Ridge Drive, .23 acre, June 22, $1,065,000.

J. Snyder Jr. to Von Lukanovic and Brown, 252 Northside Drive, .97 acre, Aug. 15, $895,000.

 

SAG HARBOR

E. Early to 19 Cornell L.L.C., 19 Cornell Road, .23 acre, Aug. 10, $895,000.

 

SPRINGS

D. and A. Epstein to E. and M. Pourshalchi, 2 Bon Pinck Way, .5 acre, July 10, $1,150,000.

J. Dragotta to Town of East Hampton, 20 Squaw Road, .62 acre (vacant), July 25, $455,000.

D. Paley and C. Del Buono to P. McCord, 33 Woodbine Drive, .5 acre, June 19, $660,000.

Papa-Heatley to M. Callahan, 4 Ingalls Road, .4 acre, Aug. 15, $1,050,000.

A. and J. Sneddon Trusts to Y. Tai and E. Law, 4 Cherry Street, .6 acre, Aug. 22, $725,000.

 

WATER MILL

19 Rosewood L.L.C. to BRYDAV L.L.C., 19 Rosewood Court, 1.27 acres, Aug. 14, $2,130,000.

R. Trotta to Farrell Building Company, 87 Oliver’s Cove Lane, .94 acre, Aug. 8, $3,800,000.

M. Goldfine (by executor) to Kidd Construction Co, 138 Montrose Lane, .88 acre, Sept. 13, $3,350,000.

Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton.