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A Shop Where You Never Know What You’ll Get

A Shop Where You Never Know What You’ll Get

Theresa Davis, the manager of LongHouse Reserve’s new Instore museum shop, is surrounded by one-of-a-kind objects from the world’s most exotic places.
Theresa Davis, the manager of LongHouse Reserve’s new Instore museum shop, is surrounded by one-of-a-kind objects from the world’s most exotic places.
Durell Godfrey
Now in its second season
By
Irene Silverman

    “Jack redoes it every three weeks,” said Theresa Davis, the manager of INstore, the museum shop at Jack Lenor Larsen’s LongHouse Reserve. “In three weeks, you won’t see any of this.”

    Now in its second season, the tiny shop, judiciously placed near the entrance to the gardens where it’s the first and last thing LongHouse visitors encounter, somehow manages to squeeze in about 100 items, most of them chosen by Mr. Larsen himself. At 85, the noted textile designer still roams the world, and Indian cashmere scarves, English teapots, Turkish necklaces, Japanese kimonos made of Thai silks, and much, much more follow him back to East Hampton.

    INstore, much like LongHouse itself, is all about one-of-a-kind-ness. There are evening bags of Larsen fabrics with contrasting linings and drawstring closures, each different from the next, that look like they’d be right at home at the season opening of the Metropolitan Opera. No worries about being upstaged. There’s a circus contortionist of a sterling silver necklace, the most expensive item in the shop, that can twist and turn and become whatever shape the wearer makes it into, really 10 necklaces in one for $2,500.

    At the more breathable end of the shopping stratosphere are decorative wrapping papers from Nepal that could easily be framed and hung on a wall ($8 apiece) and cream-colored Ecuadorean tagua-nut rings, some dyed in mysterious colors. The nuts, which grow on trees, “take the dye just like silk does,” Ms. Davis said. “When they’re soft, you can eat them. Monkeys do.”

     Gonul Paksoy, a Turkish artist and designer, made the voodoo-ish little dolls that are to be worn as brooches. “She designs for royalty,” Ms. Davis confided. “If you have one of her pins, it’s a style statement.” At $90 for a two-inch pin, it had better be.

    A few of the offerings at INstore aren’t immediately identifiable. There are looped skeins of colorful strings, looking for all the world as if they’re waiting for a pair of knitting needles except that they’re not wool. Even Ms. Davis was mystified when she unpacked them.

    “What do you want me to do with these?” she asked Mr. Larsen.

    “Sell them!” he shot back.

    “But what are they for?”

    “You wrap presents with them!”

    With all these unpredictable objects arriving all the time from faraway places (and a few from near ones, including mugs by the East Hampton artist Emma Katz, striated to look like birch bark), there’s bound to be an occasional shocker. Ms. Davis was taken aback not long ago to get a whiff of something evil when she opened a box of woven iPad cases from India, some of them dyed blood-red and others jet black.

    “I e-mailed our Indian contact,” she recalled. “ ‘What kind of toxic paint did you send us?’ ”

    “Just put it out in the sun and the smell will go away,” came the reply.

    “And,” she said loyally of the now de-reeked and prominently displayed cases, “they’re unique beyond anything!”

    Because INstore, like LongHouse, is open for just three hours on Wednesdays and Saturdays (Wednesdays through Saturdays in July and August) and by appointment, it has relied on the museum’s members and visitors for sales. That is changing, though, with the snazzy new addition to LongHouse’s Web site, longhouse.org/longhouse-instore, designed by Ellen Watson and Jerry Lack of East Hampton, which features expandable photos of what’s in stock at the moment.

    “In summer, we get an international crowd,” said Ms. Davis. Not long before Valentine’s Day, someone in Italy used the Web site to buy a silk scarf imprinted with red hearts for the object of his affections in Germany.

Recorded Deeds 05.16.13

Recorded Deeds 05.16.13

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

AMAGANSETT

A. Villa Jr. to J. Cooke and B. Warner, 210 Fresh Pond Road, .31 acre, March 28, $625,000.

T. and D. Goldbergh to D. Lyon and S. Johnson, 77 Hand Lane, .74 acre, March 25, $2,500,000.

EAST HAMPTON

C. Myers to S. Spevakow, 17 Miller Lane West, .25 acre, March 25, $950,000.

S. Singer (by executor) to J. and C. Panico, 5 Close Court, .92 acre, March 21, $725,000.

Spielberg Properties to 500 MTK HWY L.L.C., 500 Montauk Highway, 1.27 acres (vacant), March 20, $1,650,000.

R. Perez to R. Ames, 2 Jody’s Path, 1.9 acres, March 15, $825,000.

S. and L. Jesner to S. and L. Steinman, 53 Edwards Hole Road, .47 acre, March 21, $1,195,000.

MONTAUK

W. and S. Sobel to E. Granata and P. Chang, 40 Birch Drive, 1.09 acres, March 27, $940,000.

M. Fuchs (by executor) to 75 Grant Drive L.L.C., 75 and 77 Grant Drive, .68 acre, March 22, $850,000.

J. and J. Levy-Hinte to M. Hirtenstein, 234 Old Montauk Highway, 2.1 acres, March 1, $10,000,000.

J. Levy-Church to M. Hirtenstein, 230 Old Montauk Highway, 1.5 acres, March 1, $3,000,000.

NOYAC

C. Beirne (by executor) to G. Kamph, 19 Harry’s Lane, .26 acre, March 21, $440,000.

SAG HARBOR

P. Wolfram to M. and C. Flanagan, 384 Division Street, .46 acre, March 27, $510,000.

D. and S. Ramunno to J. and J. Tembeck Jr., 8 Round Pond Lane, .63 acre, March 8, $782,500.

J. Labrozzi Sr. Trust to Curto, Curto, and Curto, 51 Joel’s Lane, .51 acre (vacant), March 18, $580,000.

SPRINGS

299 Kings Point Road to L. Bossard and A. Monod, 299 Kings Point Road, .78 acre, March 1, $2,950,000.

C. Lyman to C. Greenberg, 46 Flaggy Hole Road, .52 acre, March 27, $500,000.

WAINSCOTT

P. Witt to SR Talo at Wainscott, 32 Wainscott Hollow Road, .46 acre, March 26, $1,830,000.

B. Brown to Town of East Hampton, 2, 6, 10, and 14 Ardsley Road, 4 acres (vacant), March 4, $2,000,000.

Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton

Keeping Account 05.16.13

Keeping Account 05.16.13

Local business news
By
Star Staff

Creative Awards

    The Montauk advertising and design firm blumenfeld + fleming, founded by Jill Fleming and Lynn Blumenfeld, has won four platinum and five gold Hermes Creative Awards.

    The firm’s platinum awards were for a brochure for the Kathleen D. Allen Maternity Center at Southampton Hospital, an e-mail blast for BMW of South­ampton, and advertising for McLoughlin Construction Company. Gold awards were given for e-mail blasts for Audi of Southampton and the Group for the East End, an ad campaign for Landscape Details, a logo for Gurney’s Inn, and a radio spot for Suffolk County National Bank.

    The competition was international, and this year’s saw more than 5,600 entries, with 15 to 20 percent winning a gold or platinum award.

Aesop in East Hampton

    Aesop, founded in Melbourne, Australia, in 1987 and carried in more than 65 stores around the world, has arrived in East Hampton. The brand’s skin, hair, and body care products are now offered at 55 Main Street.

    The company’s new retail store was designed with a simple installation that recognizes the South Fork’s cultural and maritime heritage, according to press materials. A basin made from Vermont soapstone occupies the central space, with taps using simple copper valves of the type seen in neighborhood gardens.

    Reverence is the name of Aesop’s new hand wash and balm, containing both mechanical (finely milled pumice in the wash) and laboratory-derived (lactic acid in the balm) exfoliating properties.

    Aesop is open Wednesday through Monday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. until Memorial Day, after which it will be open every day.

Serena and Lily Arrive

    Serena and Lily, a lifestyle and home decor company, will open its first retail location, Serena and Lily Beach Market, on May 25 at 332 Montauk Highway in Wainscott. Serena Dugan and Lily Kanter, the company’s co-founders, will be on hand, and treats from some of their favorite California purveyors will be served.

    The 3,200-square-foot retail location will house a selection of the company’s core products: bedding, custom upholstery, furniture, decorations, and items for indoor and outdoor living.

    Seasonal merchandise will include vintage and unusual items selected by Ms. Dugan, the company’s chief creative officer, as well as limited-edition surfboard shorts and other shorts.

    The store will host book-signing parties and will have an outdoor art gallery featuring work by artists, local and otherwise. The shop will be open to interior designers for private appointments during and outside of regular hours.

    Store hours are Monday through Thursday and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Friday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Sunday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Saks at Stitch

    Stitch Southampton, which offers custom clothing and tailoring, will host Saks Fifth Avenue Off 5th tomorrow and Saturday from noon to 6 p.m. A selection of merchandise from the Saks Fifth Avenue Off 5th store at the Tanger Outlet in Riverhead will be offered, including women’s shoes and apparel, designer handbags (Judith Leiber designs among them), cosmetics, gift items, and a Saks Fifth Avenue private-label fragrance exclusive to the Tanger location.

    All attendees will receive a surprise gift. Stitch Southampton is at 22 Nugent Street.

A Correction

    An article in last week’s paper on INstore, the museum shop at Jack Lenor Larsen’s LongHouse Reserve, had a number of errors. The East Hampton artist who makes ceramic items with a birch motif is Emma Katz and the correct name of a Turkish artist and designer mentioned in the story is Gonul Paksoy. The wrapping papers fit for framing are from Nepal and a Web site customer who purchased a silk ikat scarf was from Italy, not Uzbekistan. Mr. Larsen is 85, not 87.

Keeping Account: Shoppers, It’s Show Time!

Keeping Account: Shoppers, It’s Show Time!

The high season approaches
By
Carissa Katz

    Shop openings, special events, and go-go publicity stunts abound this month as the high season approaches. Among those who have brought their latest ventures to our attention are a new Jack Rogers store in East Hampton, Blue 1, a men’s and women’s clothing boutique in Bridgehampton, and C. Wonder, a lifestyle store that’s opening a second South Fork pop-up in East Hampton this summer.

    The Jack Rogers store at 38 Newtown Lane will offer the brand’s “effortless, chic, American collections for every season,” according to a release, including footwear, handbags, and clothing.

    Blue 1, next to Bobby Van’s, is Crystal and Jarret Willis’s second store on the South Fork. They opened their first, in Westhampton Beach, seven years ago. The couple work together to seek out “the newest and coolest pieces and new designers,” Ms. Willis said in an e-mail. The shop will be open year round.

    This weekend Blue 1 will host a vintage designer trunk show, with What Goes Around Comes Around featuring vintage Chanel jewelry and handbags. There will be complimentary champagne for those who stop in on Saturday from 2 to 6 p.m. and mimosas for shoppers on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    C. Wonder, which had a location in Southampton last summer, will pop up again at 5 Main Street there and also in East Hampton at 48 Main Street this season. The shops are celebrating their openings with candy, balloons, prizes and gifts for shoppers, and even a D.J. in Southampton.

    Shoppers will get a chance at a $250 C. Wonder shopping spree, and those who spend $50 or more will get a tote bag while supplies last. The shops will be open Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Monday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

    The Southampton C. Wonder plans to have D.J.s and dance parties every Saturday and Sunday, and both shops will have complimentary candy and balloons every weekend.

    Balloons and candy not enough for you? Day and Night, which describes itself as “the infamous brunch party,” will have a magnum of Dom Perignon delivered by a skydiver to its summer brunch spot at Gurney’s Inn in Montauk on Sunday. “This celebratory bottle will be chilled by a 10,000-foot free fall and delivered to your table by parachute,” according to a release. The skydiver is a member of the Dual Group.

    The brunch parties, also held last summer at Gurney’s, will take place this weekend, July 4th weekend, Aug. 3, and Labor Day weekend. The promoters promise “world-renowned D.J.s,” “carefully curated” food, and music. Sunday’s party runs from 2 p.m. till sundown. Reservations are at party@day­and­nightlife.com. 

New in Montauk: From Body Care to Bikinis to Beach Bags

New in Montauk: From Body Care to Bikinis to Beach Bags

At her new shop, Made in Montauk, Ingrid Torjesen, left,  sells handmade pillows like the ones she is lounging on. Kim Gatti, right, has opened the Beach Boutique at Montauk Harbor.
At her new shop, Made in Montauk, Ingrid Torjesen, left, sells handmade pillows like the ones she is lounging on. Kim Gatti, right, has opened the Beach Boutique at Montauk Harbor.
Janis Hewitt Photos
“Montauk is obviously picking up and is an exciting place to be right now,”
By
Janis Hewitt

   The Beach Boutique and Spa at Montauk Harbor is a place that Kim Gatti of Montauk always wanted to open. A licensed esthetician, Ms. Gatti had worked in other areas of the business before opening a shop in a prime space on West Lake Drive with a wide view of the harbor and a clutch of fishing boats bobbing nearby.

    The open space has been transformed from a kitschy clothing store to a hip boutique with light summery clothing and a private room for facials, body waxing, and other personal services. Pedicure chairs are lined against one wall, and clients are offered a massage while they have their toes touched up.

A basic manicure starts at $18. A glycolic manicure costs $25 and runs for 25 minutes. There are a variety of pedicures, including a beach pedicure with mandarin honey, citrus, and spices for $35. A lime zest pedicure with lime juice and oils provides extra hydration to soften and rejuvenate the soles of the feet. It costs $55 for a 50-minute service.

    A vanilla and wild plum pedicure that uses a blend of vitamins, nutrients, and essential oils is said to send your senses reeling. After the mask is removed, feet are dipped into vanilla paraffin.

With Alison Lane, Ms. Gatti has collaborated on a body-care line called Beach Boutique that uses natural botanicals for extra softness. One batch, a pale pink, is as smooth and frothy as icing on a cake and smells yummy too.

    A back room with a bubbling water fountain is used for body treatments that include a body scrub, facials, a back “facial” for stress relief, waxing, salt-scrub treatments, and a detox “body glow” with pulverized rock that is said to contain molecular properties to exfoliate and soften skin.

The clothing is for hot summer days. There are beach bags, cover-ups, and wide-brimmed sunhats. All products and gift certificates are available for purchase at thebeachboutiqueandspa.com. The spa is open seven days a week, until 9 p.m. on weekends.

“It” Items

    Closer to Montauk’s downtown is Ingrid Torjesen’s Made in Montauk at 12 South Etna Avenue. The store, part of the space rented by Lila Yoga, is filled with summery items, including hand-painted and hand-dyed dresses for women, one a limited-edition bias-cut silk dress that Ms. Torjesen predicts will be an “it” item this season.

    She acquires vintage saris from India and then transforms them into caftans, cover-ups, and sarongs. Ms. Torjesen designs and sews most of her inventory. “I literally get an idea or a flash of inspiration and then learn how to make it,” she said with a laugh.

    No, she was not taught to sew by Granny: She taught herself only a few years ago using how-to books and online sites.

    A favorite item in her shop is a one-size-fits-most cover-up that can be thrown over a bathing suit or matching slinky dress. “I found they worked really well, so I made more in different colors. I love color,” she said, sitting on a mound of handmade pillows of silk and velvet in turquoise, pink, blue, and orange.

She also sells jewelry by Brenda Perruzza, a noted jewelry designer, and will present a trunk show of her designs at the store on Saturday from 5 to 8 p.m. More designs are featured on her Web site, montaukdesigns.com.

    Several feet east of Made in Montauk on South Etna Avenue is a new branch of Waves, a Bridgehampton shop, that will have its grand opening this weekend, said Ariana Li, who with her mother owns the two stores.

    “Montauk is obviously picking up and is an exciting place to be right now,” she said.

In a shop just two blocks from the ocean beach, Ms. Li is ready to dress beachgoers in itsy-bitsy bikinis, cover-ups, jewelry, beach bags, and more. The Web site is wavesboutique.com.

Minkoff Pops Up

    Rebecca Minkoff, a fashion designer, is opening a pop-up shop at the Sole East resort on Second House Road this weekend. Located on the main floor across from the lobby, it will offer handbags, footwear, sunglasses, and small leather goods, with prices in the range of $150 to $750. A complimentary tote bag and friendship bracelet come with each purchase.

    The Surf Bazaar at the Surf Lodge on Edgemere Road is back in a space that is part of the main building. This year it has creations by over 30 designers, from gauzy tunics to Tori Praver bikinis to accessories.

    And finally, the Montauk Movie has decided to reopen this summer. In the fall, residents were surprised to see a “for rent” sign on the building. David Rutkowski, who owns the business, said that he may have “jumped the gun” on that.

    He decided to pack it in when he learned the exorbitant cost of new digital film projectors. He has since realized that quite a few films are still suitable for the 35-millimeter projector he uses.

This spring, Mr. Rutkowski completed a course to be a certified cycling instructor and will now offer Cinema Cycle in the mornings. He has moved some of the theater’s seats and will have indoor cycling classes in the mornings. “Star Trek Into Darkness” will be playing this weekend.

Now, a Nonstop Cannonball on the L.I.R.R.

Now, a Nonstop Cannonball on the L.I.R.R.

Expectations are high that this will be a popular train
By
Carrie Ann Salvi

   A nonstop 4:07 p.m. Friday Cannonball train from Manhattan’s Penn Station to the South Fork will begin tomorrow. The train, making a 76-mile trip, is scheduled to arrive in Westhampton Beach at 5:41 p.m., followed by stops in Southampton at 6:03, Bridgehampton at 6:13, East Hampton at 6:25, and Montauk at 6:48. The service will continue through Labor Day weekend.

    A ticket to ride the air-conditioned double-decker costs $27 each way, or $33 if purchased on board. Reserved seating with attendants who serve snacks and beverages runs an extra $20 per trip.

    Expectations are high that this will be a popular train, and the Long Island Rail Road has suggested via its Web site that riders buy round-trip reserved tickets to ensure seats. Seasonal and weekly reservations for its Hamptons Reserve Service are also available. Arriving early at Penn Station has been suggested, as the number of passengers without seats will be limited on board to maintain safety.

    On Sunday evenings, a Cannonball West train from Montauk to Penn Station is planned to run nonstop from Westhampton Beach to Jamaica after stops in East Hampton, Bridgehampton, Southampton, and Hampton Bays. Neither the eastbound nor westbound Cannonball trains are scheduled to stop at the Amagansett station.

    The Cannonball train was added in response to requests from customers who didn’t want to change trains in Jamaica with their luggage, Helena E. Williams, the L.I.R.R.’s president, said on the company’s Web site. The train will use electric power upon its departure from Penn Station and later switch to diesel power.

    The railroad reported that the Montauk branch had a 34-percent increase in summer riders in 2012 compared to 2011.

    In prior years, Cannonball service began at the Hunterspoint Avenue terminal in Long Island City, where additional trains on the Montauk line have now been added for Thursday and Friday afternoons, with connections from Penn Station and Brooklyn’s Atlantic terminal.

    In addition to Fridays in-season, the Cannonball train will be available on Wednesday, July 3, and Thursday, July 4. Other trains, although not Cannonballs, have been added for the summer season on the Montauk branch through the Labor Day weekend.

    The only named train operated by the L.I.R.R., the Cannonball first traveled these tracks in the 1890s as an express train between Long Island City and Southampton.

    New Montauk line timetables are available at stations along the branch, online at mta.info/lirr, or by dialing 511, the New York State travel information line.

Making New Memories

Making New Memories

The Memory Motel, immortalized in a Rolling Stones song of the same name, will have live music and D.J.s every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday this summer.
The Memory Motel, immortalized in a Rolling Stones song of the same name, will have live music and D.J.s every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday this summer.
So sang Mick Jagger on “Memory Motel,” immortalizing the long, low-slung structure in Montauk’s downtown on the Rolling Stones’ 1976 album, “Black and Blue.”
By
Christopher Walsh

“We spent a lonely night at the Memory Motel / It’s on the ocean, I guess you know it well.”

    So sang Mick Jagger on “Memory Motel,” immortalizing the long, low-slung structure in Montauk’s downtown on the Rolling Stones’ 1976 album, “Black and Blue.” Rehearsing for their 1975 Tour of the Americas while camped at Andy Warhol’s Church Estate, the band, according to legend, was attracted to the Memory Motel for its pool table and piano.

    A somewhat obscure track in the band’s immense catalog, the song is nonetheless a favorite, and with good reason. Wistful and slow in tempo, filled with oblique references to an affair — possibly with the singer Carly Simon — “Memory Motel” is an exquisite ballad among the slashing, raunchy, and downright dangerous music of the “world’s greatest rock ’n’ roll band.”

    Indeed, we do know it well. “The Memory,” as the business is commonly known, was reborn several years ago with the introduction of live music to the bar. It has proven wildly popular, and Brian Kenny, who became the business’s principal owner last year when he purchased the building from Arthur Schneider, is continuing the tradition with an active summer schedule.

    “We have live music and professional D.J.s every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday,” Mr. Kenny said. “We will be working with D.J. Matty Nice heavily — the D.J. sets are so important to what we do. We will also have live music Saturday afternoons during our new Day Bomb party.” The music on Memorial Day weekend kicks off on Saturday at 3 p.m. with Winston Irie, followed by the Michael Jazz Trio.

    With Chris Reenock, his best friend and fiance of his sister, Mr. Kenny saw the Memory Motel as a timeless and iconic brand, and a perfect opportunity to participate in Montauk’s exploding popularity. All signs, he said, point to the motel’s 13 rooms being sold out during peak season.

    The building, Mr. Kenny said, dates to 1926, constructed by a sea captain in memory of his son, who perished at sea. “A memorial headstone is on the west side of the building embedded in the foundation,” he said, “and the map on the stage wall outlines all the captain’s journeys.”

    Unsubstantiated rumors of the motel’s history recall more Stones lyrics: “The ballrooms and smelly bordellos / And dressing rooms filled with parasites / Onstage, the band has got problems / They’re a bag of nerves on first nights” (“Torn and Frayed,” 1972).

    “Old timers have told us that during World War II, a bordello was run at the Memory for sailors based in Montauk,” Mr. Kenny said.

    Today, such activity has receded into history — if it happened in the first place — but the bands, nervous or not, will be entertaining the throngs that fill Montauk’s downtown throughout the summer. Revelers packing the bar may even hear a Rolling Stones song or two.

Recorded Deeds 04.25.13

Recorded Deeds 04.25.13

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

EAST HAMPTON

J. and B. Laviero (by administrator) to H. Quiroz, 86 Crystal Drive, .56 acre (vacant), March 6, $150,000.

Sid Cullum Inc. to W.A.G. Properties L.L.C., 46 Three Mile Harbor Road, .37 acre, Feb. 28, $1,040,000.

61 Buell Lane to M. and K. Lieb, 61 Buell Lane Extension, March 1, $3,775,000.

T. Ovanessian to P. Jakab and I. Fein, 68 Oyster Shores Road, Feb. 28, $2,200,000.

EAST HAMPTON VILLAGE

F. Schnall and T. Boston to S.R.U. Realty L.L.C., 18 Pondview Lane, 1.2 acres (vacant), Nov. 15, $5,100,000.

MONTAUK

T. DiMatteo to Executoram Investment Company,  57 Startop Drive, 1.1 acres, March 7, $3,800,000.

R. Flood to M. and M. O’Shea, 153 West Lake Drive, .45 acre (vacant), Feb. 20, $425,000.

M. and A. Potapchuk to D. Watson

 and T. Havel, 23 Fort Pond Road, Unit 34, .2 acre, March 1, $330,000.

J. and C. Luksic to K. Hejducek and O. Reville, 15 South Edin Street, March 6, $740,000.

M. Burns to 1 East, L.L.C., 100 Deforest Road, Unit 29, March 1, $740,000.

NOYAC

J. MacGregor (by executor) to Z. and N. Tunick, 2461 Noyac Road, 1.1 acres, Feb. 7, $456,000.

N. Barnett Morse to J. and M. Jalbert, 1499 Noyac Path, 2.7 acres, Feb. 28, $1,340,000.

SPRINGS

C. and N. Kiembock to A. and M. Cassidy, 36 Briar Croft Drive, Feb. 13, $925,000.

J. Best to K. Giehl and J. Ragovin, 132 Old Stone Highway, 1.02 acres, March 6, $2,135,000.

WAINSCOTT

J. Jayme II (by executor) to Deer Forest L.L.C., 19 Wainscott Stone Highway, .48 acre, March 1, $1,470,000.

   Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton

Now, Khanh Can Do More

Now, Khanh Can Do More

Khanh Ngo has opened a new, larger shop in the Montauk Highway, East Hampton space formerly occupied by Spielberg Nursery.
Khanh Ngo has opened a new, larger shop in the Montauk Highway, East Hampton space formerly occupied by Spielberg Nursery.
Morgan McGivern
Khanh Sports is now stocked with 200 bikes
By
Christopher Walsh

   “You don’t want to come in to a bike shop and see 10 bikes,” Khanh Ngo observed, standing in his newly opened Khanh Sports and Boutique. “You want to see 100.”

    As it happens, Khanh Sports, occupying the former Spielberg Nursery and Garden Shop at 500 Montauk Highway in East Hampton, is now stocked with 200 bikes, among them a wide variety from the Specialized brand, and 8 and 11-speed ElliptiGO outdoor elliptical bikes. “This is like running without impact,” Mr. Ngo said of the ElliptiGO brand. “Doctors are recommending it; they’re using it in physical therapy. We are the biggest dealer, nationally and internationally. If you need instruction, I’m certified in it. I’ve done 111 miles in 7.5 hours.”

    Mr. Ngo, whose Khanh Sports and EH Eyewear is in its 17th year at 60 Park Place in East Hampton Village, long felt the need to expand beyond the shop brimming with sunglasses, swimwear, sandals, and more for the active, outdoor lifestyle. With a lease on the former Spielberg site, he has put his plans in motion.

    A personification of vitality and activity, Mr. Ngo, who has been in the United States — he is from Vietnam — since 1979, ticks off a list of products and services his shop offers.

    “Helmets, accessories, gloves. Off-road bikes that you can actually ride on the beach, even in the soft sand. Everything is all in one place, versus ‘We can order it.’ We do repairs, too. In the other part we’re going to do surf. On top of that is the Ping-Pong table. Everybody’s got a pool; everybody’s got a house. They want a Ping-Pong table. Also, we are expanding to miniature golf. We could do it for parties, set it up at people’s houses. Eight holes, 9 holes, 18 holes, we’ll set it up on your lawn, wherever you want. Come on, where have you seen that done?”

    There’s more: “Volleyball sets, tents, fishing gear. Here, we’re going to do some teak furniture,” he said. Several long paddleboards are suspended overhead in the shop. “We’re renting them, we have people doing lessons. I can’t display this at the store in the village. If I put it in the village, it’s on the sidewalk. There’s no room inside the store. Now, you can drive up, you can park as many cars as you want.”

Recorded Deeds 05.02.13

Recorded Deeds 05.02.13

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

AMAGANSETT

C. Turlinski to M. and A. Gross, 228 Town Lane, 1.36 acres, Mar. 8, $1,200,000.

EAST HAMPTON

A. Kuhn (by executor) to J. Kim, 71 Harbor View Avenue, .23 acre (vacant), Feb. 20, $110,000.

A. Kuhn (by executor) to M. Brennan, 73 Harbor View Avenue, .44 acre (vacant), Feb. 20, $110,000.

T. Bacon to SeleneRMOF II, 124 Oakview Highway, .11 acre, Aug. 23, $460,451.

E. Krug and J. Haubrich to C. Beirne and R. O’Dunne, 7 Shellfish Lane and 2-42.002, .86 acre, Mar. 8, $1,295,000.

M. Katz Trust to E. Biggar, 39 Hands Creek Road, 2.28 acres, Mar. 6, $2,850,000.

EAST HAMPTON VILLAGE

E. Kulman and C. Mitrut to S. Gaustad, 55 Mill Hill Lane, .19 acre, Mar. 4, $2,800,000.

MONTAUK

G. Chiaramonte to 136 Soundview L.L.C., 136 Soundview Drive, .83 acre, Mar. 4, $1,500,000.

E. Patrowicz to Silver and Christophe, 5 Royal Oak Way, .94 acre, Mar. 8, $2,190,000.

R. Iannucci and S. Ewers to M.D. Madison L.L.C., 23 Miller Avenue, .85 acre, Dec. 28, $5,800,000.

N. Bellassai to Hibiscus Holdings L.L.C., 15 Elm Lane, 1.1 acres, Mar. 7, $795,000.

Michael’s Home Work to J.F.J. Montauk L.L.C., 6 Birch Drive, 1.13 acres, Oct. 3, $4,500,000.

Michael’s Home Work to J.A.B. Real Estate Holdings, 333 Old Montauk Highway, 1.02 acres (vacant), Oct. 3, $150,000.

NORTH HAVEN

S. Hagerstrom to L. Esker, 18 Fairlea Court, 1.84 acres (vacant), Mar. 8, $1,100,000.

NOYAC

M. Kelly to L. Chaplynsky, 74 Cliff Drive, Baypoint, .26 acre, Mar. 6, $505,000.

Alliance Equity Partners to P. and M. Armstrong, 104 Brick Kiln Road, 1.47 acres, Mar. 8, $4,122,500.

SAG HARBOR

H. Waxman to M. and J. DiBari, 17 Rosemary Lane, .69 acre, Mar. 15, $700,000.

N. Tucker to T. and S. Reppert, 19 Princeton Road, .21 acre, Mar. 1, $750,000.

SPRINGS

M. and B. Slater to Springmark L.L.C., 100 Runnymede Drive, .54 acre, Feb. 27, $2,875,000.

   Data provided by Suffolk Research Service of Southampton