The Story Behind
Two Acres, Two Hundred Feet of Shoreline, One Extraordinary Estate
There is a particular kind of architecture that announces itself not through ostentation but through conviction — through the sureness of a curved white stucco facade, the sweep of a circular stone fountain driveway, the quiet authority of proportions that feel both inevitable and rare. This Cove Neck estate belongs to that category. Its Art Deco lines carry an unmistakable sense of intention, a design philosophy that prizes fluidity and drama in equal measure, and which reveals itself most fully the moment you cross the threshold.
The grand entry foyer sets the tone immediately: a floating marble staircase with glass railings ascends beneath a cascading crystal chandelier, and the eye is drawn — almost involuntarily — toward the Long Island Sound framed beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows. This is a home designed to orient every room, every sightline, every lived moment toward the water. The formal dining room, its curved glass wall holding the Sound like a living painting, exemplifies this philosophy. Light shifts here with the tides, the room transforming from morning gold to afternoon silver to the long amber of a coastal evening.
The kitchen is a study in sophisticated contrast — white perimeter cabinetry against a dark-toned granite island, a chandelier lending warmth to professional-grade appliances, including three ovens and two dishwashers — a kitchen that takes entertaining seriously without sacrificing elegance. Adjacent, the great room anchors the main floor with an onyx wet bar and a wood-burning fireplace, a space where grand gatherings feel natural and intimate evenings feel equally at ease. A library with its own bath and a dedicated den complete the main level, ensuring that within this home of grand gestures, there is always a quiet room.
Upstairs, three ensuite bedrooms each open to private balconies where the Sound stretches to the horizon. The primary suite is designed as a genuine sanctuary: vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, a fireplace, and a fully updated spa bath finished in green marble with gold hardware — dual vanities, a glass-enclosed shower, a curved bay window admitting light and water views in equal measure.
The lower level, with its own private entrance, functions as an entirely self-contained world. A guest suite with kitchen and generous living space offers complete independence. Beyond it, the indoor pool and integrated spa are flanked by a billiard room and full wet bar — a resort amenity tucked beneath the main residence, operational in every season.
Outdoors, over 1,800 square feet of wraparound decking transitions to manicured lawns, a wrought-iron gazebo, a private tennis court, and 200 feet of shoreline accommodating everything from quiet mornings on the water to jet skis and kayaks. A four-car garage, full-house generator, and comprehensive security system ensure the estate performs at the level it presents. At this address, craftsmanship is not incidental — it is the entire premise.
Oyster Bay occupies a singular position in the American imagination — and in the geography of Long Island's North Shore. Known for centuries as the Gold Coast, this stretch of coastline drew the Gilded Age's most prominent families, drawn by the deep, protected harbors, the rolling wooded bluffs, and a quality of light over the Sound that painters and poets have long struggled to adequately describe. The village of Oyster Bay and its surrounding hamlets retain that legacy with a quiet confidence, offering a lifestyle that balances deep historical character with the full amenities of contemporary coastal living.
Cove Neck, where this estate is situated, is among the most private and prestigious enclaves within the Oyster Bay area. A narrow peninsula extending into the Sound, Cove Neck is predominantly residential and deliberately unhurried — a place where the water is audible from the lawn and where privacy is not an amenity but a given. It is, notably, the location of Sagamore Hill, the Victorian-era home of President Theodore Roosevelt, which now operates as a National Historic Site maintained by the National Park Service. The presence of that estate has long lent the surrounding landscape a sense of historical gravitas that few American neighborhoods can claim.
The broader Oyster Bay community offers a richly layered quality of life. The village itself features a walkable main street with local restaurants, independent boutiques, and a harbor front that comes alive through the warmer months with sailing regattas, waterfront dining, and the easy rhythms of a community that has always oriented itself toward the water. The Oyster Bay–Cold Spring Harbor area is served by the Long Island Rail Road, placing Midtown Manhattan within approximately an hour's reach — a commute that, from a waterfront estate of this caliber, feels less like a concession and more like a choice.
For those who live on the water, the surrounding marinas and yacht clubs provide full-service facilities, and the Sound itself offers some of the finest recreational sailing on the East Coast. The sheltered coves and inlets that define this part of the North Shore are equally suited to kayaking, paddleboarding, and the kind of unhurried afternoons that are the quiet currency of a life well arranged.
Educationally, the Oyster Bay–East Norwich Central School District serves the area, and the region is home to several well-regarded private institutions as well. Culturally, Nassau County's broader offerings — including the Tilles Center for the Performing Arts and proximity to New York City's world-class institutions — ensure that intellectual and artistic life remain as accessible as the waterfront itself.
To live at this address is to occupy a particular intersection: a landscape of genuine historical significance, a community with authentic character, and a waterfront that has been drawing people of discernment and ambition for well over a century. Oyster Bay does not need to announce itself. Its reputation, like its shoreline, has always spoken for itself.
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Curated Content • Presented by Liza Bendett & Melanie Cogan | The Scout Residential Team at Compass


























