This $7.3M Hamptons Home Marries Sleek Interiors and Sculpted Gardens 


Tucked away on a quiet acre in East Hampton, this $7.25 million modernist home is all about balance—between openness and privacy, structure and nature. Completed in 2001 and reimagined in 2019, the 5,000-square-foot residence is conceived as a series of cedar-clad glass pods linked by breezeways, giving it a sculptural quality that shifts with the light. The home was designed to enhance indoor-outdoor living options and feels intimately connected to its surroundings in every direction.

Listed with Kurt Giehl at Corcoran, the glass walls wrap both floors, flooding the interiors with natural light by day and creating a soft interior glow by night. Interior spaces are warm and minimal, with clean lines and organic materials that echo the landscape. 

RELATED: Designer Judith Leiber’s Former East Hampton Home Is Back on the Market for $7 Million

Old Stone Highway East Hampton home

A breezeway dining room links the main house to the guest pod and garage.

Kathleen O’Donnell

A dramatic double-height entryway with a floating wood and steel staircase sets the tone. A wet bar divides the fireside formal sitting room from the chef’s kitchen and the adjoining family room. Nearby is a dining room that leads into a wine room that includes a hidden washer and dryer. There are two bedrooms that share a bath on the main floor, along with a glass-lined breezeway that links the main house to a one-bed/one-bath guest pod; another breezeway continues on to a two-car garage.

The second floor is devoted to the principal suite. Flanking a central mezzanine overlooking the atrium-like foyer are a private study with built-in shelving, a 28-foot bedroom that opens to a balcony, a fitted dressing area lined with closets, and a roomy bath. A laundry room adds to the suite’s conveniences, while the partly finished basement adds flexibility, with a gym that includes an infrared sauna, plus a light-filled artist’s studio.

RELATED: This $17 Million Minimalist Home in the Hamptons Sits on a High Bluff Above Gardiner’s Bay

Old Stone Highway East Hampton home

Walls of glass provide lush views of the sculpted gardens.

Kathleen O’Donnell

Outside, a heated pool, spa, and fire pit lounge are tucked into the sculpted landscape, while pebble paths lead to two hidden gardens—one for vegetables, the other a Zen-like retreat for quiet reflection. Mature trees, flowering beds, and manicured hedges add to the calm, intentional feel of the grounds. Subtle lighting transforms the property after sunset, while an integrated sound system—both indoors and out—sets the musical mood.

East Hampton’s luxury market has been heating up, with total home sales climbing roughly 15 percent year over year and overall volume surpassing $1.4 billion in the second quarter of 2025. According to Douglas Elliman, the Hamptons’ median sale price recently crossed the $2 million mark for the first time—a clear sign that demand for distinctive, design-driven properties in premium locales remains strong.

Click here to see more photos of the East Hampton home.

Kathleen O’Donnell