‘Succession’ producer lists NYC home amid show’s buzzy final season

Real Estate

Priced out of the Roy brothers’ Upper East and West Side penthouses? You’re in luck.

Another piece of “Succession” real estate hit the market on Friday, The Post has learned — and in the midst of the final season of the buzzy series, to boot. The home belonging to the show’s producer Frank Rich, according to public records, has listed for $3.2 million.

Rich, a journalist by background who also produced the HBO political comedy “Veep,” bought unit 15B at 110-118 Riverside Drive with his wife Alex Witchel — herself a New York Times writer and a published book author — in 1993. However, it’s unclear what they paid for it.

Other recent offerings from “Succession,” the show alone being a common topic of discussion around New York City these days, are at a slightly higher price point. They include a duplex penthouse at 200 Amsterdam where Roman Roy (played by Kieran Culkin) lives in season 4, which is available for $38 million.

Meanwhile, the Upper East Side triplex penthouse where his troubled older brother Kendall Roy (Jeremy Strong) resides at 180 E. 88th St. is listed for $29 million. His prior fictional abode, on the 90th floor of 35 Hudson Yards, sold for $35 million last summer.


The couple bought the home in 1993.
The couple bought the home in 1993.
Getty Images

A view of the layout.
A view of the layout.
Celeste Godoy Photography

The classic six has room for a plush living area.
The classic six has room for a plush living area.
Celeste Godoy Photography

The kitchen.
The kitchen.
Celeste Godoy Photography

Siobhan “Shiv” Roy (the now-pregnant Williamsburg resident Sarah Snook) is cooling her heels in a penthouse at 270 Broadway down in Tribeca, where a unit directly below is on the market for a bargain $5.99 million.

Not to be overshadowed by the digs of the show’s spoiled siblings, the Emmy and Golden Globe-winner’s apartment has plenty of notable features, assures its listing broker, Julie Gans of Compass.

Chief among them are “the most spectacular, unobstructed sunsets over the Hudson River, with 15 oversized windows providing views for days,” she said. “In a city where views are constantly disappearing, these vistas are not going anywhere.”


The unit has room for a home office.
The unit has room for a home office.
Celeste Godoy Photography

Perks also include a wide foyer with beamed ceilings.
Perks also include a wide foyer with beamed ceilings.
Celeste Godoy Photography

A bedroom.
A bedroom.
Celeste Godoy Photography

Though a tad dated compared to the aforementioned penthouses, Rich’s classic six boasts historic charm.

Nestled in a 1929 white-glove co-op across from Riverside Park, it opens with a large foyer leading to a great room at one end and a formal dining room at the other.

A windowed kitchen is tucked next to a pantry with a washer/dryer, around the corner from a home office space with an ensuite bath.

Over in the bedroom wing, there’s ample closet space and a windowed ensuite bath in the primary suite.

Amenities in the building include a gym, a playroom, extra storage and a bike room.

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