Real Estate

Tommy Hilfiger putting $80M pad up for sale

These digs are stunning — and so is the price!

Fashion tycoon Tommy Hilfiger is putting his sprawling Plaza-hotel penthouse duplex on the market for a cool $80 million.

Dee Ocleppo and Tommy HilfigerAndrew H. Walker/Getty Images

The 6,000-square-foot, four-bedroom pad includes the hotel’s turreted “dome” room with 35-foot ceilings and an original “Eloise” mural by Hilary Knight — not to mention a private terrace with views of Central Park and Fifth Avenue.

The upstate Elmira native and his wife, Dee Ocleppo, are selling the home in the landmarked hotel because they plan to spend more time in their just-renovated 22-acre estate in Greenwich, Conn., said Dolly Lenz, their exclusive broker.

The couple also owns a home on Mustique, a private island in the West Indies.

Hilfiger bought the Plaza home and two more apartments for $25 million in 2008, combined them and, two months later, briefly put the place on the market for $50 million.

Hilfiger, 62, has since spent $20 million to integrate the two apartments and fully renovate the space, Lenz said.

It is now filled with such priceless art as a Basquiat and Warhols, including portraits of Elizabeth Taylor and Grace Kelly.

The duplex is filled with original artwork, including Andy Warhol’s portrait of Elizabeth Taylor.Tamara Beckwith

The designer’s collection also includes Bert Stern photos of Marilyn Monroe, painted doors by Keith Haring and Harry Benson photos from Truman Capote’s 1966 Black and White Ball at The Plaza.

There’s also furniture and historical artifacts, such as a British flag from the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.

The apartment even comes with some royal neighbors — sharing a floor with a Qatari princess.

Other high-profile Plaza residents include developer Harry Macklowe and Jimmy Cayne, ex-CEO of the now-defunct Bear Stearns.

Business mogul Robert Kraft, owner of the New England Patriots, also has a Plaza home, as does a Saudi prince and London developer Christian Candy.

The Plaza recently sued the city to get rid of a decidedly déclassé Citi Bike rack out front. But residents have their own private entrance to avoid the pedal-pushing riffraff.

The view of Central Park.Tamara Beckwith