Metro

Beautiful Texas oil heiress adds deluxe security to her Greenwich Village house

ON GUARD: Mom Anne Bass (left) was held hostage in 2007, so daughter Hyatt (right) is loading her home with security. (
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A beautiful Texas oil heiress and her screenwriter husband are building a single-family mansion that’s outfitted like a high-tech security fortress in the heart of the landmarked West Village, The Post has learned.

The buyer of the planned 7,000-square-foot luxury home — who has remained a mystery since its $7.5 million purchase in 2001 — is Hyatt Bass, daughter of oil baron Sid Bass and his former philanthropist wife, Anne, sources confirmed.

Hyatt, her “Date Night” screenwriter husband, Josh Klausner and their two young sons will live in the four-story mansion on Greenwich Street.

The family has been targeted at least twice. One was in 1980 in Texas. The other was in 2007, when three armed men dressed “like ninjas” invaded Anne Bass’ Connecticut estate, injected her with a blue fluid containing a “deadly virus,” and threatened to withhold the antidote unless she gave over $8.5 million.

The threat turned out to be a hoax. Only one of the assailants, her former butler, was caught and later convicted.

Hyatt Bass’ oldest son was sleeping in the Connecticut home during the invasion.

“Hyatt is very concerned about her family’s privacy and security,” a source said. “The home is going to have state-of-the-art security.”

First off, the ground floor will be commercial space. Only the top three floors will be used as the home.

Security features will include five ground-level surveillance cameras painted like the brick facade, two flush-mounted intercom panels adjacent to the entrances, and wrapping the top three floors in metal, plans show.

Designs also call for using reinforced glass and having the windows open only toward the back yard.

Brick parapets — which mean “to cover, or defend” in Italian — along the roof are also planned, to stop would-be intruders.

The security cameras “will be small in scale, simple in design, painted to match the facade and limited in number and will not be grouped together, thereby helping them remain a discreet presence,” according to the building permits, which are rarely granted in the historic neighborhood.