Real Estate

Act now

Hugh Grant and Gerard Butler might be duking it out for the $15.45 million penthouse triplex at 54 Bond St. in NoHo.

Both actors have checked out this grand, three-bedroom, 4,862-square-foot bachelor pad on a charming cobblestoned block. Developer Adam Gordon says the entire building is also for sale at $32 million — and can be turned into an 11,000-square-foot, single-family mansion (plus retail space), with the basement used for storage or transformed into a lap pool.

Gordon bought the cast-iron, landmarked structure, which dates back to 1874 and is also known as the Bouwerie Lane Theatre building, for $15 million in 2007.

The penthouse has swirling mahogany staircases where a craftsman molded each piece of wood by hand. There are two full gourmet, dine-in kitchens — one with an adjacent wine-tasting room. The penthouse also includes 1,277 square feet of outdoor space, including a roof deck and a terrace.

What’s up, Dockery?

Ex-New York Jets defensive back John Dockery and his wife, Anne, are glamming up the One Brooklyn Bridge Park building, where they just closed on a $4.575 million, three-bedroom, three-bathroom condo. The development sits at the foot of the 85-acre Brooklyn Bridge Park area, which straddles Brooklyn Heights and DUMBO.

We’re told Dockery, who now works as a sportscaster, likes the condo’s 1,636-square-foot terrace with views of the Manhattan skyline. Building amenities include a 3,000-square-foot gym with cardio rooms and a yoga studio, says Highlyann Krasnow of the Developers Group, which is selling the building.

Pony up $29 million

Former New York Islanders co-owner Paul Greenwood, who was arrested on securities fraud charges last year, has put even more of his property on the market. We previously reported that he listed his Westchester estate in North Salem for $10 million. And now he wants to sell his nearly 300-acre horse farm for $29 million.

Grand Central Farm, at the border of North Salem, includes 29 horse stalls, two modest caretakers’ homes, an indoor show arena and two barns. Declan Orpen of Vincent & Whittemore has the listing.

Spies who attended a recent open house for the eccentric Greenwood’s $10 million estate discovered something wacky. There was a giant brass pig out front — while inside the home were two real-life pigs that might weigh as much as 200 pounds. They were residing with Greenwood’s wife, Robin, whose maiden name is, get this, Bacon.

Hickory smoke

After ex-Bloomberg LP salesman David Weinreb pleaded guilty and was sent to jail for wire fraud, his wife, Karen, wrote a novel. The thinly veiled book, “Summer Kitchen,” was about a rich wife whose husband was in jail and who was “excommunicated” by her friends.

The novel was a must-read in Bedford, the tony Westchester town where Weinreb was creating a house of cards.

At the time of his arrest, Weinreb was only halfway finished with a five-bedroom mansion on Hickory Kingdom Road. Hedge-funder Theodore Petroulas bought it at auction for a cheap $1.9 million, finished building it with NYC-based Ogawa/Depardon Architects (the original architect) and just listed it for sale with Sotheby’s at $9.5 million.

The five-bedroom, 7½-bath, 14,000-square-foot home has an indoor pool and sits on 20 acres. Petroulas is also the developer of a nine-unit, Lower East Side condo building on Orchard Street, where residences will range from about $600,000 to $2.5 million.