Jennifer Gould

Jennifer Gould

Real Estate

Sam Worthington checks out luxe SoHo pad

“Avatar” actor Sam Worthington may have been flirting with his co-star Jennifer Aniston on the set of indie flick “Cake” earlier this week, but Aniston’s fiancé Justin Theroux has no need to worry.

Worthington has been spending his off hours house-hunting in Manhattan — with model gal pal Lara Bingle in tow.

Worthington — who was in a paparazzi scuffle back in February — was “nice and unassuming” while touring Manhattan luxury homes, we hear.

One spot he looked at was a $15,500-a-month rental at 473 Broome St. The 2,400-square-foot two-bedroom, two-bathroom is listed with Town’s Bill Kowalczuk.

The unit includes 12.5-foot tin-pressed ceilings, Corinthian cast-iron columns and 7-foot-high windows. There’s also a spa-like master bath that comes equipped with an over-sized shower, a 15-foot ceiling and skylight, along with a clawfoot deep-soaking tub.

It’s all in an 1872 landmarked building, the Gunther Building in SoHo, and it comes with a communal landscaped roof deck and garden.

Dollhouse for sale

Welcome to the prewar studio!

Actress Heather Matarazzo, who played Lilly Moscovitz in “The Princess Diaries” and awkward seventh-grader Dawn Weiner in Todd Solondz’s “Welcome to the Dollhouse,” has put her pre-war studio on the market.

The co-op, priced at $315,000, has an open layout and finished eat-in kitchen with granite counters and stainless-steel appliances, and is only a block away from the East River.

No word as yet on where Matarazzo is moving, but Brown Harris Stevens’ Kristin Hurd scored the listing.

We hear . . .

That the Kips Bay Opening Night Cocktail Reception was held last night at the Mansion on Madison … that Shaun Osher, CEO of Core, was honored last night by the Union Settlement Association, East Harlem’s oldest social service association, at Gustavino’s … that a rare Egyptian Ptolemaic Period mummy sarcophagus, circa 332-330 BC, was taken out of a three-bedroom apartment at 30 Sutton Place and sold for $60,000 at Capo Auction Fine Art and Antiques in Long Island City. It had been purchased for $3,000 in the 1980s from Sam Haddad Egyptiain Antiquities, which has long been out of business. The auction house estimates had been $5,000 to $7,000.