Jennifer Gould

Jennifer Gould

Real Estate

Meryl Streep’s daughter buys $1.74M Chelsea apartment

The actress Mary Willa Gummer, best known as Mamie, has just bought a $1.74 million apartment in Chelsea — not too far (but not too close, either) from her mom Meryl Streep’s home in TriBeCa.

The apartment’s listing price was $1.69 million.

Gummer, who is the daughter of Streep and the sculptor Don Gummer, recently split from her husband, actor Benjamin Walker.

The apartment she bought is a two-bedroom, two-bathroom co-op at the Broadmoor, at 315 W. 23rd St.

The renovated unit includes a large open chef’s kitchen, lots of storage and built-in cabinetry and shelving, along with two walk-in closets.

There’s also a spa-like marble master bathroom, beamed ceilings and oak floors throughout. The listing brokers, Steven Sumser and Lee Ann Jaffee, of Stribling, did not return calls.

Broker a leg

Just in time for the Tony Awards, Broadway veterans Danny Burstein and Rebecca Luker have listed their classic six at Revere Hall, at 622 W. 114th St., for $1.55 million. Burstein is currently in “Cabaret,” where he has received a Tony nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Musical.

Off-stage, they are looking for a bigger home.

Built in 1905, Revere Hall has been home to director/producer Cecil B. DeMille, notes a plaque by the front door — and President Obama lived in a smaller, shared apartment here when he was a student at Columbia University.

The fully restored three-bedroom, 1½-bathroom apartment features an oak decorative fireplace mantel and 9-foot-6-inch ceilings. The listing broker is Kinnaird Fox of Fenwick Keats Real Estate.

Bids in the Hall

Hospitality PR guru Steven Hall has just bought a one-bedroom, one-bathroom apartment in Gramercy Park, at 102 E. 22nd St., for $520,000.

The prewar unit has high, beamed ceilings and a woodburning fireplace. An extensive renovation is next, according to Hall, to transform the space into a “funky gentleman’s” pad.

It will be designed by Ray Trosa and star hospitality architect Glen Coben with furniture by Peter Kirkiles and Andrew Ross. Hall’s broker was Douglas Elliman’s Paul Zweben.