Metro

A Trump executive’s ‘vacation from hell’

A Trump Organization executive has filed a $250,000 lawsuit against a Manhattan doctor who allegedly rented him a Hamptons vacation home from hell.

Trump Vice President and special counsel Michael Cohen plunked down $150,000 for a month-long family getaway to the Sagaponack manse on Parsonage Lane.

Cohen corralled his extended family from across the state, California and Florida for a reunion and to celebrate birthdays at the eight-bedroom home.

The too-tiny twin beds inside the Sagaponack home.

But Cohen says his nightmare started at the $7.5 million, 12,000-square-foot pad as soon as his family got there Aug. 2.

Half of the bedrooms had child-sized twin beds, the air conditioning was not working, the sauna was broken, the security gate malfunctioned, and the toilets were busted, according to his Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit.

“He ruined my summer!” huffed Cohen about landlord and NYU physiatrist Ali Guy.

The twin beds are too small for Cohen’s six-foot teenage son and completely inappropriate for his married sisters, the real-estate exec said.

“I wanted to do something special for my parents and my siblings, and he destroyed that by being irresponsible and conniving,” Cohen fumed of the owner.

Cohen originally chose the Sagaponack Village home with a backyard pool “to accommodate his entire family” and for its “wow factor,” according to his suit.

The “landlord assured [Cohen] that the property was fully furnished, equipped with the latest state-of-art technology, and a host of luxuries that [his] family would enjoy,” the suit says.

But while “aesthetically the house is fantastic, mechanically, it’s a disaster,” Cohen said.

When the contractor couldn’t fix the air-conditioning, Guy told Cohen to “sleep with the windows open and hope for sea breeze,” according to court papers.

But Guy, who specializes in pediatric rehabilitation, insisted that the complaints are “completely unfounded.”

“He wants to sue me for $250,000 and his rent was $150,000” Guy griped to The Post.

“We are filing a response, and I feel I will be vindicated,” Guy said.