Real Estate

Sean Parker lands 3 Greenwich Village mansions in row

Facebook co-founder Sean Parker just bought his third adjacent town house in Greenwich Village — and is set to create a mansion that’s impressive even by tech-mogul standards.

The Napster creator, 36, scooped up his new acquisition, at 36 W. 10th St., on the neighborhood’s toniest block, about a year after it had been bought by an investor for $14 million.

It was still being renovated and not even officially back on the market when Parker swooped in, sources said. The asking price was going to be set around $22 million, sources said.

Sean ParkerAP

Parker bought 38 W. 10th St. in May and has owned the Beaux Arts-style carriage house at 40 W. 10th since 2010.

He scored the carriage house — dubbed the “Bacchus House’’ after the Greek god of wine and famous as a party pad for the city’s elite — as a bachelor. He married singer Alexandra Lenas in a $10 million “Lord of the Rings”-themed ceremony in 2013.

To combine the three Manhattan properties, between Fifth and Sixth avenues, Parker will have to adhere to strict historic-landmark regulations that prevent him from altering their facades — likely leaving him to create a labyrinth of tunnels worthy of the Tolkien saga.

The listing broker for 36 W. 10th, Compass president Leonard Steinberg, was unavailable for comment.

Parker is the latest billionaire to move to the city to escape the faceless, fortressed life of suburbia, sources said.

“When you live in a suburb, no matter how impressive your house is, you are still surrounded by a lot of mediocre people,” sniffed a millionaire resident. “Here, it is easier to surround yourself by like-minded people.’’

As The Post reported, Russian tycoon Roman Abramovich is undertaking a similar project on the Upper East Side, combining adjacent properties into one megamansion.

“Russian oligarch clients tell me they can’t use their Rolls-Royces or wear their furs in London because they are afraid of being kidnapped, but in New York, they feel that they can go anywhere and do anything they want,” said town house expert Paula Del Nunzio of the real estate firm Brown Harris Stevens.