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744 Warren St 4 225 pi² 100% Loué Commerce de détail Immeuble Hudson, NY 12534 959 114 $ CAD (227,01 $ CAD/pi²)



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Faits saillants de l'investissement
- Large street-level windows and dual entrances create a visible ground-floor presence suited for hospitality, retail, gallery, or any commercial use.
- Rear of the building fully rebuilt with new framing, windows, door, and reinforced foundation. Rubber roof eight years old. A full custom build-out.
- Known as Lawrence Tavern, Kappy's, and Wunderbar, the building has operated as a tavern or restaurant for nearly its entire history since 1908.
- 3-level layout supports a commercial ground floor with 2 residential units above, live-work configurations, or other income-generating arrangements.
- Rear lot provides parking with zoning that accommodates a commercial kitchen addition, outdoor dining, carriage house, garage, and residential units.
- Close neighbors include Rivertown Lodge, Hudson Diner, and Flowerkraut. The Crescent Arts Center, 18,000-square-foot arts/film, and events, opens 2027
Résumé de l'annonce
Welcome to The Bellwether Building, a circa 1908 mixed-use residential and commercial building on prime Warren Street in Hudson's historic district. A beloved neighborhood gathering spot for more than a century, it has operated as a tavern or restaurant for nearly its entire history, first as Lawrence Tavern, later Kappy's, and most recently Wunderbar. Structurally sound and now at a complete reset, the building stands ready for its next chapter: historic facade intact, original staircase preserved, and every square foot open to whatever its next owner envisions. A generous back lot further expands the opportunity, with zoning that accommodates a commercial kitchen addition, carriage house, garage, additional residential units, outdoor dining, and more.
Following a fire in 2025 and subsequent gut renovation, the ground floor is an open canvas. Two separate entrances face Warren Street. The left entry is flanked by two large street-level windows, a storefront configuration that frames the space from the street, draws natural light deep into the interior, and creates the kind of ground-floor presence that has served hospitality on this block for over a century. Behind it, a wide space runs uninterrupted from front to back, a footprint that can be divided, opened, or built out in any configuration: restaurant or café, showroom or gallery, yoga or fitness studio, creative studio, retail or residential. The right entry leads to the original staircase and banister, rising through the building to the upper floors, original 1908 craftsmanship intact and ready for the next century.
The second and third floors open into generous, uninterrupted spaces with large bay windows overlooking Warren Street. From these rooms, the Catskill Mountains fill the western horizon and the light at dusk carries the quality of a sun setting behind the peaks. Salvaged original radiators remain in the building. The upper floors are equally suited as two separate income-generating apartments, a single owner's residence above a ground-floor business, a live-work configuration, or an expansive creative or studio space. The footprint and position make this one of the most compelling development opportunities currently available on Warren Street.
The gut renovation creates the opportunity to build all infrastructure from scratch, with full control over every finish, layout, and system. There is currently no electrical, plumbing, or HVAC. The rubber roof is eight years old. Since the fire, the rear of the building has been fully rebuilt: new framing, new windows and a new door, and a new and reinforced foundation. The back lot provides off-street parking and substantial open space, with zoning that allows for a new commercial kitchen, carriage house, additional residential units, a garage, outdoor dining, a garden, or further development. It has city water, electricity and gas.
The Bellwether Building has held one of Warren Street's most prominent commercial positions for more than a century, and the block around it is only gaining momentum. Rivertown Lodge, Hudson Diner, and Flowerkraut are immediate neighbors; just steps away, The Crescent Arts Center, an 18,000-square-foot adaptive reuse of the 1916 Crescent Garage, is slated to open in 2027 as a hub for arts, film production, live-work studios, and rooftop events, bringing a major new cultural anchor to this already active stretch of Warren Street. Amtrak service to Penn Station runs from Hudson Station, about ten minutes on foot. The circumstances of this reset are as favorable as they could be: a historic facade fully intact, the rear fully rebuilt, stabilized, and ready for development, and a location whose stature is only growing. For a buyer with a clear vision, the opportunity here is substantial.
Following a fire in 2025 and subsequent gut renovation, the ground floor is an open canvas. Two separate entrances face Warren Street. The left entry is flanked by two large street-level windows, a storefront configuration that frames the space from the street, draws natural light deep into the interior, and creates the kind of ground-floor presence that has served hospitality on this block for over a century. Behind it, a wide space runs uninterrupted from front to back, a footprint that can be divided, opened, or built out in any configuration: restaurant or café, showroom or gallery, yoga or fitness studio, creative studio, retail or residential. The right entry leads to the original staircase and banister, rising through the building to the upper floors, original 1908 craftsmanship intact and ready for the next century.
The second and third floors open into generous, uninterrupted spaces with large bay windows overlooking Warren Street. From these rooms, the Catskill Mountains fill the western horizon and the light at dusk carries the quality of a sun setting behind the peaks. Salvaged original radiators remain in the building. The upper floors are equally suited as two separate income-generating apartments, a single owner's residence above a ground-floor business, a live-work configuration, or an expansive creative or studio space. The footprint and position make this one of the most compelling development opportunities currently available on Warren Street.
The gut renovation creates the opportunity to build all infrastructure from scratch, with full control over every finish, layout, and system. There is currently no electrical, plumbing, or HVAC. The rubber roof is eight years old. Since the fire, the rear of the building has been fully rebuilt: new framing, new windows and a new door, and a new and reinforced foundation. The back lot provides off-street parking and substantial open space, with zoning that allows for a new commercial kitchen, carriage house, additional residential units, a garage, outdoor dining, a garden, or further development. It has city water, electricity and gas.
The Bellwether Building has held one of Warren Street's most prominent commercial positions for more than a century, and the block around it is only gaining momentum. Rivertown Lodge, Hudson Diner, and Flowerkraut are immediate neighbors; just steps away, The Crescent Arts Center, an 18,000-square-foot adaptive reuse of the 1916 Crescent Garage, is slated to open in 2027 as a hub for arts, film production, live-work studios, and rooftop events, bringing a major new cultural anchor to this already active stretch of Warren Street. Amtrak service to Penn Station runs from Hudson Station, about ten minutes on foot. The circumstances of this reset are as favorable as they could be: a historic facade fully intact, the rear fully rebuilt, stabilized, and ready for development, and a location whose stature is only growing. For a buyer with a clear vision, the opportunity here is substantial.
Faits sur la propriété
Type de vente
Investissement
Condition de vente
Construction sur mesure
Type de propriété
Commerce de détail
Sous-type de propriété
Taille du bâtiment
4 225 pi²
Classe d’immeuble
C
Année de construction
1908
Prix
959 114 $ CAD
Prix par pi²
227,01 $ CAD
Pourcentage loué
100%
Location
Multiples
Hauteur du bâtiment
3 étages
Coefficient d’occupation des sols de l’immeuble
1,39
Taille du lot
0,07 AC
Zone de développement économique
Oui
Zonage
07
Façade
31’ sur Warren St
Moyennement accessible à pied
60/100
Exceptionnellement adapté aux voitures
100/100
Transports en commun limités
30/100
Plutôt accessible en vélo
40/100
Principaux détaillants à proximité
Impôts fonciers
| Numéro de lot | 100600-110-061-0001-002-000-0000 | Évaluation des bâtiments | 716 139 $ CAD |
| Évaluation du terrain | 29 839 $ CAD | Évaluation totale | 745 978 $ CAD |
Impôts fonciers
Numéro de lot
100600-110-061-0001-002-000-0000
Évaluation du terrain
29 839 $ CAD
Évaluation des bâtiments
716 139 $ CAD
Évaluation totale
745 978 $ CAD
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744 Warren St
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