Alec Baldwin lists longtime Hamptons home for a cool $29M
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Alec Baldwin lists longtime Hamptons home months after upstate sale

More than eight years after claiming he’d “probably” have to move out of New York, Alec Baldwin finally seems to be moving in that exact direction.

Seven months after buying a massive 55-acre farm in Vermont, Baldwin, 64, is listing his longtime Hamptons estate for $29 million, The Post has learned.

This East End listing also comes less than three months after Baldwin and wife, Hilaria, sold off their upstate Cleveland, NY, lake house in July for $530,000, records obtained by The Post show.

All that remains is their luxe penthouse in Manhattan’s Greenwich village that’s valued at $16 million, which the Baldwins have quietly shopped off-market since the pandemic, The Post reported.

The spirited actor purchased his Hamptons estate in Amagansett in 1996 for $1.75 million, or some $3.35 million today, records show. Baldwin, his wife and their six children have spent most of the COVID-19 pandemic on the property.

Baldwin has owned the Amagansett abode since 1996.
Baldwin has owned the Amagansett abode since 1996. Bing Maps

Made up of four bedrooms and seven bathrooms, the residence sits on 10 acres of land and boasts more than 10,000 square feet of living space.

Overlooking a bucolic preserve, the listing describes the home as a “marriage of nature and luxury” and an “impeccable retreat.”

The two-story house features all the luxe trappings of Hamptons properties: an expansive eat-in kitchen, a dining room, a movie theater, a wine tasting room and a wood-paneled library.

Tony outdoor highlights include a custom-made 625 square-foot pavilion with a fieldstone fireplace, a 25-by-50-foot pool and spa and a fenced vegetable garden, the listing notes.

“A nature and equestrian enthusiast’s dream getaway offers a unique opportunity to cultivate the reserve or build private stables,” the listing adds. Photos of the interiors, however, are not shown.

The Post has reached out to Baldwin’s reps for comment.

Scott Bradley with Saunders & Associates holds the listing.

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The Central New York house on Oneida Lake, built in 1828, stands on 2.4 acres of land.
The Central New York house on Oneida Lake, built in 1828, stands on 2.4 acres of land. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
The home has six bedrooms and six bathrooms.
The home has six bedrooms and six bathrooms. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
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The foyer.
The foyer. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
The living area.
The living area. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
The kitchen with wooden beams.
The kitchen with wooden beams. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
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The breakfast area with a woodburning fireplace.
The breakfast area with a woodburning fireplace. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
The formal dining room.
The formal dining room. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
One of six bedrooms.
One of six bedrooms. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
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One of six bathrooms.
One of six bathrooms. Coldwell Banker Prime Properties
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Meanwhile, the Baldwins quietly sold off their six-bedroom, six-bathroom home in Central New York, which boasts 340-foot views of Oneida Lake, on June 28.

Spanning more than 5,400 square-feet on 2.4 acres of land, they purchased the home in 2016 for just $250,000 at the time.

Baldwin’s aggressive real estate moves come less than a year following the shooting incident on the New Mexico set of the now-suspended film “Rust.” On Oct. 21, 2021, Baldwin discharged a gun being used as a prop, killing cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and injuring director Joel Souza. The incident, which took place at the Bonanza Creek Ranch in Santa Fe, was ruled an accident in August by New Mexico’s Office of Medical Investigator. Meanwhile, the Hutchins family has filed a wrongful death suit against Baldwin.

In a 2014 as-told-to article in New York Magazine, Baldwin openly discussed leaving New York and opting instead for a more private life.

“New Yorkers would make a terse comment to you. ‘Big fan,’ they’d say … They signaled their appreciation of you very politely,” Baldwin said. “To be a New Yorker meant you gave everybody five feet. You gave everybody their privacy. And now we don’t leave each other alone. Now we live in a digital arena, like some Roman [Coliseum], with our thumbs up or thumbs down.”

“There was a time the entire world didn’t have a camera in their pocket,” he added. “There are cameras everywhere, and there are media outlets for them to ‘file their story.’ They take your picture in line for coffee. They’re trying to get a picture of your baby. Everyone’s got a camera. When they’re done, they tweet it. It’s … unnatural.”