The Story Behind
Newly Completed Gold Coast Colonial on Two Private Acres
From the moment the crisp white facade comes into view—dark-framed windows set against stone masonry, a symmetrical roofline rising against the sky—it is clear that 63 Fruitledge Road was conceived with a singular sense of intention. This is not a home assembled from a catalog of luxury finishes; it is a property where every material decision serves the whole, and where architecture and interior design operate as a single, continuous statement.
The entrance establishes the tone immediately. A grand foyer opens onto the main level, where light herringbone hardwood floors extend throughout and ten-foot ceilings create a sense of volume that never tips into excess. The formal living room anchors the social heart of the home: a marble-surround fireplace on one wall, floor-to-ceiling black-framed windows framing the private grounds on another, and a custom wet bar with black cabinetry and a built-in wine refrigerator positioned as a purpose-built entertainer's centerpiece. It is a room that functions equally well for an intimate evening and a fully orchestrated gathering.
The kitchen is equally considered in its execution. A marble waterfall island serves as both a working surface and a visual focal point, its veining carried upward through a full-height marble slab backsplash. Glass-fronted illuminated cabinetry lines the perimeter, while the appliance suite—Gaggenau gas range, double Bosch dishwashers, Sub-Zero refrigerator and freezer—reflects a commitment to professional-grade performance within a refined residential setting. The kitchen opens directly into the formal dining room, ensuring that the flow between cooking, serving, and gathering remains entirely uninterrupted.
Beyond the kitchen, a well-designed service corridor addresses the practical architecture of daily life with equal care: a mudroom with radiant heated floors, a walk-in pantry, a full bath, and direct access to the three-car garage and back staircase. Radiant heat extends through all bathrooms as well, a quiet luxury that speaks to the thoroughness of the home's specification.
Upstairs, all five bedrooms are en suite—a deliberate choice that affords genuine privacy at every level of the home. The primary suite is expansive by any measure: dual custom outfitted walk-in closets, light hardwood floors, and a marble bath that reads more spa than utility. A glass-enclosed shower with brass fixtures, a freestanding soaking tub positioned beneath generous windows, and a dual-vanity layout together compose a space that prioritizes both comfort and calm.
The main level also accommodates a generously proportioned guest bedroom with its own full bath—an arrangement that makes extended stays as seamless as everyday living.
Outside, the property continues its commitment to considered design. A heated 40-by-20-foot Gunite saltwater pool anchors the rear grounds, surrounded by stone paver terracing and a fully equipped outdoor kitchen. Mature trees frame the perimeter of the two-acre lot, creating a degree of privacy rarely available at this proximity to the North Shore's most sought-after communities. The result is a property that performs at every scale—from a quiet morning to a fully realized outdoor event—without ever feeling as though it is trying too hard.
Brookville occupies a singular position on Long Island's North Shore—an incorporated village in Nassau County that has maintained its character as one of the Gold Coast's most quietly distinguished addresses for well over a century. Situated within the Town of Oyster Bay, Brookville is defined by its generous lot sizes, mature tree canopies, and the kind of considered land preservation that keeps its residential streets genuinely serene. With a population of just over 3,400 and zoning that has historically prioritized estate-scale properties, the village has resisted the pressures of overdevelopment that have transformed other corners of the metropolitan area, preserving instead the rolling topography and pastoral character that first drew Long Island's most prominent families to this stretch of shoreline in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
The Gold Coast designation is not merely a real estate convention—it reflects a genuine historical identity. During the Gilded Age and into the Jazz Era, the North Shore of Long Island became the preferred retreat of New York's industrial and financial elite. Grand estates, some of which inspired F. Scott Fitzgerald's vision of West Egg, once dotted the landscape from Great Neck through Oyster Bay. While many of those original estates have been converted to institutional or educational use, the landscape they shaped—and the culture of privacy, land stewardship, and architectural ambition they established—remains embedded in the character of villages like Brookville.
For families with children, the Locust Valley Central School District is among the most significant practical advantages the area offers. Consistently ranked among the top public school districts in New York State, Locust Valley serves the villages of Brookville, Lattingtown, Laurel Hollow, Matinecock, and Muttontown, providing a small-district intimacy alongside strong academic and extracurricular programming.
The surrounding area offers a lifestyle that moves comfortably between the bucolic and the cosmopolitan. The village of Locust Valley itself provides a walkable main street with independent shops, restaurants, and services. The nearby hamlet of Cold Spring Harbor offers waterfront dining and access to the Cold Spring Harbor State Park and Fish Hatchery. Oyster Bay, a short drive to the east, carries its own historical weight as the home of Sagamore Hill, the former residence of President Theodore Roosevelt and now a National Historic Site operated by the National Park Service.
For those who commute to Manhattan, the Long Island Rail Road's Oyster Bay Branch provides service from Locust Valley station, connecting residents to Penn Station and the broader metropolitan rail network. The area also sits within reasonable driving distance of both major regional airports.
Golf, equestrian facilities, and yacht clubs are woven into the fabric of North Shore life, with several private clubs operating within the immediate vicinity. The natural landscape—harbors, preserves, and the Long Island Sound shoreline—provides a counterpoint to Manhattan's density that is, for many residents, precisely the point.
To live in Brookville is to inhabit a version of the metropolitan area that moves at a different register—one where privacy is architectural, landscape is a daily consideration, and the infrastructure of a well-lived life is close at hand without ever intruding on the quiet of two private acres.
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