Real Estate

Hamptons ‘mobile beach home’ — featuring two bed and one bath — lists for whopping $3.2M

Yet another Hamptons mobile home has hit the market with an exorbitant pr✅ice tag. 

Continuing the recent trend, a residence in the tony Montauk Shores trailer park has b🌜een listed for sale at $3.2 million.

The two-bedroom, one-bathroom, 600-square♕-foot abode is located a💧t 100 Deforest Road in the posh hamlet of Montauk.

There are a variety of shared amenities at Montauk Shores. credit: Robert Philips

The “mobile beach home with property” features a private driveway, outdoor shower, deck and “ the exciting pos🐬sibility of expanding and customizing” the address to add extra bedrooms, an outdoor entertainment area o💜r the like, describes the . 

Photos of the obscenely💫 expensive mobile home’s interior reveal a surprisingly humble space, with bedrooms that can barely fit✤ the beds, a bathroom with a stand-up shower, and a modest living room that opens into the kitchen. 

The owner will also get access to Montauk Shores’ shared amenities, which include a clubhouse, pool, playground, and basketball court.

Potential buyers, however, will certainly be most focused not on the appointments but the location, location, locꦦation, which is “like heaven,” says Christine Sparacino of Re Max Sparrow Realty — Center Moriches, who holds the listing.

The outdoor shower.
The property is seeking $3.2 million. credit: Robert Philips
An aerial view of the property. credit: Robert Philips
The beachfront trailer park. credit: Robert Philips

You can’t buy those views anywhere. It’s insane, honestly,” she added to The Post. “You drive out there, [and it’s like] you’re at the end of the Earth.”

As for the price, it’s nothing new for this once blue-collar trailer park, where other trailers have recently gone for $3.75 million and $4.4 million.

“I know quite a few billionaires here,” Montauk resident and architect Fred Stelle said of the area just before the pandemic. “The most appealing aspect is the park’s quality of life. It’s a classic throwbacܫk to a summer community — relaxed and low-key in a funky way, like what Southern California must have been like in the 1950s, and it’s safe for kids.”

Since the coronavirus, the wealth 𒈔has only increased.

“Especially since COVID, individuals and families have realized the value of oceanfront communities and are pay𒁃ing up for it,” real estate agent Will Gold told The Post last February♏, after representing the buyer of a multi-million-dollar trailer in the community.