
Catherine Zeta-Jones and Michael Douglas are officially parting ways with Longmeadow, their 12-acre Hudson River spread in Irvington, Westchester County. The restored Georgian manor is a four-level, entertainment-focused home with sprawling common spaces and a year-round heated indoor pool, and it is now listed on the regional MLS.
Price and listing history
The estate first grabbed national headlines in mid-2024 when it hit the market with a $12 million asking price. As Realtor.com reported at the time, that debut highlighted Longmeadow’s riverfront perch and fresh interior renovations. MLS records later show the property returning to public listings in May 2025 with a trimmed $10 million price tag, according to RE/MAX/OneKey MLS.
A closer look at Longmeadow
Listing data describes Longmeadow as spanning about 11,653 square feet across four levels, with eight bedrooms and 10 full plus two half bathrooms. Outside, the estate offers roughly 130 feet of direct Hudson River frontage, a 100-foot west-facing terrace made for sunset viewing, separate guest quarters and garage space for four cars, all detailed in the MLS entry on OneKey MLS.
Lower level 'fully immersive' lifestyle
The marketing copy does not hold back on the lower level, billing it as a “fully immersive lifestyle experience.” That floor combines a two-story paneled library, a fitness room, a summer kitchen and a 21-foot heated indoor pool. The same language shows up word for word on several brokerage sites tied to the MLS entry, underscoring that the space was designed for year-round recreation and entertaining, per the published Listing details.
Why they're selling
Zeta-Jones told The Wall Street Journal that listing the home felt like the natural next step once their children moved out, adding that she and Douglas plan to “spend more time in Bermuda and Europe.” That explanation is carried locally by Patch, which cites the Journal. Regional coverage also notes that the couple purchased Longmeadow for about $4.5 million in 2019 when they downsized from a larger Bedford estate, according to Westchester Magazine.
What it means for Irvington
In Westchester real estate circles, Longmeadow sits firmly in trophy territory. Riverfront parcels of this size rarely hit the open market so close to Manhattan, and regional roundups have repeatedly ranked it among the county’s priciest listings. The estate has also hosted its share of high-profile gatherings, which has kept it in steady rotation in local real estate coverage, as noted by Journal News/Yahoo.
For now, the home remains an active listing on the MLS and is being shown by local brokers on an appointment-only basis. It continues to appear across brokerage sites that syndicate from the same entry on OneKey MLS.









