The Woodbury Fisk House was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.
A historic home known for its "elaborate" Italianate architecture is on the market in Minneapolis.
The Woodbury Fisk House - built in 1869 for Fisk, the co-founder of flour milling giant Pillsbury - listed earlier this year for just under $1 million, but is now on the market for $897,000.
Found at 424 5th Street SE. in the Marcy-Holmes neighborhood, the home was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983, and is considered one of the most intact "specimens" of Italianate architecture left in Minneapolis.
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Dolly Langer, of Edina Realty, has the listing for the 5,600 sq. ft. home made from Chaska brick, which comprises seven bedrooms and five bathrooms on a third-of-an-acre plot.
"This [home] features original details including hardwood floors, 12-foot ceilings on the first floor, leaded glass windows and cabinet doors, original hardware, cast-iron window arches, massive wooden brackets at the eaves, seven bedrooms on the upper level, a majestic front porch with cement board flooring, and a screened side porch," a spokesperson for the property told Bring Me The News.
The listing says the home "home awaits those that live to revive the elegant life of centuries past," with a previous Star Tribune article about the property saying its current owner has held numerous arts and cultural gatherings in the property.
Dolly Langer, of Edina Realty, has the listing for 424 5th St. SE. Click here to learn more.