A West Village building was once a fish shack and a speakeasy. Call it home for $6M.

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One of the oldest wood homes in Manhattan is located at 6 Weehawken St. It belonged to Jean-Louis Goldwater Bourgeois, the son of the late artist Louise Bourgeois.

He said publicly for years that he planned to leave the house to the Lenape people, telling the New York Times in 2017 that he was โ€œgiving it back to whom the land was stolen from, and thatโ€™s really a joyful event.โ€

An interior shot of 6 Weehawken Street

Photo by Allyson Lubow, Courtesy of Corcoran

However, when Bourgeois died last year, the house went to his estate and is now being sold through the Corcoran Group. Bourgeois did leave $50,000 for the care and feeding of his cat, Mali.

The cedar-shingled shack, which sits in the middle of a blocklong historic district, was built on the site of the former Newgate Prison, the first of the cityโ€™s many ill-fated penitentiaries.

An interior shot of 6 Weehawken Street.

Photo by Allyson Lubow, Courtesy of Corcoran

In 1834, a few years after the prison was torn down, the city built a wide, open shed with deep, overhanging gables, which functioned as a market for meat, produce, and fish from the nearby maritime trade. The remains of that market structure were used to build 6 Weehawken St.

In the 189 years since then, the building has served as a Prohibition-era speakeasy, an illegal gambling club, an adult DVD store, two different leather bars (Choo Chooโ€™s Pier and Sneakers) and a single-family home, among other purposes.

A staircase inside the house at 6 Weehawken Street.

Photo by Allyson Lubow, Courtesy of Corcoran

Now the clapboard live/work space with its distinctive outdoor staircase is for sale, with an asking price of $6 million. The Corcoran Group, which is handling the sale, advises prospective buyers to โ€œbring your architect and your imagination.โ€

As the block is landmarked, the buyer will not be able to change the home’s historic exterior.

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