logo
Emma Stone's $26.5 Million Austin Estate Lists After Four-Year Renovation

Emma Stone's $26.5 Million Austin Estate Lists After Four-Year Renovation

Forbes22-05-2025
Hidden behind high walls yet only minutes from downtown Austin, Emma Stone's Tarrytown estate blends seclusion and convenience.
Renovation is a slow burn. For multi award-winning actor Emma Stone and comedy-writer and producer Dave McCary, that burn lasted four years—long enough for the pair to carve deeper roots in New York, long enough for a project once intimate to become impossibly remote. The couple's unfinished Austin sanctuary is now on the market at $26.5 million, offering a new steward the rare chance to direct its dazzling finale.
The address is 2109 Rockmoor Avenue, a leafy corner of Tarrytown where magnolia leaves blanket the streets and celebrity sightings prompt more knowing nods than star-struck squeals. Privacy, yes, but conversely a sense of quiet community. Streets remain walkable. Schools rank highly. Lake Austin sits minutes away for a paddle or a dusk cruise.
The 1.24-acre grounds read like a country estate: water features, a cutting garden, fairy garden and broad lawn space.
In that context, a discreet iron gate and a brick drive feel less like luxury than necessary etiquette. That said, listing agent Eric Moreland notes the walled, 1.24-acre parcel is a rare pocket of private breathing-room—hard to come by in Tarrytown and harder still across Austin.
Stone and McCary bought the 1940s manor in 2021, seeing potential in its dignified brick and the guardian oaks that flank the plot. They then set about coaxing it into the 21st century without silencing its past. Brick in the Georgian-style façade was removed, cleaned and re-used, a meticulous process that allowed steel skeletons and poured concrete to slip behind the home's historic skin. Glass walls followed, pulling Hill Country sunlight deep into rooms that had once squeezed rays in through small windows. Eighty percent of the work is finished, according to Moreland. The remaining finishing touches are set to wrap by summer.
Every installed element of the near-complete renovation of Emma Stone and Dave McCary's 1940s-era property is squarely top-tier.
Inside, craftsmanship channels old-world flourish. Herringbone oak clashes playfully with reclaimed brick, a syncopated conversation in wood and clay. Fireplaces and countertops wear thick, cream-toned marble. Leaded-glass panes peek through arched openings, winking at the past. Heritage, rewritten. 'The goal from day one was to craft a modern estate that still feels anchored to Tarrytown,' notes Moreland, who shares the listing with fellow Moreland Properties agent Diane Humphreys. 'Rooted in tradition yet forward-thinking in design and livability.'
Structural bones aside, architects Cuppett Kilpatrick preserved the original footprint where they could, bending additions around venerable oaks. Outdoor rooms unfurl beside their canopy—terraces for twilight suppers, a future pool deck pitched toward the lake breeze. Nearby, an auxiliary two-bedroom cottage seals the estate status.
Handsome millwork imbues the four-bedroom main house with an old-world glamour.
Fitting for an actor, the house hides a cinematic lair. Walnut-clad cabinetry conceals secret doors, a full bar waits in the wings, and double insulation teams with acoustic fabric overhead to uncork genuine theater hush. Elsewhere, a glass-wrapped solarium absorbs the day's full rays, while a wood-paneled library keeps counsel.
Historic homes like 2109 Rockmoor Avenue can be found in steady supply across Austin, yet the city's future-leaning ethos spills into its rooftops, where new construction steers much of the market's current momentum. Still, discerning buyers are in search of soul without inheriting every squeaky joist. Rockmoor Avenue threads that needle.
Though the famous couple may have never officially lived in the estate, their imprint lingers in bespoke flourishes and highly considered materials.
Of course, craft never comes cheap. But, according to Moreland, starting over from scratch would cost more than money—it would cost narrative. 'In today's market, new construction feels prescriptive and often like a sterile blank canvas. A project like this offers a refreshing and completely elevated residence without starting from scratch.'
Moreland Properties is a member of Forbes Global Properties, an invitation-only network of top-tier brokerages worldwide and the exclusive real estate partner of Forbes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jennifer Aniston teases ‘emotional' season four of The Morning Show
Jennifer Aniston teases ‘emotional' season four of The Morning Show

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jennifer Aniston teases ‘emotional' season four of The Morning Show

Jennifer Aniston has revealed the plot of the forthcoming fourth season of The Morning Show will be 'complicated'. The 56-year-old stars in the Apple TV+ drama, which follows a fictional breakfast show in the aftermath of a prominent news anchor being hit with a series of allegations, alongside Reese Witherspoon, Billy Crudup and Julianna Margulies. Aniston – who plays the TV anchor Alex Levy on the show alongside executive producing the series with co-star Witherspoon – told People that The Morning Show 'is just a beast to film'. 'It is layered, it's complicated, it's emotional, it hits on a lot of topics and current events, so let's just say, it's not Friends,' she added, referencing the Nineties show in which she played Rachel Green from 1994 to 2004. She continued: 'We're involved in every single aspect of the show, on top of just the performance side, which is a big piece of it. But I've got incredible support, and we have such an incredible team.' Season four of The Morning Show finished shooting in December last year, according to a post from Witherspoon's media company, Hello Sunshine. 'And that's a wrap on Season 4 of #TheMorningShow!' it read. 'Thank you to our incredible cast and crew for bringing this season to life. We can't wait for you all to see what's in store on @AppleTV!' Season three of The Morning show saw a romance begin between Aniston's Alex and the space tech billionaire Paul Marks, played by Jon Hamm. Elsewhere, Witherspoon's Bradley attempted to salvage her reputation as a journalist after she chose not to reveal video evidence of her brother taking part in the insurrection at the US Capitol. Speaking to Deadline, showrunner Charlotte Stoudt said the next season of the show would explore deepfakes and artificial intelligence. 'We blew everything up last year with the biggest bomb we could possibly build,' she said. 'So, we have to ask ourselves how is the band going to get back together, and what will that look like? 'We get into the world of deepfakes and AI and the misinformation in the fog of war that we're seeing now in the Middle East and stuff. 'We're looking at who can trust. And can you trust what you're seeing? Can you trust yourself? Can you trust your news outlet?' The Morning Show returns for season four on Wednesday, 17 September on Apple TV+

Husband Says He Doesn't Want Wife Using Baby Name He 'Secretly' Hates Because It Sounds Like a 'Forest Fairy'
Husband Says He Doesn't Want Wife Using Baby Name He 'Secretly' Hates Because It Sounds Like a 'Forest Fairy'

Yahoo

time30 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Husband Says He Doesn't Want Wife Using Baby Name He 'Secretly' Hates Because It Sounds Like a 'Forest Fairy'

A man says he "hates" the name his wife wants to use for their future child, but waited so long to tell her that she is now mad In a post on Reddit, he writes that he held off on telling the woman he dislikes the name, "because I didn't want to kill her vibe" But now, he feels he has to offer up his opinion, adding, "I want our daughter to have a name that'll command respect in a boardroom, not at a Renaissance Faire"A man says he "secretly hates" the name his wife wants to use for their future child, writing in a Reddit post that the name sounds like something out of a "Renaissance Faire." "We've both been throwing around names for a while, but there's one she's been dead set on ever since we found out we were having a girl: 'Elowyn,' " the anonymous 35-year-old writes in the post. "She says it's 'magical and lyrical' and reminds her of a forest fairy or something." He continues: "I've been nodding along because I didn't want to kill her vibe, pregnancy hormones and all, but honestly, I can't stand it. It sounds like a name someone would give their Dungeons & Dragons character. I want our daughter to have a name that'll command respect in a boardroom, not at a Renaissance Faire." He writes that last week, he finally told his wife that he isn't comfortable with the name. "I suggested alternatives that are still beautiful but more grounded (like Claire or Julia), and she got really upset. She accused me of 'waiting too long' to say something and said I'd been 'deceptive.' I told her I was trying to be supportive and avoid unnecessary stress, but that this is my child too," he writes. Now, his wife isn't speaking to him, other than to say she is 'mourning" the name. "I get that pregnancy is emotional, but that feels a bit theatrical to me," he writes. "I told her we still have 21 weeks to decide and that maybe this is a sign to keep looking." He then asks if he's wrong "for holding my ground and not wanting to name my daughter something that sounds like a Tolkien side character?" Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. While many commenters agree that the name is not their favorite, some are also chiding the man for not being honest sooner. "Why would you not just be honest from the beginning? That makes no sense to hide your feelings from your partner, especially about something they seem dead set on and you are adamantly against," wrote one. Added another commenter: "Naming a baby is like making one: both parties need to agree or it shouldn't happen. The best time to say no might have been earlier, but the second best time is right now. Both are infinitely preferable to never." Read the original article on People

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store