The compound is comprised of three townhouses that have all been meticulously renovated and restored with all new plumbing and electrical systems.
The brick buildings originally date back to the 1830s, and altogether have 16 rooms and 13 wood-burning fireplaces.
It's rare to find such a large property in the West Village. There's even a self-contained two-story guest house within the compound with one more bedroom, another bathroom, a kitchenette, and two fireplaces.
The two townhouses are connected via the sub-basement as well as by this wide, sky-lit corridor on the top level.
Leibovitz started buying the townhouses in 2002, and has gut-renovated them all.
Even so, the rooms retain old-world touches, like wide-plank wood floors and 70 new landmark-approved windows.
Leibovitz, known for her celebrity photographs, put her personal touch on the home in each room.
There's even a street-accessible central garden — a real rarity in the jam-packed West Village neighborhood.