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1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
Every item inside this Boca Raton, Fla., home is included with the property's $850,000 listing price.Douglas Elliman
1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
Touches include custom-made rugs whose patterns match the lines of the dining room furniture.Douglas Elliman
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1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
"It's like a little museum here," says owner Richard Phelan, and the living room is a strong exhibition centerpiece.Douglas Elliman
1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
One wall shows a custom-designed panel of the New York skyline.Douglas Elliman
1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
The opposite wall shows South Beach.Douglas Elliman
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1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
Phelan's home also includes some $80,000 worth of vintage Frank Lloyd Wright-designed drapes. They're in multi-color display in the master bedroom.Douglas Elliman
1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
Phelan's family room features two globe lights salvaged from the SS Normandie, a French passenger ship later seized by the US during World War II.Douglas Elliman
1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
Another look inside the family room.Douglas Elliman
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1685 SW 17th St., Boca Raton, FL
Outside, a pool is surrounded by palm trees. "I smile every time I walk in the house," says Phelan. "I smile every time I walk out."Douglas Elliman
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This Boca Raton, Fla., home is replete with rare furnishings — Frank Lloyd Wright-designed window drapes and light fixtures sourced from a French passenger ship, among them. And when this three-bedroom spread lists for $850,000, every decorative item inside the property will be included in the sale for a new owner to inherit.

Richard Phelan, 75, who’s owned this 1685 SW 17th St. home for some 25 years, says he’s making this unusual sell-everything move not because he’s in a rush to leave the property, but because every aspect of its decoration was meant just for this house.

“I’d like [them] to stay with it,” Phelan says of these items, whose value he estimates to be near $400,000. “They belong here,” he says, adding that he’s aiming to find a smaller condo in the area, which he wants to decorate differently. “I sell all my homes like that.”

Phelan’s late brother, Joseph, designed the home in full — including the custom-made furniture and carpets with matching patterns. For instance, the metal frames of the Art Deco-style chairs and table in the dining room match the angular black-and-white patterns of the rug beneath.

But the 2,300-square-foot home — being marketed by Claire Sheres of Douglas Elliman — is replete with other treasures. One belonging, he points out, is a light fixture sourced from the Otis Elevator Company in Chicago — a two-tiered, Art Deco statement that depicts the Windy City’s skyline. Phelan says it’s one of a kind, and perhaps that’s why it cost $30,000 when he bought it over two decades ago.

But after he bought it, a then-Chicagoan named Oprah Winfrey learned of the purchase and — via the former New York antiques shop where Phelan nabbed it — offered $75,000 to buy the fixture.

“I said no; I wanted to keep it,” Phelan recalls. “I wanted it and I still have it.”

Oprah Winfrey was willing to pay $75,000 for this vintage light fixture, Phelan says.Douglas EllimanOprah Winfrey was willing to pay $75,000 for this vintage light fixture, Phelan says.Douglas Elliman

In the family room, Phelan — a former concert promoter who says he was the first to bring Queen, Elton John and the Rolling Stones to America — has two ceiling globe lamps salvaged from the SS Normandie. Built as a passenger ship in France for transatlantic crossings, it was later seized by the US during World War II and renamed the USS Lafayette. But in 1942, a welding torch sparked a fire inside the ship, causing it to capsize at Pier 88 in Hell’s Kitchen.

Other highlights: about $80,000 of those Frank Lloyd Wright-designed drapes from a long-ago home decor collection, which Phelan says are his favorite possessions. They’re most grand in the master bedroom; theater-style curtains in pink-and-black geometric patterns grace the windows and a canopy over the bed, whose covers feature that same design.

“The draperies took the home over the top,” he says.

Also over the top, extravagant living room wall displays made of plastic, glass and wood — custom-designed by Phelan’s late brother, no less — that show the South Beach and New York skylines, including the silhouettes of the Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center and, at street level, the facade of the former Carnegie Deli.

“That was a real loss for New York,” Phelan says of the now-shuttered restaurant.

Indeed, the perks extend outside to another favorite place for Phelan. His property sits on a 3,043-square-foot lot that includes a lush backyard with palm trees, a saltwater pool and about 36 flamingo figures placed throughout the yard.

“It’s my real pleasure place,” he says. “I smile every time I walk in the house. I smile every time I walk out.”

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