Justin Baldoni and $2.1 Million Liens Hit Lively-Reynolds Estate

Justin Baldoni and $2.1 Million Liens Hit Lively-Reynolds Estate

Five contractors and subcontractors have put justin baldoni in the same financial conversation as Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds, after filing $2.1 million in mechanics liens against the couple’s 110-acre Lewisboro property. The claims land on an unfinished estate that has been part dream home, part long-running buildout, and now part debt dispute.

Westchester County records show the filings last month total $2.1 million, with FlowCon Inc., doing business as Flower Construction, seeking $1.35 million on its own. Its claim covers framing, HVAC systems, plumbing, electrical, drywall, masonry, waterproofing, painting and millwork, while other liens cite custom copper roofing, structural steel fabrication, rough carpentry, geothermal excavation and septic installation.

Lewisboro Land and Liens

The property sits in South Salem and was quietly acquired through an LLC in 2018, then expanded two years later with a $1.6 million four-bedroom parcel and four surrounding plots. The buildout includes a 14,500-square-foot main residence, a 3,306-square-foot pool house, a 1,000-square-foot swimming pool, a 1,702-square-foot gym and accompanying septic and stormwater systems.

No lien releases or discharges appeared in county records, which leaves the unpaid claims sitting against a high-value property still tied to construction work that appears to have lost momentum sometime around late 2025 or early 2026. For a project that has been treated publicly as a family compound, the lien filings turn an unfinished home into a live financial dispute.

Blake Lively’s 2022 Pitch

At a 2022 planning board hearing, Lively called the property “heaven” and “the most beautiful place in the world.” She also said, “We love this land so much. We’re so grateful to have this land and to have such space and such privacy.”

She added that the couple was “desperate to get shovels in the ground and be living on this land.” Attorney Michael Sirignano later said they had “no plans” to sell any of the surrounding lots and intended the property to “remain a family compound” for Lively, Reynolds and their four children.

Separate Pressure Around Baldoni

Lively is still pressing to recover legal fees tied to Justin Baldoni’s failed $400 million countersuit, even after the two sides reached a settlement earlier this month, two weeks before trial was set to begin. A judge recently denied her request to submit additional filings, keeping another legal bill in play while the estate liens sit unresolved.

That leaves the couple with two separate fronts: the contractor debt attached to the land, and a legal fight that still carries cost exposure. Until the liens are released or disputed in county records, the unfinished South Salem project will keep reading less like a private retreat and more like a property under strain.

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