This piano is structurally sound, with all original parts. It has moderate water damage on two of the upper panels of wood, some chips in the veneer, and much of the original mother-of-pearl inlay is missing. Some of the keys need to be repaired, and the tuning pins will need to be reset. However, the hand-painted interior boards are completely intact, and this piano can definitely play again with a little TLC.
IF fully restored, this limited production piano could go for more than $20,000. I just don't have the time or patience to restore it. Wife wants it gone. As is, it's still a great conversation piece.