Manhattan Transfers

Articles in Manhattan Transfers

$48,836,000: The Official New Co-op Record

Scott and Donya Bommer.
Patrick McMullan.
Scott and Donya Bommer.

A few minutes ago, the deed for that spectacularly, mind-bogglingly amazing $48,836,000 penthouse sale at 1060 Fifth Avenue was filed in city records. According to the deed, the deal was signed on July 29, which means the hedge fund manager Scott Bommer and wife Donya took exactly six months and six days to flip their $46 million penthouse for $2,900,000 more than they'd paid in January.

"Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, is what I’m saying," the investor Glenn Greenberg, who used to live in the apartment, told The Observer earlier this week when asked about the Bommers' sale. "Sometimes it’s no more complicated than somebody changes their mind and the opportunity presents itself. And they go live in something that suits them better.”

The buyer is listed anonymously on the deed as Park View Trust.

Inside New York's Biggest Co-op Deal!

Patrick McMullan

Even though Tom Wolfe didn’t include 1060 Fifth Avenue in his canonical 1985 list of the most high-heeled, high-nosed, high-fenced Manhattan buildings, it’s the kind of co-op where the very proper, philanthropic financiers who are allowed to buy the most massively expensive apartments are, by silent decree, supposed to stay for at least a few presidential administrations.

“We certainly would not look favorably if we thought someone was coming in with the notion of turning around and leaving quickly,” an owner at 1060 Fifth, built by J.E.R. Carpenter in 1928, said this week. George Soros stayed in the building after his divorce (his ex-wife got $24 million for the apartment).  read more »

Public Intellectual Ian Buruma Purchases $1.5 M. Condo in Public Eyesore

Property Shark

Ian Buruma, one of the world’s genuinely sharp, eloquent public intellectuals, has bought a condo in one of New York’s genuinely unsightly new condos. According to city records, he spent $1,495,000 on an apartment at the Kalahari on West 116th Street. He and Eri Hotta, who taught at Oxford until 2005, closed last month.

On the plus side, their building has solar paneling and wind-generated energy, music practice rooms, sustainable bamboo floors in the apartments, and 120 lottery-drawn affordable housing units to go with the luxury spaces.

But the Africa-inspired facade just doesn’t work: When the new building was ranked as the city’s single ugliest condo by Time Out New York late last year, the magazine wrote: “This is reminiscent of the Kalahari Desert.  read more »

$10 M. Thunder! Ben Stiller Buys Riverside Duplex from Zabar Scion

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There’s something so inoffensive and smiley about Ben Stiller that he can make phallus-in-the-zipper jokes (or write and direct a Hollywood blockbuster that heavily features blackface) but still come across as a really amiable fellow who likes to stay in close proximity to his aging parents.

So it makes sense that he just spent $10 million on a duplex in a prewar orange-brick co-op on Riverside Drive in the West 80s, the same building that his parents, Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara, have lived in for years. Mr. Stiller’s name isn’t on the deed, filed last week, though the duplex was bought through a trust that shares the actor’s billing address.  read more »

The City's Most Glorious Co-op Flip! Bommers Selling New Duplex for $48.9 M.

PropertyShark.

In what will surely go down as one of the most splendid flips in the history of ultra-posh New York City real estate, the young hedge fund executive Scott Bommer and his wife Donya, once an anchor for "Good Day Philadelphia," have sold their duplex penthouse at 1060 Fifth Avenue for around $48.9 million, according to a source.

Not only does the sale come in the middle of a relatively sludgy, even gloomy real estate market, but there's the downright flabbergasting fact that the Bommers bought the apartment only this January. They paid $46 million, setting a record for a Manhattan co-op sale.  read more »

Jamie Drake-Designed Triplex Falls Victim to Kindergarten Crisis!

3 East 75th Street
Elliman
3 East 75th Street

Two years ago, in one of the most awesomely honest interviews ever given about a very, very expensive apartment, Seema Kalia, the wife of hedge fund manager Vedula Murti, told The Observer about her new $7,127,750 triplex in the 104-year-old mansion at 3 East 75th Street. "You know that sometimes people buy great houses and have no taste?" Ms. Kalia said then. "Well, we have no taste, so we put it in the hands of someone who does." She hired Madonna's designer, Jamie Drake, to fix up the space--not to mention The Dirty Sock Funtime Band to play for her 4-year-old daughter's friends in the apartment.  read more »

What a Mensch! Pete Peterson Buys Pal Les Gelb a $3 M. Co-op

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Fiscally conservative, octogenarian leveraged-buyout billionaires who served in Nixon’s cabinet can be incredibly generous to their buddies.

Pete Peterson, the co-founder and senior chairman of the Blackstone Group, and the chairman emeritus of the massively powerful Council on Foreign Relations, has bought that organization’s apartment at the huge Imperial House co-op on East 69th Street. According to city records, he paid the council $3,040,000.

Why would Mr. Peterson, who bought David Geffen’s $37.5 million duplex on Fifth Avenue last year, pick up a petite co-op? “Let me give you the background,” Mr. Peterson said after returning The Observer’s phone call, much to The Observer’s surprise.  read more »

Designer Discount? Enrique Norten Buys in Own Building

oneyorkny.com

Architects make for neurotic, itchy apartment buyers. “I would never live in anything I design,” Peter Eisenman told The Observer last year. “If you were a son of mine, I wouldn’t want you to be an architect because it’s a tough way to be in the world.”

But Enrique Norten, the star Mexican architect who was commissioned three years ago to build a Guggenheim museum in Guadalajara, spent $1,929,000 this month for an apartment at One York Street, the hefty, sharp building he designed in northern Tribeca.

He doesn’t mind living within his own work (he has a place in one of his Mexican buildings, Parque España), although he’s taking down some walls in the apartment, plus changing some finishes and appliances in the bathroom and the kitchen.  read more »

'A Lot of Barbara Kruger': Wife Gussies Up $3.2 M. Stopgap; $35 M. Mansion Awaits

Patrick McMullan

Seven months after getting disbarred for his ties to a personal-injury practice in Long Island City that belonged to a non-attorney who’d made his money in taxicab medallions, and 10 months after closing on a $35 million mansion on East 62nd Street that Madonna had bid on, the lawyer turned real estate investor Keith Rubenstein has made another real estate deal. But it’s more modest.

According to city records, he and his wife, Inga, an art collector and ex-model, spent $3.2 million on a two-bedroom duplex at 101 Warren Street, the massive new Tribeca condo building.

It’s a much smaller place than the penthouse (marketed as a “skyhome”) that Mr.  read more »

Trump Parc, C'est Chic: $38 M. (or €26 M.) Listing Marks Autumn Dash

stribling.com

James H. Herbert II, the chairman and chief executive of the very ritzy First Republic Bank, listed his penthouse at Trump Parc East on Central Park South earlier this month for $38 million, nearly four times what he paid back in 2005.

That’s a sign that the annual onslaught of post-Labor Day real estate listings (most brokers don’t bother putting anything good on the market in hot, deadened August) will be as giddily ambitious as always. And considering that the apartment is being listed by Stribling at 25,866,600 euros (monthly maintenance fees and taxes are given bi-continentally, too), it’s also a sign that brokers are still hoping to lure the gaggle of foreign buyers that have been feasting on Manhattan real estate—despite evidence that the dollar is regaining some ground.  read more »

Kress Clan's Epic Penthouse Coming Back on the Market--Smaller Tag, Less Brokers!


Last November--on what must have surely been a sad day for the kind of New Yorker who obsesses over 17-room Fifth Avenue apartments with ballroom ceilings imported from 17th-century Venetian palaces and marble staircases carved from Michelangelo’s quarry--the Kress family’s famous penthouse duplex at 1020 Fifth Avenue was taken off the market.

At that time, a source told The Observer that the listing, which, oddly, hadn’t been given to any one broker (though certain shiny-shoed brokers from certain brokerages were allowed to advertise the duplex on their Web sites), had come off the market because of “loose ends” that had to be cleared up by the estate.  read more »

Shelter From the Norm: Renée Zellweger Buys $2.8 M. Spread from Dylan Lover

Getty Images; www.stribling.com

Actresses don’t tend to have a particularly easy time getting into Upper East Side co-ops. At River House, the building so wonderfully correct that real estate brokers cannot use its name in marketing materials, Diane Keaton was turned down back when she was a bachelorette linked to Woody Allen, and Joan Crawford was rejected, too (though apparently because Coca-Cola’s president was in the building, and Ms. Crawford was on Pepsi’s board).

But Renée Zellweger has outsmarted the neighborhood.

According to city records, the 39-year-old actress has gradually amassed an $8.2 million spread in a small, unassuming co-op at 82nd Street and Madison Avenue.  read more »

Dakota-Spurned Cardboard Magnate Mehiel Asking $35 M. for Carhart Mansion Duplex

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Westchester corrugated-cardboard magnate Dennis Mehiel tasted the sorrowful, sour lows of Manhattan high-end real estate in September 2002, back when he was the running mate to H. Carl McCall, the Democratic nominee for New York governor.

“What does it take to get the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor?” asked a front-page article in the right-leaning Sun. “Something less, it appears, than the qualifications for buying an apartment in the Dakota.”

Mr. Mehiel had been rejected by the beloved Central Park West co-op’s board, which, as far as bad news goes, wasn’t as salacious as some of the political leaks that year, but is still enough to make a multimillionaire blush.  read more »

Write Down This! Deutsche's Old Mortgage Securities Maestro Gets $9.3 M. for Co-op


It’s hard to grasp what mortgage-backed securities are, or why they’re wreaking gruesome havoc on the global economy. (Actually, an excellent little article by a Slate editorial assistant named Chris Wilson explains that companies like Bear Stearns buy up bouquets of mortgages from primary lenders, then use monthly payments from homeowners as a nice little revenue stream—a plan that backfires when the housing market wobbles or interest rates climb.)

But back in the rosier days of March 2005, when Anilesh Ahuja had recently become the head of the multibillion-dollar mortgage-backed securities group at Deutsche Bank, he and his wife spent $7.  read more »

Lady Mandl: Architect's Widow Gathers Memories, Sells Park Avenue Condo for $3.1 M.


Most 1,203-word Sunday Times articles about combined-unit condos with nine surround-sound speakers and 14 plasma televisions and a 15-foot retractable theater screen and 35 electrically shaded windows stir up throbbing, bilious resentment.

But there was something unpredictably lovely about a July 2005 profile of the apartment that architect David Mandl built for himself and his wife, Anita, at 280 Park Avenue South. The article ends with Ms. Mandl explaining that they watch a little TV, but prefer putting photographs from their three decades together up on those 15 screens.

A few months after that article was published, Mr. Mandl, who co-founded the much-lauded firm Meltzer/Mandl Architects, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.  read more »

Feisty Cookbook Writer Karen Hess' Old Co-Op Sells for $1.9 M.

Gourmet Magazine.

It isn’t a wild surprise that Karen Hess, who died last year at age 88 after a lifetime of crotchety but widely admired culinary writing (“How shall we tell our fellow Americans that our palates have been ravaged,” one of her book’s introductions went, “that our food is awful, and that our most respected authorities on cookery are poseurs?”) left behind an amazing and odd kitchen at 285 Riverside Drive.

“She got, I think it was, a Garland--a huge restaurant stove--and no one could figure out how they got it in there, she couldn’t even remember,” her daughter, Martha, told The Observer.  read more »

Luxury Chronicler Buys 'Responsibly High-End' West 98th Street Pad

Property Shark

Envying the over-wealthy is a terrible thing. Despite the pleasure of writing a Manhattan real estate column, every time I report on another $25 million real estate deal, or a type of marble in a master bathroom that I can’t really pronounce, or an en suite dressing room that is literally bigger than the entire sixth-floor walk-up apartment that I share with a roommate, something inside of me dies.

So Morgan Hertzan, an ex-MTV executive who launched LX.TV, an online television luxury lifestyle brand that makes short, fawning videos about the well-to-do city lifestyle—especially the real estate part—must have innards of steel to resist the dejection and existential malaise you’d think anyone who produces videos on $16.  read more »

Kiddie Music Mogul to Flip $7.96 M. Upper West Side Condo


If you’ve co-founded the biggest preteen music phenomenon since the Backstreet Boys, and you also happen to have a record label that’s made cheesy but enormously well-selling compilations (Monster Ballads, Goin’ South), it’s all right if you spend nearly $8 million on a three-unit apartment and then, before spending a night there, decide you don’t quite want it anymore.

Cliff Chenfeld, the 48-year-old lawyer and music entrepreneur who helped launch the tectonically successful Kidz Bop concert tour and CD series (as of last year, the first 12 volumes had sold over 10 million copies, and two more have since been released), paid $7,965,000 for a 14-room, 5,200-square-foot loft at 219 West 81st Street last month.  read more »

Monk-Turned-Magnate Peter Norton Buys Village Loft for $6.8 M.

Late last decade, Peter Norton, the Buddhist monk turned software pioneer turned art magnate, was modest and enlightened enough to choose a Manhattan apartment so unassuming that his architect, Maya Lin, complained it was too small and dark. After all, the place was a ground-floor duplex, partially below ground.

Mr. Norton’s tastes have apparently changed. According to a deed filed with the city’s Department of Finance just this week, he paid $6.8 million for a penthouse at the Greenwich, a huge prewar luxury loft building on West 13th Street, late last year. The condo has at least 23 windows facing north and west, according to the Corcoran listing, but then there’s a 10.  read more »

Nyet to the Trend! 'Kremlin Godfather' Sells Trump International Condo for $7.5 M.

Getty Images

In a weird reversal of the rule that horrifyingly omnipotent Russian oligarchs are supposed to be buying up New York’s trophy condos, the automobile and oil billionaire Boris Berezovsky has sold his 30th-floor apartment at Trump International on Central Park West.

Late last month, according to city records, a buyer named Lucietta Estates Corp.—its president is listed as Joseph DiLorenzo—paid $7,550,000 for the apartment.

Mr. Berezovsky bought the condo for $3.2 million in 2001, the same year he fled Russia, where he has since been found guilty in absentia of embezzlement. He and Putin have clashed furiously, though under Yeltsin Mr.  read more »

Years After Maya Lin's Basement, Tech Guru Norton Buys Penthouse


Ten years ago, the architect Maya Lin redesigned an apartment for the 1980s software magnate Peter Norton that was so modest--half underground, and not that big--that Architectural Digest called it "quirky, if not awkward." When a Brazilian banker bought the place and redid it, an Interior Design piece on his renovations was called "Let There Be Light."

Mr. Norton's new Manhattan apartment is bigger and brighter, a better fit for the man whose cocky pose on the cover of his eponymous computer programming guides and fix-it software products became an icon of '80s computing. According to city records filed yesterday, he paid $6.  read more »

'I Nearly Slapped My Little Cousin's Face': A Letter to The Observer

47e3.org.

It's been well over a month since I received one of the most riveting letters in the history of letter writing. It's an e-mail from a man who says he's the eldest cousin of Alistair Economakis--the landlord that's awfully close to turning the 15-unit, 60-room tenement building he owns at 47 East Third Street into a mansion for his family.

Despite several e-mails sent from The Observer to the landlord's lawyer (as well as to that lawyer's spokesperson) asking to confirm that Mr. Economakis has a cousin named Evel, we still haven't heard anything one way or the other. So take the letter with a grain of salt.  read more »

For Rent: Suite w/ Park Views, $75K 'Beetles' Slept Here! Act Now!!

Brown Harris Stevens

On Monday, the day Mayor Bloomberg warned that New York City’s budget deficit will go from $68 million in 2009 to more than $5 billion in 2011, thanks to drooping tax revenue from Wall Street and real estate sales, three of the city’s most expensive rental apartments hit the market.

The timing of the gargantuan new rentals, all asking $75,000 per month (nearly $1 million per year), is enough to make one wonder if there are more absurdly expensive apartments in New York than absurdly wealthy New Yorkers who want them. That would be a tectonic shift from the past half-decade, when high-end brokers constantly kvetched about all the demand and such little supply.  read more »

Telemarketing Maven Buys $8.3 M. Time Warner Duplex to Go with Current Spread

Property Shark

About six months after Steven Feder, the psychic hot-line guru behind that pay-per-call legend Miss Cleo, bought a $24.5 million condo at the Time Warner Center, Cheryl Mercuris, who founded the telemarketing firm Quality Resources Inc., based in a 20,000-square-foot call center in Clearwater, Fla., paid $8.3 million for a duplex in the glassy Columbus Circle development.

She’ll combine the duplex with a 1,987-square-foot apartment she bought for $2,750,000 from a Salt Lake City attorney in 2004, according to city records.

“I love the building,” said Ms. Mercuris, who returned a call at night after getting off a flight from the Hamptons.  read more »

1960s Officially Over in Soho: Phil Lesh Pays $1.7 M. Cash for Chef's Kitchen, Marble Bath

www.citi-habitats.com

Years of appreciating the Grateful Dead’s music leaves one with the impression that the band’s surviving members all maintain a certain kind of house. Surely, rhythm guitarist Bob Weir lives in a moss-covered mansion where little pixie servants tend to his benevolent whims, and drummer Bill Kreutzmann resides below the oceanic photic zone with kindly umbrella mouth gulper eels, or, at the very least, bassist Phil Lesh makes his home with dancing bears in a rainbow-colored cave.  read more »

But that isn’t the case. According to city records, Mr. Lesh and his wife, Jillspeth, paid $1,775,000 earlier this month for a condo on Prince Street

'Salesperson' Gets $38 M. Listing at 740 Park

Corcoran.

The co-op 740 Park, which is so obsessed over that a death in the building automatically becomes a hot topic among Upper East Side brokers (who want the listing), finally has a new apartment on the market.

Corcoran's Web site just put up a $38 million listing for a 16-room, five-bedroom, seven-and-a-half-bathroom duplex. Apparently there are another three bedrooms and two bathrooms in the servants quarters off a "seperate [sic] staircase," according to the listing.  read more »

Oddly, the apartment is being handled by a Corcoran broker named Julie Gordon, who's a mere salesperson with the firm--lowlier than the Rolls Royce-driving

The Voodoo Economics of 15 Central Park West: Why the $100 M. Listings Are All in Your Head

Property Shark

Even though the most expensive single residential deal ever documented in New York City is still a $53 million townhouse sale (though that’s unofficially been beaten by combined-unit spreads at the Plaza), and even though Manhattan real estate is slouching toward dreariness, the biggest real estate story of the summer has been potential $100 million sales at 15 Central Park West, where buyers who closed on their new condos just this year are putting the places back on the market at massive markups.

But most brokers, even the ones who are listing the biggest units in the just-finished mega-condo, say nine-digit apartments are a fantasy.  read more »

Tech Genius and Woody Allen Foe Build 10-Story, Five-Unit Hudson Parthenon

Property Shark

Last April, Fred Wilson, probably the best-known tech venture capitalist in New York City (his firm invests in beautiful new-wave Web sites like Tumblr and Twitter), and his wife, Joanne, sold a double-wide West 10th Street townhouse for $33,148,800, the biggest single residential deal ever in downtown.

To replace it, they’re building a Hudson River wonderland.

But when they spent $16 million on the massive site at 397 West 12th Street last April, partnering with the architect and developer Cary Tamarkin, Mr. Tamarkin had already been working on it for years: After he agreed to buy the property and another seven blocks up, the seller tried to make a separate deal with someone else for more money.  read more »

Former Freddie Mac President Buys $3.1 M. Condo, Without Mortgage

Property Shark

Eugene McQuade is a smart man. Last year, the president and chief operating officer of Freddie Mac declined an offer to replace Richard Syron as chief executive of the mortgage behemoth.

Instead, he became vice chairman and president of Merrill Lynch’s U.S. banks, just before his old company, which, along with Fannie Mae, guarantees or owns around half of the nation’s $12 trillion of mortgage debt, plummeted so theatrically (the stock went from $67.20 to $3.89 in 52 weeks) that the entire American economy has apparently been jeopardized.

It’s unlikely that any of the $12 trillion in mortgage debt comes from Mr.  read more »

Mack Daddy! Investor Selling Mansion for $59 M., a Tidy Markup

Property Shark

Twelve months and 26 days ago, according to city records, the nonprofit adoption agency Spence-Chapin sold its 24,463-square-foot headquarters at 4-8 East 94th Street, built from three 19th-century row houses, to Richard Mack, a managing partner of his father’s multibillion real estate investment group, Apollo Real Estate Advisors. He paid $23 million.

But real estate executives are wilier than nonprofit adoption agencies. After receiving a permit from the Landmarks Preservation Commission in December to essentially replace an un-pretty three-story addition, built above a third of the house, with a full 60-foot penthouse, among other upgrades, Mr. Mack put the property back on the market this week.  read more »

Brooke Astor's $46 M. Apartment (Briefly) Off The Market

New York magazine.

In what must surely be the most sweepingly devastating tragedy of the week (in terms of Park Avenue real estate), the late Brooke Astor's salivated-over $46 million duplex at 778 Park Avenue has been taken off the market for the summer.

The listing is down from the Web site of Leighton Candler, the Corcoran broker who won the listing after five of the city’s top brokerages met in the co-op's library, where the floor-to-ceiling bookcases have 10 coats of scarlet lacquer.

"We’re doing just a few things to the apartment during the summer work period," said Mr. Candler. "We’re making a few minor alterations to the apartment--we’re raising a ceiling that had been lowered in the entrance hall, because, you know, it needed to be done.  read more »

One Penthouse Duplex to Rule Them All: Peter Jackson Likely Buyer of $17.3 M. Tribeca Spread

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Peter Jackson, that jumble-haired, once obese New Zealander, whose massively fantastic Lord of the Rings trilogy makes the Star Wars franchise look like a feeble little video project by comparison, is not a name that simply pops up on a real estate deed in city records. (A Queens man named Peter A. Jackson and Peter G. Jackson of Brooklyn both make purchases in their own names, though that’s different.)

So considering that the filmmaker’s executive assistant Matthew Dravitzki, his New Zealand-based attorney Michael Stephens and his Hollywood power lawyer Peter Nelson are all listed in city records on twin penthouse purchases in Tribeca, it seems likely that Mr.  read more »

Wild Wildenstein Mansion Sells for $42.5 M.; Brooke Astor's Butler on the Deed!

Getty Images

Eleven years after the Dada-faced Jocelyn Wildenstein, who looks like a William Steig drawing of that great plastic surgery scene in Brazil, found her husband, Alec, in bed with a 19-year-old blonde at their 29-foot-wide mansion—Mr. Wildenstein, in a towel, responded by pulling a 9mm pistol on his wife—the famous townhouse has been sold.

The deal, first reported on The Observer’s Web site on Monday, closed earlier this month for $42.5 million.

In 1999, Ms. Wildenstein left the mansion at 11 East 64th Street, which was owned by her father-in-law, Daniel, and which she and her husband had shared with Alec’s younger brother Guy.  read more »

Rangers' Drury Buys 'Operation Old School' Target's Central Park Condo for $5.1 M.


It took 18 months for Abraham Pustilnik to renovate his three-bedroom, Canadian-maple-floored apartment in the Century, that twin-towered 1930s Art Deco condominium on Central Park West, which is exactly how long a two-borough undercover investigation dubbed “Operation Old School” lasted before Mr. Pustilnik, his mother, his wife and 12 others were indicted for insurance fraud and grand larceny.

He and his mom, who led an enterprise of illegal New York health clinics and a billing company that filed a decade’s worth of bogus claims with over 60 insurance companies, had to pay $4 million after pleading guilty to corruption charges. But they’ll be all right: That Central Park West apartment has sold for $5.  read more »

$35 M. Park Avenue Mansion Goes to Contract After 19-Year Sales Odyssey

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In June 1989, the month that the Ayatollah Khomeini died, Robert Mapplethorpe’s photos were removed from the Corcoran Gallery and protestors were massacred in Tiananmen Square, the developer Sherman Cohen paid a then epic $12.5 million for the neo-federal, Tuscan-columned, 100-foot-wide, 20-foot-deep, 25-room mansion at 603 Park Avenue as a surprise for his wife.

She didn’t like it.

So Mr. Cohen put the house back on the market, where it stayed, on and off, for nearly 20 years. Around May 21, the press-shy broker and socialite Serena Boardman (her great-great-grandfather was George F. Baker, who founded what later became Citibank) and her Sotheby’s colleague Leila Stone put the house back on the market after a lull for $35 million.  read more »

Infamous Wildenstein Mansion Sells for $42.5 M., But Is Buyer Blavatnik?

Ms. Wildenstein.
Getty Images.
Ms. Wildenstein.

All unhappy houses are not alike. The epically altered Jocelyne Wildenstein lived for years with husband Alec on the third floor of his father's 29-foot-wide mansion at 11 East 64th Street, while his younger brother was one floor up, and both brothers' children (and a nanny) were up top.

Eventually, Mr. Wildenstein allegedly threatened his wife at gunpoint after she found him in that third-floor bedroom with another woman, and a judge barred him from the house. Ms. Wildenstein left herself in the spring of 1999--leaving the basement swimming pool, ballroom, and 18th-century satinwood French furniture. Mr. Wildenstein died earlier this year.

Now his family is gone from the house, too: According to a deed filed today in city records, the house sold this month for $42.  read more »

Will New 'Beaver Butler' and Pillow Fights Sell Balazs' Condos?


When times get tough, what does a perfectly-coifed developer--once called the King of America--do to sell the dozens of remaining apartments at his new condo? Lure buyers with videos of pillow-fighting chicks.

André Balazs today introduced a new amenity at his Beaver House condo in the Financial District building, and it’s called The Beaver Butler. For about $1,000 per year, buyers can watch footage from their “in-residence cameras” on their computers--to “check up on what’s happening while you’re away.”

According to the faux camera footage on the condo's Web site, you’ll apparently see shirtless men with power tools drinking beer in the kitchen, a girl dusting down a yellow convertible, or, in the bedroom, two blondes and a brunette dressed in pink smacking each other with pillows.  read more »

Handbag Designer, 22, Nets $8.1 M.Village Townhouse

Property Shark

Greenwich Village has a very young new landlord.

Earlier this year, a 22-year-old handbag designer and freelance fashion writer named Charmaine Ho bought a 25-foot-wide Greek Revival townhouse on West Ninth Street. According to city records, a limited liability corporation in her name paid $8.1 million.

Her parents, who still live in the Hong Kong house where she was born and raised, are paying for almost all of the townhouse. “I can contribute as much as I can, but it’s not enough, and they’ll have to help me,” said Ms. Ho, reached through a school e-mail address. “I don’t even have a full-time salary! I work part-time for a small designer, and then I also write things for Web sites.  read more »

Rag & Bone Founder, Makeup Artisan Buy Chelsea Duplex for $4.42 M.

Getty Images

It’s been about seven years since David Neville founded Rag & Bone with a friend from English boarding school, but their pristine $480 split back swing dresses, $215 western shirts, $505 hooded capes and matching $215 tailored leggings are the kinds of things that get designers very far very quickly in this town.

Mr. Neville and his wife, the star makeup artist Gucci Westman, just bought a duplex penthouse loft at the Spears Building, a former warehouse on West 22nd Street. According to city records, they paid $4.426 million.

“We’re so excited to get in there,” Mr. Neville said. “My wife, she’s definitely pretty good with interiors and color; that’s what she does.  read more »

De Montebello Sells East Side Co-op for $2.1 M., But Stays in Met's Neighborhood


The fact that imperial Metropolitan Museum of Art director Philippe de Montebello is ending his 31-year tenure in just a few months is bad enough for the Upper East Side’s delicate collective psyche. But what would happen to the neighborhood’s sense of nobility if the molasses-voiced descendent of Napoleonic aristocracy (and, on his mother’s side, of the Marquis de Sade) actually moved away?

According to city records, Mr. de Montebello and his wife, Edith, director of financial aid at the Trinity School, sold their two-bedroom co-op at 25 East 86th Street this month for $2.195 million.

The buyer is graphic designer Holly Okner, whose father happens to be the investor Peter A.  read more »

Are Eight Bedrooms Enough to Break a Record? 1030 Fifth Duplex Listed for $47.5 M.

Property Shark

This May, it took Christine Wasserstein less than a week to find a buyer for her $34 million apartment (which she’d kept after a divorce from New York magazine owner Bruce Wasserstein). Her neighbors at 1030 Fifth Avenue—where, for example, Diane Sawyer and Mike Nichols live in Robert Redford’s old penthouse—were probably impressed.

Barnard trustee Karen Fleiss, who founded the hedge fund KMF Partners, and her husband, David, a Fifth Avenue orthopedic surgeon, have put their duplex there on the market for $47.5 million, one of the most expensive apartment listings ever in New York.

“I’m not going to respond to that,” said Ms.  read more »

Trump on $100 M. Sale: ‘You Don’t Have to Worry About Me’ Plus! Spurned Broker Lenz on ‘Voice’ in Donald’s Head

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In the next few weeks, when the Russian fertilizer billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev buys Donald Trump’s gargantuan Palm Beach estate Maison de L’Amitie for a reported $100 million, it will be the biggest sale ever of a single-family home in America.

“You don’t have to worry about me at all,” Mr. Trump told The Observer, when asked about the country’s real estate woes. “We’re doing well.”

Besides the bizarreness of a record-breaking sale during a mostly cruel year for real estate, there’s the astounding fact that the listing broker, Lawrence Moens—Mr. Trump calls him Larry—had only been showing the property since March.  read more »

One of Manhattan's Biggest Townhouse Sales! Home of Late Goebbels Kin Goes for $37.5 M.

While the rest of the country wallows in a gruesome housing slump (“He could only nod, tears welling up, when asked if it was hard to make new friends,” The Times wrote this week about a boy, in actual tattered socks, who’s had to move with his mother from rental to rental in Flint, Mich.), the tip-top of New York City’s high-end real estate keeps booming.

Rich realty gets richer and strange people—bespectacled hedge-fund evil geniuses, oil barons and, yes, sometimes the descendants of major Nazis—benefit.

According to city records, the 11,626-square-foot, six-story mansion at 18 East 80th Street sold this month for $37.  read more »

Soho Loft Seeks 'Some TLC' as Deposed Shoe Shiners Sell for $7.3 M.


The over-chic luxury loft building at 285 Lafayette Street—where 31 apartment units were built above a former chocolate factory, then sold to David Bowie and Iman, Patrick McEnroe, an IBM heiress, a Murdoch heir—is supposed to be a shiny, happy place.

Larry and Annette Everston, the owners of the high-end shoe shop Otto Tootsi Plohound, outdid their neighbors in shininess: The Observer reported in 2000 that while Mr. McEnroe hadn’t planned renovations for his place, the Everston couple had spent close to $3 million to transform their $3.5 million sixth-floor loft “into a northern Morocco village, complete with mosaic tiles, a citrus garden of lemon and orange trees in the sunroom, Venetian plaster walls, cement countertops built to look 200 years old, even a waterfall in one corner.  read more »