For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
The Machinery Exchange was originally constructed as a horse stable for the nearby Police Building in 1915, and was converted to a seven-story, 11-unit condominium in 2007. Located at 136 Baxter Street, it is at the crossroads of Soho, Nolita and Chinatown. The building has a virtual doorman, a full-time resident manager, and deeded storage cages.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
The Carl Fischer Building at 62 Cooper Square faces Cooper Square, a green plaza and promenade at the confluence of some of Manhattan’s most exciting neighborhoods - NoHo, the Bowery, East Village, Greenwich Village and Union Square. The property consists of three pre-war buildings - a 12-story loft and two four-story buildings next door. The loft holds a shared roof deck with dramatic skyline views, with a private penthouse with a hot tub taking up the roof of one of the smaller buildings.
The Carl Fisher Building offers a 24-hour doorman/concierge, an on-site superintendent, resident storage, and access to the New York Health and Racquet Club. Some of the city’s liveliest dining and nightlife abounds on the surrounding blocks; the campus of Cooper Union, one of the country’s most prestigious art and architecture universities, sits next door and across the square; up the block, the Astor Place station of the 6 train puts both Downtown and Midtown within a ten-minute commute.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
Located at the crossroads of Chelsea and the Meatpacking District, 459 West 18th Street is 11 stories and contains 10 apartments.
Apartments in the distinctive, black-and-white building with angular accents are distinguished by their white, modern interiors, tall ceilings and unique floor plans. Custom kitchens are equipped with large islands, top-of-the-line appliances and premium cabinetry, while master bathrooms have separate showers, deep tubs and double vanities.
An attended lobby and central air conditioning and heating are among the noteworthy amenities at 459 West 18th Street. It is also located near the Chelsea Piers entertainment complex, the Highline, art galleries, many restaurants and boutiques and several of Chelsea’s most notable new buildings.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
The Sterling Mason building at 71 Laight Street is one of Tribeca's most sought-after condominium loft conversions. Loved for its location, stunning design, and gorgeous interiors, the project was designed by noted architect Morris Adjmi and takes a six-story Tribeca loft building replicates the original 1906 red-brick masonry building with a new light-gray twin with concrete panels and a metallic finish.
Within, Gachot Studios has blended refined finishes with soaring ceilings and other classic loft details, with bespoke finishes like Henrybuilt kitchens. A four-bedroom duplex penthouse sits at the building’s pinnacle offering 5,000 square feet of interior space and a 1,065-square-foot private terrace.
Unlike many of the neighborhood’s authentic lofts, this one is blessed with the kind of amenities you’d find in a high-rise, including a concierge, a doorman, a porter and a resident manager, a children’s play space designed in collaboration with the 92nd Street Y, a fitness center and a 12-car garage.
From La Garconne to Locanda Verde, Bubby’s and Ear Inn, the western Tribeca neighborhood, near Soho and the West Village, is a cornucopia of shopping, restaurants and waterfront enjoyment in the form of Hudson River Park, the Tribeca dog run and much more.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.