For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
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.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
213 West 23rd Street is a boutique pre-war condo that was transformed into twelve lofts in 2004, features a newly renovated lobby, part-time doorman and on-site superintendent. The condo permits immediate unlimited sublets, live/work, investors, foreign buyers, pieds-a-terre, co-purchasing, gifting, guarantors and pets.
The building is just blocks from Madison Square Park, Chelsea Piers, and the High Line Park. It is close to nightlife with an array of fine dining options, cozy cafes and world-class shopping with Eataly, Whole Foods, and Trader Joe's just around the corner. It offers easy access to major transportation lines.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
A landmark on the Upper West Side, the Apple Bank Building at 2112 Broadway has 27 apartments in its top four floors.
Residences have their own private entrance at 2112 Broadway. The building itself occupies a full block between Broadway and Amsterdam and 73rd and 74th Streets. SLCE Architects designed the units to be unique and each features its own layout. Ranging in size from 1,200 to 3,800 square feet, apartments also have ceilings between 11 and 18 feet and modern appliances.
Amenities include an attended lobby, concierge service, central air conditioning and a health and fitness club. It is near Central Park, numerous restaurants and retail shops and excellent public transportation options.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
Built in 2003, the Hubert has an address at 7 Hubert Street, a cobblestone street in TriBeCa.
Designed by BKSK Architects, the Hubert has 9- and 10-foot windows in bays as wide as 22 feet. Residences include two mansion-width townhouses with private garages, gardens and terraces, as well as three sprawling maisonettes and 28 loft-style apartments offering 19 different floor plans. Lofts range from a 1,787-square-foot two-bedroom, two-bath unit, to a nearly 5,244-square-foot penthouse with five bedrooms, six bathrooms, a 360-degree wrap-around terrace, a dining room, a family room and a double-height living room. Fourteen of the 33 apartments have outdoor space and most feature 11- to 12-foot ceilings.
The architect Alan Wanzenberg designed the interiors.
The Hubert's amenities include a state-of-the-art fitness room, refrigerated delivery storage in the lobby, a children's playroom, a landscaped courtyard, 24-hour concierge service and individual basement storage.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
The Solita is a boutique condominium located at 161 Grand Street, at the crossroads of SoHo and NoLIita and close to Chinatown, NoHo and the Lower East Side, and close to some of the best restaurants, nightlife and shopping that New York has to offer. This pet-friendly condominium features video intercom, live-in super who accepts packages, bike room, and a roof terrace. The 6, J/Z, and N/Q/R/W trains are close by.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
The Puck Building at 295 Lafayette Street in SoHo, one of the city’s grand 19th Century buildings, is distinguished by two gilded statues of Puck, a character from Shakespeare’s “Mid-Summer’s Night Dream.” The full-service boutique residence with a 24-hour doorman consists of just 6 apartments atop a mixed-use building.
Of these, the most spectacular residence is the 5-bedroom, 7.5-bath penthouse with 7,241 square feet of interior and 5,158 square feet of exterior living space with a library, gym, home theater, wine cellar and landscaped private terraces with a yoga lawn, putting green, spa tub and wet bar.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
160 Wooster Street was originally intended to be 43 rental units, but it was reconfigured into 15 loft-style apartments in 2005.
Residences offer flexible floor plans to adapt to changing lifestyles. The two duplex penthouses have custom-designed staircases and expansive terraces. Apartments range in size from 1,400 to 3,500 square feet, with two ground floor commercial units. Most are corner apartments, allowing for open views and sun-drenched rooms. They also have ceilings more than 10 feet high, white oak hardwood floors, wood-frame windows, video intercom and security systems and washers and dryers. Units are also equipped with individually controlled heating and air-conditioning systems.
Amenities include a common roof garden, private basement storage and a separate service entrance with elevator access; there are also two key-locked passenger elevators. Convenient to NoHo, Greenwich Village, NoLita and Little Italy, 160 Wooster Street is well-served by public transportation and is close to many restaurants, art galleries and boutiques.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.
The Textile Building is a handsome building designed by Henry J. Hardenbergh (of The Dakota and Plaza Hotel fame) in 1901 and converted to 46 luxury condos in 1999. Residential amenities include a residents lounge, rooftop terrace with grilling areas and gorgeous views, a children's play area, a fitness center, storage, and bike room. It is a short distance from 56 Leonard Street, future home of Anish Kapoor's bean-shaped sculpture.
For screen reader users all content above is visible so you may ignore the show more button below.