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Pricing Information

  

Approx. Prices for Apartments at Leighton House, 360 East 88th Street

5 Bedrooms from $4,250,000 (updated 01/10/2010)
4 Bedrooms from $3,600,000 (updated 08/03/2009)
3 Bedrooms from $1,975,000 (updated 12/17/2009)
1 Bedroom from $1,280,000 (updated 01/28/2010)
 
  

Overview

   About Leighton House, 360 East 88th Street

This 46-story sliver building was designed by James Stewart Polshek & Associates and was a high-rise pioneer on First Avenue.

Polshek has one of the city's most diversified practices. He oversaw the restoration of Carnegie Hall and also designed the marvelous new low-rise housing at Washington Court on the Avenue of the Americas in Greenwich Village and the splendid high-rise residential tower addition at 500 Park [Avenue] Tower and a spectacular new building at the American Museum of Natural History on Central Park West.

Here, Polshek's mix of façade treatments is somewhat similar to 500 Park Tower and to a design Polshek did for the redevelopment of the New York Coliseum site. This design, however, is less successful than those two where the division between the different façade treatments was more even. Here, nevertheless, the result is still a few cuts above the average construction of the period.

The tower's main slab runs from east to west and its east and west ends are very narrow for a building of such height.

From the south, the building presents itself as a large, brown slab, but from the north its avenue corner is indented and highlighted by a bay of metal-covered windows that stop two stories short of the top of the building and two stories above the building's three-story, metal-and-glass base that includes expansion facilities for the adjacent Rhinelander Children's Center of the Children's Aid Society, a non-profit organization.

In their book, "New York 2000, Architecture and Urbanism Between the Bicentennial and the Millennium," Robert A. M. Stern, David Fishman and Jacob Tilove note that critic Suzanne Stephens called the building a "well-syncopated orchestration of advancing and receding planes, cantilevered elements, reveals, and articulated detailing," adding that "In architectural deportment it is miles ahead of its clunky neighbors."

The building, which was completed in 1990, has a health club and concierge, but no sundeck and no garage.

Most of the tower's 163 condominium apartments, some of which have fireplaces, have very open and impressive views in this former tenement area that has been considerably gentrified in recent years and is now very lively.

The tower's purple-brown Norman brick masonry façade is attractive, but the building is a bit vertiginous and just misses being more impressive. The tower is visually divided vertically into five sections each marked by a small balcony. Its relatively small windows make it appear more massive than it is.

The project, which has a garden and a playground, was developed by Philip E. Aarons and Christopher M. Jeffries of the General Atlantic Realty Corporation.

 
   

For More Information

For more information about buying an apartment in Leighton House, please call us at 212-755-5544, or contact us by email  »

Building Summary

Features Amenities

Building Features

>Condominium
>Built in 1990
>Located in Yorkville
>163 Apartments
>46 Floors
>10% Down
>Concierge
>Full-time Doorman
>Hi Rise
>Post War
>Central AC
>Garden
>Health Club
>Washer/Dryer in building
>Elevator
>Health club
>Concierge
>Garden and playground for children
>Good views
>Some balconies

Leighton House > 360 East 88th Street

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All information furnished regarding New York City property for sale, rental or financing is from sources deemed reliable, but no warranty or representation is made as to the accuracy thereof and same is submitted subject to errors, omissions, change of price, rental or other conditions, prior sale, lease or financing or withdrawal without notice. All dimensions are approximate. For exact dimensions, you must hire your own architect or engineer.