Username:
Password:

How City Realty Works:
· For Buyers>
· For Renters>
· For Brokers>
· For Building Owners>
· The City Realty Advantage>
· Buyers Guide>
· Renters Guide>
· Co-op & Condos>
· Luxury Condo Guide>
· New Developments>
· Rental Buildings>
· Relocation Guide>
· Neighborhood Guide>
Register now to find the perfect apartment - it's easy and it's free >>
To buy, rent or sell
an apartment
please call us at:
2 1 2 - 7 5 5 - 5 5 4 4
or email us at:
contact@cityrealty.com
Park East Apartments > 233 East 86th Street
located between Third Avenue & Second Avenue
Bookmark and Share
  

Pricing Information

  

Approx. Prices for Apartments at Park East Apartments, 233 East 86th Street

1 Bedroom from $450,000 (updated 11/17/2009)
 
  

Overview

   About Park East Apartments, 233 East 86th Street

New York City is full of surprises, usually of juxtaposition, or scale, and, in the period prior to World War 11, design.

In the post-war period, however, major design surprises have been few and far between and mostly commercial: Lever House, the Seagram Building, the World Trade Center, Citicorp Center, 77 Water Street, 9 West 57th Street, United Nations Plaza Hotel, and the Wintergarden at the World Financial Center at Battery Park City are the most obvious examples.

Some residential projects such as the Galleria at 115 East 57th Street and Trump Tower have been innovative and stunning. There is, of course, incredible diversity within the quite narrow range of permissible building "envelopes" authorized by the city's complex zoning regulations, but such diversity generally has been minor.

This building, designed by Liebman Liebman & Associates, is one of the exceptions: an extremely bold but modest residential building.

While not as complex as some other buildings of its era such as the angular plans of Waterside along the East River, or the embracing ruggedness of the four massive waterfront towers of I 1 99 Plaza at 111th Street, or the highly textured design curves and sunken plazas of 309 East 49th Street, or the bundled cylindrical forms of the Corinthian at 38th Street and Second Avenue, this relatively modest, 22-story tower is very striking, especially for a midblock structure.

In their fine book, "The AIA Guide to New York City, Third Edition," (Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1988), Elliott Willensky and Norval White noted that this building was a "high style, purply brick design statement, but embodying a quality more appropriate to Milan than 86th Street."

Nonetheless, 86th Street has continued to change dramatically and this building now stands out less, in the sense that its high quality was unusual on this part of 86th Street. In recent years, 86th Street has undergone dramatic redevelopment and hardly any traces remain of its once low-rise environment. Some of the new buildings are not too bad, but this still remains the most interesting.

Its sculptural balconies recall those designed by Paul & Jarman for the handsome apartment building nearby at 247 East 87th Street that was completed in 1966. Those balconies had brick walls identical with the rest of the building's facades as this building has but while the 87th Street balconies were boxy and rectilinear creating a strong visual pattern those on this building are angled at the west end and are stacked horizontally creating a visual "ladder."

While the tower's asymmetrical form is simple, its base is not. The entrance, which is at the west side of the building, is marked by a three-story high "opening" that is crossed at the second story by a horizontal facade element that is at a reverse angle with the balconies above. The "tangled" base can be thought of, perhaps, as the hilt for the raised sword of the tower. It is consistent from a design viewpoint and very effective because it interrupts the staccato impact of the tower's balconies much as Gordon Bunshaft of Skidmore, Ownings & Merrill decided to use huge horizontal gutters at the base of his sloped skyscrapers at 9 West 57th Street and 1114 Avenue of the Americas to lessen the veritiginosity of the tower's and also try to maintain some semblance of traditional streetscape.

The building, which has a canopied entrance, has a lobby with a vaulted ceiling of stainless-steel ribs that leads to large and handsome garden of the rear of the building with a fountain. The north facade of the building is very handsome with large balconies, which, are not angled.

The handsome masonry here complements the red-brick buildings on either side of it.

This building, once known as the Far East, was erected in 1983 as a cooperative with 57 apartments. It has a concierge.

This stretch of Yorkville used to have many dance halls and German beer emporiums and this building and the adjacent apartment house at 225, erected one year earlier, marked the beginning of the radical transformation of this area from an lively entertainment district and ethnic enclave to a high-rise "luxury" residential neighborhood.

86th Street in this vicinity remains an important retail artery on the Upper East Side, however, because of the proximity of the express subway station at Lexington Avenue. Directly across the street from this building, for example, are a Barnes & Noble bookstore, a Burger King, a Ben & Jerry, and a Circuit City store.

This neighborhood has good neighborhood shopping and many private schools and religious institutions. This building is a long block and a half from an express subway station at Lexington Avenue and there is excellent crosstown bus service.

Carter B. Horsley

 
   

For More Information

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

Building Summary

Features Amenities

Building Features

>Cooperative
>Built in 1983
>Located in Yorkville
>57 Apartments
>22 Floors
>10% Down
>50% tax deductable
>Concierge
>Post War
>Basement Storage
>Garden
>Elevator
>Several wintergarden balconies
>Some arched windows
>Convenient public transportation
>Excellent neighborhood shopping
>Close to many private schools and religious institution
>Canopied entrance and paneled lobby
>Concierge
>Some balconies

Park East Apartments > 233 East 86th Street

Schedule An Appointment  »
Save Bldg. (Email Updates)  »
Peer Buildings  »
Area Maps  »
Building Ratings  »
Pros & Cons  »
Sell Your Apartment  »
Inquire About Buying Here  »

Peer Buildings



Carriage House

151 East 83rd Street

110 East 87th Street

The Wellesley

The Mayflower


Comments or questions? · Phone: 212.755.5544
Copyright © 1994-2009 CITY REALTY.COM INC. All Rights Reserved.
568 Broadway, Suite 802 New York, NY 10012
Terms of Use · Our Privacy Policy · About CITY REALTY.COM · Advertise With Us · Site Map
Developed by REOL Services


An equal housing opportunity.

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.