Skip to Content
There are 4 apartments for sale at 300 East 59th Street (last updated on Apr 16, 2024)

The Landmark, 300 East 59th Street

Co-op located in Midtown East, at The Southeast corner of Second Avenue

Description of The Landmark at 300 East 59th Street

The Landmark is a 30-story, 220-unit postwar cooperative located at 300 East 59th Street. This pet-friendly building is staffed with a doorman, porter, and live-in resident manager. Amenities include attended lobby, laundry room on every floor, storage, integrated indoor parking garage, and landscaped roof terrace with 360-degree views. It is in a prime Upper East Side location near Central Park, Bloomingdale's, Whole Foods, and several bus and subway lines.

All content above are visible to screen reader users, so you may ignore the show more button below.

Building Facts

  • Year Built: 1971
    Building Type: Co-op
    Neighborhood: Midtown East (Manhattan)
    Minimum Down: 30%
  • Total Apartments: 220 220
    Total Floors: 30
    Doorman: FT Doorman
    Pets: Small pets only
    Total Floorplans:

Apartment Pricing Stats

Avg. Price / ft2
Avg. Price / ft2

Building Amenities

  • FT Doorman
  • High-Rise
  • Post War
  • Resident Storage
  • Central AC
  • Full Service Garage
  • Rooftop Terrace
  • Washer/Dryer in building
  • Elevator
  • Rooftop Terrace
  • On-Site Parking
  • In-Unit Washer/Dryer
  • Terraces / Balconies

Apartments for Sale at 300 East 59th Street (4) View history of all units

4
Available Apts
$710K - $1.699M
Price Range
$870
Avg. Price / ft2
Loading Listings ...
No Listings Found. Please update the search criteria.
  • List
 
Interested in
this building?
Book an in-person or virtual tour.
It's quick and easy. Cancel anytime.
Or connect with one of our experts
with any questions

The Landmark: Rating

30
Out of 44

Architecture Rating: 30 / 44

+
26
Out of 36

Location Rating: 26 / 36

+
11
Out of 39

Features Rating: 11 / 39

=
67

CityRealty Rating Reference

 
Architecture
  • 30+ remarkable
  • 20-29 distinguished
  • 11-19 average
  • < 11 below average
 
Location
  • 27+ remarkable
  • 18-26 distinguished
  • 9-17 average
  • < 9 below average
 
Features
  • 22+ remarkable
  • 16-21 distinguished
  • 9-15 average
  • < 9 below average
  • #13 Rated co-op - Midtown East
 

Carter Horsley's Review of The Landmark

Carter Horsley's Building Review
"What's in a name, you might ask. Here the name is a very ambitious, glorified exaggeration as the building is definitely not an official, nor an unofficial, landmark. Still, in the parlance of New York City real estate developers chutzpah has always been a virtue and the hope here probably was that this apartment tower would become an instant landmark. The handsome, cleancut, 220-unit apartment tower, which was converted to a cooperative in 1983, is a cut above most of those of its generation, to its credit, but it is not an architectural gem. Its real claim to historical importance is that it was the first major new tower to be erected at the Manhattan entrance to the Queensborough Bridge, which it overlooks. Hollywood has always thought, not necessarily wrongly, that this bridge is New York's most romantic. It has been joined, since this building was erected in 1971, by the Roosevelt Island Tram station on the west side of Second Avenue. With its large, brightly colored gears and large cable cars, the tram station is much more highly visible for residents of the 36-story Landmark than the great towers of the bridge that are fairly far away in the East River. This area is one of the city's most congested as bridge traffic is formidable, but the area is also highly convenient to midtown and Bloomingdale's is just a long block away. The neighborhood is very well served by subways and buses and after decades of controversy a large food market and restaurant is anticipated to open in the Piranesian vaults beneath the Queensborough Bridge before the Millennium, provided an important and long missing ingredient in the retail lineup of the nearby Sutton Place district. The Landmark has very large and broad windows that afford spectacular views and a pleasant and stylish lobby." Read Carter's Full Review
Pros
  • Spectacular views
  • Some apartments have incredible views
  • Garage
  • Convenient to subways and buses
  • Doorman
  • Concierge
Cons
  • Severe traffic congestion and noise
  • No health club
  • No sundeck
{ "key" : "AIzaSyDquABdSLhathmwfnoTcYwA1BY6coZZyZk", "lat": 40.7602859, "lng": -73.9640752, "marker": { "icon": "https://img3.cityrealty.com/neo/i/w/amenities/base.png" } }

Subways

  1. N
  2. Q
  3. R
  4. 4
  5. 5
  6. 6
at 3rd Ave and 60th 0.23 miles
  1. F
at Lexington Ave and 63rd 0.32 miles
  1. M
  2. E
at Lexington Ave and 53rd 0.32 miles
 

Sales Summary - Past 12 Months

View By Apartment Sizes
Past 12 Months
$1,029,167
Avg. Price
Based on 6 Sales
 

Closing History - Last 10 sales

10
Units Sold
$660K - $1.3M
Price Range
$898
Avg. Price / ft2

Pricing Comparison of Similar Buildings

View Detailed Comparison
Dahlia
between Amsterdam Avenue & Broadway
Broadway Corridor
Forward-thinking and elegant homes on the Upper West Side. 3 bedroom residences | Immediate Occupancy
Learn More
Dahlia Building - Exterior Views Dahlia Building - Living Room Dahlia Building - Open Kitchen Dahlia Building - Courtyard Dahlia Building - Playroom Dahlia Building - Exterior Front View
{"section":"building","group":"A","hood-id":5,"omit-double-building-ads":true,"ads":[{"type":21,"page":101},{"type":18,"page":101}]}
Book a Tour or Get More Information on this Building
Interested in selling? Learn how we can help