Real Estate
Like everywhere else in the city, renovations and new buildings are ubiquitous—but bargains are plentiful, too.
![]() |
(Photo: Lisa Kereszi) |
111 Central Park North
Sales: Jeffrey Burger, 917-846-3975
All 47 apartments take advantage of top-of-the-park views, so they’ve sold quickly, even at $1,200 per square foot. Rumor has it the penthouse is in negotiations for $12 million.
SoHa 118
301 W. 118th St.
Sales: 212-280-3500
Broker: Michelle Mizrahi, Prudential Douglas Elliman
Once it’s built, SoHa 118 (above) will likely be the tallest building in the immediate vicinity. Most of the 93 units, from one-bedrooms to three-bedrooms, will go for market rate, but a third are slated for middle-income housing, priced in the mid-$200,000s.
245 W. 115th St.
Sales: Shelley O’Keefe, Corcoran, 212-634-6515
This twenty-unit brownstone condo has only studios and one-bedrooms. It’s fairly no-frills—there’s no doorman or gym—but the units are outfitted with name-brand fixtures (Kohler) and finishes (Durango limestone), all for under $300,000 apiece.
The Normandie
100 W. 119th St.
Sales: Norman Horowitz, Halstead, 212-381-4214
A prewar conversion made up primarily of sprawling four-bedrooms with the usual finishes (central air, granite kitchens, designer baths) and the occasional wood-burning fireplace. Prices of units available now range from $975,000 to $1,195,000.

Email
Print
Behind Tim Burton's MoMA Retrospective
How Nicholas Coppola Became Nicholas Cage
Brooklyn's Wild, Prospering Music Scene
Zach Gilford on Leaving Friday Night Lights
Nine Winter Fashion Trends 
Fake Buyers Are Back at Open Houses
Look Book: The Mixed Martial Arts Fighters
Elevated, Reinvented Italian Basics at A Voce

The Times Journalist Too Big To Fail
Can NBC Be Saved?
Bloomberg's New Political Challengers