Displaying all articles tagged:

Penthouses

  1. who’s selling
    Who Owns This $18 Million Triplex With Museum-Quality Art?A mini-investigation into an Upper East Side home with a Childe Hassam.
  2. who’s selling
    A Seaside Cottage on an East Village RooftopThe listing comes with a penthouse duplex with a terrace and double-height rooms.
  3. space of the week
    A Chelsea Penthouse Where Color Takes Center StageDesigners Francis Nicdao and Andrew Sheinman created a rainbow-bright interior for a young family’s glass-walled duplex.
  4. Foodievents
    James Beard and Cedd Moses Join L.A.’s New Tasting SeasonCelebrity chefs include locals like CJ Jacobson and Shannon Swindle.
  5. For Sale
    Top Chef Condo for RentMaybe Leah left a bra behind! Or Fabio, a thong!
  6. buy low
    Penthouse Price Plummets in Brooklyn Since it went on the market in February, this three-bedroom, three-bath penthouse duplex at 383 Carlton Avenue has had three price cuts, most recently a 10-percent reduction ($225,000) sometime yesterday. New York test-drove the space this spring and found it pleasing enough. It’s certainly swanky, with all the top finishes and appliances. And with 2,328 square feet, a roof terrace, and two balconies, there’s plenty of space for entertaining. The new price tag of $1.875 million is nearly a million less than that initial asking, making the penthouse primed for the picking. “It’s a very dramatic price drop,” admits listing broker Jerry Minsky of the Corcoran Group. “The owner’s ready to sell. It’s one the nicest apartments in downtown Brooklyn.” —S. Jhoanna Robledo Related: This Is Not My Beautiful House! This Is Not My Beautiful Life! [NYM]
  7. buy low
    Home Sweet Foundry A penthouse for less than a million? In a new condo project? This $999,000 duplex atop Jackson Foundry, a “Civil War–era” conversion on Jackson Street and Manhattan Avenue in Williamsburg, got massively price-whacked yesterday (by $146,000, according to Streeteasy.com). At over 1,400 square feet, that’s less than $700 per square foot, almost unheard of in these oh-so-trendy parts — especially when you consider that it comes with intact period details that don’t always survive the modernization process, like exposed-timber columns, cast-iron staircases, and rolling fire doors. (Some ceiling heights go up to seventeen feet.) And the huge terrace is yearning for barbecue season. A call placed to someone in the know about the development reveals that “it’s a correction, rather than a reduction,” but we’ll take our discounts where we can. —S. Jhoanna Robledo