electronicsleader

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 2 August 2013

Dreamiest Apartments--from New York.com

Posted on 06:40 by Unknown
I got a kick out of this posting from New York.com about the "Dreamiest" apartments on the market..outrageously expensive no need to say that

The 9 Dreamiest Apartments on the Market Right Now

By Emily Nonko
Share

Real estate in New York City is expensive, with apartments reaching into nine figures. So what makes them worth all that money? Enormous terraces, private elevators and more square footage than most suburban homes

There is a very specific buyer who can afford to pay more than $100 million dollars for an apartment. And good for them. The rest of us can dare to dream, though, and picture ourselves lounging on the 2,000-square-foot terrace, taking a dip in the private pool or staring out a 14-foot glass clock face in the living room at the Brooklyn Bridge. Even if you are thinking about saving your pennies, be aware that it’s not just the massive mortgage you have to worry about. The monthly maintenance on the most expensive apartment here is $42,270 — that’s enough to buy a brand new Mercedes every single month.
The Dakota, Apt 46 (Photo: Warburg Realty)
The Dakota
Price: $14.5 million
Address: 1 W 72nd St., #46
Listing: NewYork.com
There is no singular apartment building in New York more famous than the Dakota. The imposing and historic building looms on the Upper West Side, right off Central Park. Many famous faces, including Lauren Bacall, Judy Garland and Jerry Seinfeld, have resided here since it was completed in 1884. Apartment #46 retains the building’s old-world aesthetic, including six fireplaces and the original floor plan. There are four bedrooms (though one could be used as a library) plus a living room, parlor, dining room and an additional room off the kitchen that was likely the maid’s room (now used as a family room). There are four exposures, but alas, even $14.5 million doesn’t buy you park views in the city.
See more apartments for sale on the Upper West Side
770 Park Ave. (Photo: Warburg Realty)
Duplex at 770 Park Ave.
Price: $21.75 million
Address: 770 Park Ave., 4/5 B
Listing: NewYork.com
If you’re looking for the historic, opulent aesthetic of the Upper East Side, look no further than this duplex co-op apartment at 770 Park Ave. The four-bedroom unit is outfitted with wood-burning fireplaces, oversized windows, crown moldings and chandeliers that likely haven’t changed much since the first residents moved in back in 1930 (don’t worry, the kitchen is decidedly modern). This unit was originally two apartments, now linked with an interior spiral staircase off the 24-foot-long marble Gallery. Upstairs are four bedrooms, plus a dressing room with a lighted makeup table and a window seat.
See more apartments for sale on the Upper East Side
151 E 58th St. (Photo: Corcoran)
Penthouse at Beacon Court
Price: $115 Million
Address: 151 E 58th St.
Listing: Corcoran
With a price tag of $115 million, this Midtown penthouse is one of the most expensive apartments on the market in New York City. Here’s what that kind of dough will get you: an extraordinary 9,000 square feet of space. That’s larger than most suburban mansions. The duplex has a total of 16 rooms, including four bedrooms, a media room, two dining areas and a reception room with a wet bar. Being on the 51st floor, you would expect amazing views, and this apartment does not disappoint. And with north, south and west exposures, there’s not much you won’t see. The living room also has 24-foot ceilings and two walls of windows looking out over Manhattan (one major drawback: no outdoor space). This kind of square footage doesn’t come up for sale often. This is the first time this penthouse has been on the market since the original owner, hedge fund bigwig Steve Cohen, purchased it in 2005.
See more apartments for sale in Midtown
158 Mercer St. (Photo: Corcoran)
Penthouse Duplex at 158 Mercer
Price: $42 million
Address: 158 Mercer St.
Listing: Corcoran
The crown jewel of the penthouse unit at 158 Mercer, in SoHo, is its expansive outdoor space. There are two large, landscaped terraces, the largest clocking in at a little over 2,000 square feet. The “small” terrace is about half that size. Back inside there are five bedrooms (all en suite), a private screening room and two kitchens (one on each floor, so you don’t have to take the stairs to get a midnight snack). The $42 million dollar price tag is steep, but the deal is sweetened by the fact that the apartment comes fully furnished. Think how much you will be saving by not having to buy lawn furniture to fill those enormous patios.
See more apartments for sale in SoHo
1 Main St. (Photo: Corcoran)
The Clocktower Apartment at One Main
Price: $18 million
Address: 1 Main St., Apt. 16
Listing: Corcoran
Crossing the Brooklyn Bridge by subway, you may have noticed the iconic Clocktower Building along the DUMBO waterfront. Did you know that there’s an apartment in the tower atop the building? The first floor of the triplex is where you find the four 14-foot glass clocks, which look out onto the waterfront (including both the Manhattan and Brooklyn bridges), the Manhattan skyline and all of Brooklyn. A private, glass-enclosed elevator (with a wraparound staircase) runs through the center of the apartment to reach the second floor with three bedrooms and a den, then up to the third-floor studio space. If those views aren’t enough, there’s always the sky roof cabana and the private deck.
See more apartments for sale in Brooklyn
60 Warren St. (Photo: Sothebys)
Penthouse at 60 Warren Street
Price: $24.5 Million
Address: 60 Warren St., Penthouse
Listing: Sothebys
This apartment looks like a townhouse that has been plunked on top of a classic condo building. The result is the feel of a townhouse with the views of a penthouse –the best of both worlds. This massive apartment comes with a total of 19 rooms, 10,911 interior square feet, three terraces and a private roof garden. If that’s not enough, throw in a rooftop home gym, a private elevator that connects each floor, a hot tub and wine storage. Double-height windows throughout the apartment look out onto the historic streets of TriBeCa.
See more apartments for sale in TriBeCa
25 E 77th St. (Photo: Corcoran)
Top Floor Apartment at the Mark Hotel
Price: $60 million
Address: 25 E 77th St., Penthouse
Listing: Corcoran
There’s a reason that the living room in this penthouse apartment is so grand. It used to be the hotel’s ballroom. That room also has 26-foot-ceilings that include the interior of the building’s turret. There are five fireplaces throughout the apartment, including a double-sided fireplace in the master suite (one of six bedrooms). This apartment is perfect for couples who don’t like to share — the master also has two attached bathrooms (though you may have to fight over who gets the one with the steam room). For outdoor space, there is a 2,400-square-foot rooftop terrace. The location within a hotel means 24-access to room service, but you won’t have to mingle with out-of-towners — the apartment has a private elevator from the lobby.
See more apartments for sale on the Upper East Side
2 E 61st St. (Photo: Sothebys)
Penthouse Apartment at the Pierre Hotel
Price: $125 Million
Address: 2 E 61st St., Penthouse
Listing: Sothebys
No, we didn’t forget a decimal point in the price of this apartment. It really is eight figures. And it is, not surprisingly, the most expensive apartment on the market. This unit takes up the 41st, 42nd and 43rd floors of the historic Pierre Hotel. A private, interior elevator leads to the five master bedrooms, guest suits, staff accommodations and four outdoor terraces. The massive arched windows, looking down onto 5th Avenue and Central Park, may be the most luxurious amenity. If it seems overwhelming to keep the 16 rooms plus nine bathrooms looking so grand, don’t worry — the apartment also comes with two designated staff members who provide housekeeping services.
See more apartments for sale on the Upper East Side
303 E 57th St. (Photo: Halstead)
Duplex at 303 E 57th St.
Price: $3.25 Million
Address: 303 E 57th St., #47G
Listing: Halstead
This apartment is a relative steal at just $3.25 million. Despite the “bargain” price, it does have one amenity that apartments four times the price can’t offer: a private pool. The duplex, on the 47th and 48th floors of the building, houses a 15-foot by 23-foot pool underneath a skylight and surrounded by floor-to-ceiling glass windows. Right outside there’s a massive 5,000-square-foot terrace. The apartment has two bedrooms, study and a living room with floor-to-ceiling glass windows in the living room. But chances are you will be spending most of your time in the pool anyway.
See more apartments for sale in Midtown East
July 11, 2013
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • The REAL results of all this shell game stuff with Lotteries- from the NY Times
    I would never take articles from the NY Times like this except that I am getting so angry at the way people are being encouraged to live in ...
  • SUNY Eye Care Center on West 42nd Street
    Now, this is a place that I have personal experience with--for years--and a good place to end for tonight. While I found Lenscrafters to be ...
  • Off the Wall--Rave Reviews for Frozen Yogurt in Upper East Midtown
    Oh no, not another frozen yogurt place you say.. Listen, it is August in NYC and this is the time for places like this! Besides, it gets gre...
  • From The Atlantic: Spectacular Photos of the East Side Access Project
    I  have mentioned this railroad connection project going on deep under NYC before, but here are some spectacular photos of the whole dig The...
  • Customers Have their say about J.C. Penney
    W ell, we might as well see how the problems of J. C. Penney are (or are not) reflected in Yelp reviews... Whatever other problems it is fac...
  • Central Synagogue, Midtown: Why This Style of Architecture?
    Yes, here we are again transported back in time to some old Synagogue in Europe probably.. I hope also to get in here some more about the re...
  • Tours of Macchu Picchu and Peru--from About.com
    Here are a couple of stories about visiting Macchu Picchu in Peru  This one is about choosing a tour Peru Travel Peru Travel Pla...
  • Could not resist this Library Post either--Best Books about NYC ( or SOME of the best)
    I know, I WAS signing off but this post from the New York Public Library is so germane to my blog that I had to share this... Here Is New Yo...
  • How Accurate are Standardized Tests, and Who Decides This?
    M ayor Bloomberg and a lot of other important people here were upset and disappointed when , using new criteria, test scores for NYC student...
  • Waitng for the Next Hurricane Sandy: Report on the first one
    9 Key Findings From the Sandy Task Force Monday, August 19, 2013 By Stephen Ne...

Categories

  • Union Square July 20 2013

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (500)
    • ►  September (123)
    • ▼  August (322)
      • Upper West Side- Big Daddy's
      • Upper West Side- Hotel Newton
      • Upper West Side Banana Republic
      • Upper West Side- Cardinal Camera
      • Upper West Side- The Parlour Pub
      • Upper West Side -The Kosher Marketplace
      • Upper West Side Whole Foods
      • Upper West Side Days Hotel
      • Upper West Side Brooks Brothers
      • UpperWestSide-Bway&96thStreet--Surrounding Sights
      • Issac Asimov's 1964 Predictions for 2014-- From Op...
      • Karen Horney Clinic
      • Ads plastered over for the Goldbergs this Fall
      • Antiques in Greenwich Village
      • Le Pain Quotidien, Greenwich Village
      • From WNYC: About the career of the woman who may w...
      • United Cerebral Palsy of New York
      • Turtle Bay- neighborhood bar it seems
      • Ipad Art--Breaking Story, and then a tale from a y...
      • Kidville in the Village
      • Sculpture Old and New
      • The Kips Bay "Alphaville" Area Revisited--Urban Al...
      • From CBS News: Photos of NYC's old Penn Station
      • From a blog called Violent Rhymes: Essential Hosti...
      • From the New York Public Library- Blog- Origins of...
      • Solar energy and hydrogen
      • Solar compactors and solar energy...
      • Food workers protest in Union Square...
      • Big Belly Solar Compacters...solar compacters in g...
      • The Smith
      • Queensboro Hardware
      • Yigal Azrouel
      • Lenscrafters Midtown East
      • City Crab and Seafood (Steaks too it says)
      • L'Express- Bouchon
      • Buttercup Bake Shop Midtown East
      • Just Another Footnote to Life in the Big Apple: pe...
      • Vince 89 Mercer..wait, do they mean Vince Camuto? ...
      • Serafina
      • La Maison du Chocolat
      • BIG cinema-- unsual and also Asian films on East 5...
      • A Message of Remembrance from a Facebook Friend
      • Big Apple Frozen Yogurt...I know, this will be las...
      • The Stag's Head
      • Lilly Pulitzer
      • Missoni PLUS British "Business of Fashion" Article...
      • rug&kilim
      • Day& Meyer Murray&Young
      • 50th Anniversary of "I Have a Dream"-- from NBC News
      • Tech Radar story on Google Glass
      • Mayoral Race- Supermarket Head John Catsimatidis,...
      • Ali Baba
      • Jos A Bank
      • Guess Fifth Avenue
      • Coach bags etc.
      • From WNYC-- The Bossless Office
      • Taking a Break-- Midtownblogger will resume either...
      • The Universal Struggle for Human Rights-- Martin L...
      • Pink Madison Avenue
      • Bikes on the Streets
      • Armani XChange Fifth Avenue
      • More in the Subway Musicians Series
      • New York.com's Guide to the Best Secrets of the Me...
      • The Metropolitan Museum- And the Billion Dollar Do...
      • Some Strikingly Simple and Compelling Photos Back ...
      • Lego Rockefeller Center
      • Clark's --Fifth Avenue has no reviews, so we do Th...
      • Aritzia
      • Michael Kors
      • Cole Haan
      • Bike Messengers Must Have Licenses? Accidents prov...
      • J. Crew
      • Ann Taylor
      • Hotel Roosevelt
      • Build a Bear? This Sounds Expensive
      • Redken on Fifth Avenue- Course and Laboratories
      • OK, No Labor Day Parade for Mayoral Hoprefuls-- bu...
      • New York Fifth Avenue Rents Second Only to Hong Kong
      • Update on Rockefeller Center-Saks Fifth Avenue and...
      • A Visit to "The Gluckmans"-- A Little Personal Not...
      • Bus on First Avenue--Yelper's Love the Tour called...
      • Sweet Violinist in Subway
      • Dublin Hotel and Tap Room
      • Apthorp Apartments-- Amazing Old Place on Upper Br...
      • From Forgotten NY: S. Klein Department Store on Un...
      • People in Traffic Island, Broadway on the Upper We...
      • First Baptist Curch
      • Oh yeah, Boardwalk Empire
      • Designer Shoe Warehouse- Upper West Side, Broadway
      • Cafe at 79th Street Boat Basin
      • 79th Street Boat Basin Upper West Side
      • NYC Grid....
      • 66th Street East Side Big White Brick Apartment Bu...
      • Kennedy Child Study Center on East 67th Street
      • Ace Hotel--Flatiron/Midtown
      • Zaro's Grand Central
      • Anti-Zionist Jews Demonstrate
      • The Christian Herald
      • Architecture Notebook: Woman behind the Seagram's ...
      • East River Esplanade- Rainy Day with Helicopter
    • ►  July (55)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile