Archives: Buildings

  • 770 Park Avenue

    770 Park Avenue

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    770 Park Avenue, located on the southwest corner of 73rd Street, is a distinguished 19-story, 41-unit co-op designed by Rosario Candela and built in 1930. Featuring spacious duplexes with 10 to 15 rooms, many with libraries, elevators, terraces, and fireplaces, it offers grand living just blocks from The Frick Collection, Whitney Museum, and Lenox Hill…

  • 527 East 72nd Street

    527 East 72nd Street

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    527-541 East 72nd Street, originally built in 1894 and rebuilt in 1938, is a unique cooperative known as “The Black & Whites” for its distinctive two-tone exterior and glossy red lacquer front doors. Located on a peaceful cobblestone cul-de-sac with a charming park offering panoramic river views, these townhouse-style residences feature wood-burning fireplaces, soaring ceilings,…

  • 55 East 72nd Street

    55 East 72nd Street

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    55 East 72nd Street is a beautiful neo-Renaissance limestone and brick building designed in 1924 by Alfred Joseph Bodker. It offers 24-hour doorman service, a full-time resident manager, private storage, bike room, and a furnished rooftop garden. Pets, pieds-à-terre, and 40% financing are allowed with board approval. Located in the Upper East Side Historic District,…

  • 755 Park Avenue

    755 Park Avenue

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    This classic prewar building, built in 1914 by W. L. Rouse in the Italian-Renaissance-palazzo style, was converted to a cooperative in 1950. It has 46 units across 12 floors and is located on the east side of Park Avenue between 71st and 72nd Streets. The full-service white-glove building offers a gym and storage. A 2%…

  • 720 Park Avenue

    720 Park Avenue

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    720 Park Avenue, in Manhattan’s prestigious Lenox Hill, is a prime example of Upper East Side luxury. This 17-story prewar co-op, designed by famed architect Rosario Candela and the Cross Brothers, showcases Neo-Georgian style with brick and limestone construction. Housing just 29 exquisite residences, the building occupies a full block on Park Avenue. Each home…

  • 71 Park Avenue

    71 Park Avenue

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    71 Park Avenue Condominium is a rare prewar condo on Park Avenue, nestled between 38th and 39th Streets. Designed by renowned architects Walker & Gillette in 1924, this boutique 13-story building offers just 43 residences and full-service amenities, including 24-hour doormen, laundry, bike storage, and private lockers. Ideally located near Grand Central and major transit…

  • Byron House

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    The Byron, located at 165 East 32nd Street, is a well-regarded full-service co-op in a prime Midtown location near Grand Central, fine dining, shopping, and the 6 train. The building offers spacious apartments with generous closets, a roof deck, laundry, private storage, and low maintenance fees. It permits 75% financing, pied-à-terre use, guarantors, and parents…

  • 710 Park Avenue

    710 Park Avenue

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    Built in 1949 by Sam Minskoff & Sons and designed by Sylvan Bien, this 20-story, 100-unit building was one of the first post-WWII apartment houses on Park Avenue. Converted to a co-op in 1979, it’s located in one of the most prestigious Park Avenue corridors near elegant and exclusive residences. East 70th Street is often…

  • 67 Riverside Drive

    67 Riverside Drive

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    This elegant nine-story Beaux Arts building, designed by George Fredrick Pelham in 1906, features just 28 residences, many with expansive foyers, high beamed ceilings, leaded glass doors, and herringbone floors. Front apartments boast Juliet balconies with direct Riverside Park views and spectacular sunsets. The pet-friendly building offers a live-in super, video intercom, private storage, bike…

  • 66 East 79th Street

    66 East 79th Street

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    This elegant prewar 15-story brown-brick building was converted to a boutique cooperative in 1986 and features just 16 expansive residences. It boasts a classic three-story limestone base, sidewalk landscaping, wrought-iron window grilles on the second floor, crisscross railings at the roofline, and a distinguished canopied entrance.

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