sometimes, words fail … Oct 19, 2002 sold $3,156,696 Sept 13, 2006 sold $4,171,000 Aug 11, 2007 new to market $12,500,000 Nov 19 $9,500,000 Jan 30, 2008 hiatus April 17 back on…
sometimes, words fail … Oct 19, 2002 sold $3,156,696 Sept 13, 2006 sold $4,171,000 Aug 11, 2007 new to market $12,500,000 Nov 19 $9,500,000 Jan 30, 2008 hiatus April 17 back on…
by 2%, but it is somethingOf course you know that any single number to summarize The Market (whether the entire Manhattan residential real estate market or the loft niche) smooths out a great deal of data noise. Some data points…
sometimes The Market mystifies…I keep staring at the the record of the recent sale of the Manhattan loft #3A at 52 Thomas Street, without achieving clarity. That facts are simple but inexplicable: the first resale in this 2007 new development…
had been a super white boxThe Manhattan loft #PH-W at 19 Warren Street sold on June 7 through a deed filed today (according to StreetEasy), yet the New York Observer observed in yesterday’s edition on-line that it had been sold,…
going all white on yaI have been poring over the pictures and floor plans comparing the recent sale and June 2007 sale of the Manhattan loft at the top of 43 West 21 Street, trying to find seven figures of…
One Year Ago Today on Manhattan Loft GuyI wrote a year ago about a Manhattan loft about to be featured in a Big Time Movie: Shia LaBeouf doesn’t really live at 31 West 21 Street. That post contains what I…
the seller held fastOne of these days I am going to look at Manhattan residential real estate sales right around the magic million, because it is my impression that buyers really really really don’t want to pay the ‘Mansion Tax’…
a warm welcome for another poster child, please!When the Manhattan loft #711 at 67 East 11 Street (the Cast Iron Building) sold on March 17 for $760,000 to earned Manhattan Loft Guy poster child status, with a caption “into (and…
[with Jan 28 postscript]our long national nightmare is overWith the January 6 sale of #PH-E at 121 West 19 Street (The Lion’s Head) for $2,445,810, the most bizarre and longest-running saga of a Manhattan loft in the tenure of Manhattan…
relish one, ignore other When the Manhattan loft #PH-L at 252 Seventh Avenue at the top of the Chelsea Mercantile closed on December 16 at $2.416mm for its “1,510 sq ft”, it continued the high-floor-premium trend at The Merc. When…
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