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Search resuls for: "Vivian Marino"


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Judith Sheindlin, better known as TV’s Judge Judy, is putting her Manhattan home, a duplex penthouse with a wraparound terrace and scenic East River views, on the market for the first time in more than a decade. The asking price for the apartment, at 14 Sutton Place South, in the Sutton Place enclave, is $9.5 million, according to the listing brokers, Tom Postilio and Mickey Conlon, a team at Compass. Monthly maintenance is around $10,130. “We’ve enjoyed this jewel of an apartment,” Ms. Sheindlin said in an email. “Time to simplify,” she added, with typical directness.
Persons: Judith Sheindlin, Judy, Tom Postilio, Mickey Conlon, “ We’ve, ” Ms, Sheindlin Organizations: Manhattan, Compass . Locations: Sutton
It was the first New York City home they owned, shortly after the breakup of the Beatles. In the fall of 1971 — two years before moving to the famed Dakota apartment house on the Upper West Side — John Lennon and Yoko Ono had settled downtown, buying a petite loft-style building at 496 Broome Street in SoHo. At the time, Lennon had just released his second solo studio album, “Imagine.”Upon relocating to New York, Lennon began forging his own identity with Ms. Ono, an avant-garde artist, musician and peace activist, while publicly distancing himself from his former bandmate Paul McCartney, with whom he had created some of the 20th century’s most popular songs.
Persons: John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Lennon, Ono, Paul McCartney Organizations: New, Broome Locations: New York City, Dakota, SoHo, New York
Elliott Erwitt had already gained worldwide renown for his memorable photographs of the famous and whimsical when he settled into his grand apartment at 88 Central Park West in the late 1960s. His home, on the eighth floor of the 12-story Brentmore co-op, at the corner of West 69th Street, cost around $75,000 at the time, according to one of his six children, Jennifer Erwitt. Image Elliott Erwitt photographed numerous celebrities, political leaders and other luminaries during his long career, but he was often celebrated for his witty and moving snapshots of people from all walks of life. Credit... Rick SmolanWith Mr. Erwitt’s death last November at age 95, both properties are now being sold by his estate. The asking price for the residence is $11.5 million, with $11,428 in monthly maintenance, and the studio is $2.3 million and $8,380 in maintenance, according to the listing broker, Ann Cutbill Lenane of Douglas Elliman Real Estate.
Persons: Elliott Erwitt, Jennifer Erwitt, , , Rick Smolan, Erwitt’s, Ann Cutbill Lenane, Douglas Organizations: Park West Locations: West, Douglas Elliman Real
Manhattan townhouses took center stage in December, with several big sales and a prominent listing. The film producer Scott Rudin teamed up with a neighbor for a combined listing at 20-22 Bank Street in the West Village. And on the Upper West Side, the real estate developer Charles Bendit, and his wife, Karyn Bendit, closed on the sale of their townhouse. Other noteworthy December closings included the purchase of a co-op through a trust for Sara Lee Schupf, for whom the Sara Lee dessert business was named. All three transactions were on the Upper East Side.
Persons: Scott Rudin, Graydon Carter, Ronald S, Lauder, Stephen Sondheim, Charles Bendit, Karyn Bendit, Sara Lee Schupf, Sara Lee, Thomas E, Harvey, Erica Jong Organizations: Rockefeller, House, New York City Schools Locations: West, New
The rapper Kendrick Lamar is the latest celebrity to descend on Brooklyn, with his purchase of a sprawling duplex penthouse near the waterfront in Brooklyn Heights. His new pied-à-terre, which comes with stunning East River views, is at Pierhouse at Brooklyn Bridge Park, a 106-unit condominium built in 2015 at 90 Furman Street. He paid $8.6 million, using the limited liability company Dogg Pound Buildings. The apartment at the Majestic, at 115 Central Park West, closed at $20.5 million, well below the $50 million initial asking price in 2012 and the $25 million she had paid for it in 2006. Still, the sale was among the top closings in New York City in November.
Persons: Kendrick Lamar, Lamar, Zendaya, Amy Schumer, Matt Damon, Emily Blunt, John Krasinski, Bjarke Ingels, Susan Weber, George Soros Organizations: Furman, Pound, Park Locations: Brooklyn, Brooklyn Heights, Pierhouse, California, Danish, Manhattan, New York City
In the summer of 1972, the townhouse at 313 West 102nd Street, where Eleanor Roosevelt’s father once lived, had lingered on the market for a year despite its historical lineage, when the developer Roland W. Betts agreed to pay the $150,000 asking price. At the time, the four-story structure, built in 1892, was divided into six apartments, and Mr. Betts and his wife, Lois, both former teachers, lived in one of them. They eventually converted the building back to a single-family residence after a yearlong gut renovation, and raised their two daughters there. Through the years, the house, situated in a historic district between Riverside Drive and West End Avenue, not only became a cherished home but a showcase for entertaining dignitaries. They included Mr. Betts’s Yale classmate and best friend, President George W. Bush, with whom he once shared ownership of the Texas Rangers baseball team through an investor group.
Persons: Eleanor Roosevelt’s, Roland W, Betts, Lois, Betts’s, George W, Bush Organizations: West 102nd Street, Betts’s Yale, Texas Rangers baseball Locations: Riverside
A flurry of big sales closed in New York City during October, including one of the year’s priciest, a full-floor aerie at 220 Central Park South purchased in a private deal for $75 million. A 79th-floor apartment at 432 Park Avenue sold for $65.6 million; a new penthouse at Steinway Tower, at 111 West 57th Street, for just under $53 million; and a high-floor sponsor unit at 217 West 57th Street, a.k.a. Central Park Tower, for $46.2 million. On the Upper East Side, at 768 Fifth Avenue, better known as the Plaza Condominium and Residences, an apartment sold for $65.8 million. The mansion once owned by the banker David Rockefeller, at 144-146 East 65th Street, sold for $47 million.
Persons: David Littman, Constance Littman, , David Rockefeller, Wears, , Meryl Streep’s imperious, Miranda Priestly Organizations: Park South, Steinway Locations: New York City, a.k.a
For the last three decades, the artist William Wegman has kept his main studio at 245 West 18th Street, a two-story, double-wide building in Chelsea. Mr. Wegman and his wife, Christine Burgin, also had part of their family home on the upper level, which was connected to the second floor of a neighboring building they co-owned. 239-243, was sold in 2019, the empty-nester couple renovated the floor above the studio to use as their Manhattan residence. But then Covid hit, and they left the city for their country home in Ghent, N.Y., where Mr. Wegman maintains another studio. “Everything changed with the pandemic,” said Ms. Burgin, 63, a book publisher and former art gallery owner, adding that Mr. Wegman’s main assistant also relocated upstate.
Persons: William Wegman, Wegman, Christine Burgin, , Burgin, Wegman’s Locations: Chelsea, Manhattan, Ghent, N.Y, Rangeley , Maine,
Annie Leibovitz is one of the world’s most celebrated and prolific photographers, with a deep portfolio of famous portraits, from John Lennon and Yoko Ono to Michelle Obama. In addition to owning a home in Rhinebeck, N.Y., Ms. Leibovitz has bought and sold several properties in Manhattan. Among them, a co-op in Chelsea and a three-building compound she assembled in the West Village in the early 2000s. In 2014, looking to be closer to her children’s school, she purchased a sprawling duplex on the Upper West Side. But now resettled downtown after buying an apartment on West Street in the West Village just last year, Ms. Leibovitz is putting the duplex at 88 Central Park West, a.k.a.
Persons: Annie Leibovitz, John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Michelle Obama, She’s, Leibovitz, Deborah Kern Organizations: Park West, Corcoran Group Locations: Rhinebeck, N.Y, Manhattan, Chelsea, West, a.k.a
The year’s most expensive sale in New York City took place in August at 220 Central Park South in Midtown, where an expansive duplex in the villa portion of the park-facing condo complex closed at $80 million. It sold for $30 million, far less than the $110 million initially sought by the developers six years ago. The buyer was Scott Lynn, an art collector and the founder and chief executive of Masterworks, an art investment platform. The crown penthouse at the new 20-story condo at 109 East 79th Street also sold, for $35 million, which was the month’s second biggest sale. The full-floor unit has 5,721 square feet, plus an additional 3,666 square feet of outdoor space.
Persons: Nima Capital, Suna Said, Scott Lynn Organizations: New York City, Nima, Woolworth, Masterworks Locations: New York, Midtown, TriBeCa
The investment banker Robert Shafir earned an enviable rate of return last month on the sale of a penthouse at 150 Charles Street, a brick-and-glass condominium in the West Village. A limited liability company linked to Mr. Shafir, a former top executive of Credit Suisse, sold the spacious apartment for $52 million to an anonymous buyer in an off-market deal; the unit had been purchased brand-new in 2016 for around $29.4 million. Off-market deals, a.k.a. whisper listings, where properties are typically not listed publicly, have become increasingly common in the luxury market since the pandemic. The sale on Charles Street was the priciest in New York City during the month of July and among several big closings taking place in Lower Manhattan.
Persons: Robert Shafir, Charles Street, Shafir Organizations: Charles, Credit Suisse Locations: West, New York City, Lower Manhattan
Mr. Viñoly trained as a classical pianist in his native Uruguay before embarking on a successful career in architecture. The New York-based Rafael Viñoly Architects, founded four decades ago, is known around the world for its major commercial, residential and cultural structures, like the new Carrasco Airport in Montevideo, Uruguay, and 20 Fenchurch Street, nicknamed the “Walkie-Talkie” building, in London. Roman Viñoly says he is now ready to sell the co-op, situated between Duane and Thomas Streets, and has placed it on the market for $2.5 million. Mr. Viñoly says that both he and his father had fond memories of the downtown loft. “It’s a very small community,” he said of the four-unit building with a ground-floor commercial tenant, “and we all look after each other.”
Persons: Viñoly, Rafael Viñoly, , Roman Viñoly, Thomas, Nicholas Athanail, Spencer H, Cutler, Organizations: Rafael Viñoly Architects, Carrasco Airport, Fenchurch, Corcoran Group Locations: Uruguay, New York, Montevideo, London, New York City, Midtown, Duane
(“I hired him to be a collaborative partner, then he became my partner partner,” she said.) The Harlem townhouse is going back on the market for $3.25 million, according to the listing brokers Stan Ponte and Colin Montgomery of Sotheby’s International Realty. Measuring around 4,900 square feet over four stories, the townhouse has five bedrooms, two full bathrooms and a powder room. “In the late 1800s it was a place for horses, and now it’s a place to park your car,” Mr. Montgomery said. “What was a luxury then is still a luxury today.”
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