Mansion Global

This Is the Most Expensive Home Sold in NYC in 2016

The $54 million Tribeca condo may soon be beaten by a $250 million sale

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An apartment at Metro Loft’s 443 Greenwich Street has become the most expensive sale of the year

443 GREENWICH
An apartment at Metro Loft’s 443 Greenwich Street has become the most expensive sale of the year
443 GREENWICH

At $54 million, a Tribeca condo has become Manhattan’s most expensive property to change hands so far this year. The five-bedroom, six-bathroom triplex in a luxurious seven-story condominium at 443 Greenwich Street topped Olshan Realty’s list of properties that sold for $4 million or more in Manhattan last week. The property has a dining room, library, rooftop entertainment room and a 3,246-square-foot terrace with a plunge pool and a summer kitchen. The great room is 40 feet long with 20-foot ceilings, and there is a private interior elevator. MORE: Ian Schrager Scraps Plans for $80 Million Penthouse in Manhattan's West Village However, this may not be the most expensive sale of the year for long. According to the Real Deal, Vornado Realty Trust has put a record-breaking $250 million 23,000-square-foot apartment at 220 Central Park South on the market. This is more than double the most expensive property ever sold in Manhattan—a penthouse in Extell Development’s One57 building by Central Park, which changed hands for just over $100 million back in January 2015. The second most expensive sale last week was apartment 4B at 33 East 74th Street, asking $14.750 million. This condo unit has 3,889 square feet including three bedrooms and 3.5 bathrooms. MORE: NoHo’s Most Expensive Listing Is a $23.75 Million Two-Story Penthouse The living room, dining room and one of the bedrooms face Madison Avenue. The unit is in a new condo building that is being created out of a row of landmark brownstones next to the former Whitney Museum. Overall, 28 contracts were signed last week, compared with 32 in the same period last year. The average asking price was $8.5 million, and on average they were on the market for 275 days. MORE From Mansion Global: