Peter Jackson is parting with two penthouse condominiums, and they’re not in Middle-Earth or even Midtown, but rather Tribeca. The filmmaker behind “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy and “The Hobbit” has listed his two apartments at 155 Franklin Street for $21.5 million, Curbed reported. [more]
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Macerich, a real estate investment trust that owns retail properties nationwide, has big plans for drawing crowds to its Shops at Atlas Park in Glendale, Queens, Crain’s reported.
The mall, at 80-00 Cooper Avenue, opened in 2006 with an array of upscale shops but went bankrupt. Five years later, California-based Macerich bought the mall for $54 million and has been working to bring affordable national chains to the location. [more]
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From the May issue: 1939: Tiffany’s moves to upper Fifth Avenue
In a decision exemplifying the continued uptown march by luxury retailers on Fifth Avenue, famed jewelry store Tiffany & Company announced a deal to relocate 20 blocks north to 727 Fifth Avenue at 57th Street, 74 years ago this month.
At the time, Tiffany’s was located at 401 Fifth Avenue, at 37th Street, an area that was losing its influence as a shopping district. [more]
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Social networking titan Facebook is eyeing a Manhattan expansion and possible relocation, and is considering taking 160,000 square feet at Vornado Realty Trust’s 770 Broadway, Crain’s reported. [more]
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- Court rules against Nat'l Arts Club prez in rent case
- Victoria's Secret takes 60K sf space above flagship
- Construction at 105-room conversion kicks off
- Orange Leaf franchise set for NYC expansion
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UPDATED, 10:45 a.m., May 24: A partnership between Black House Development and Oriel is bringing an 11-story, 27-unit luxury condominium building to West Chelsea, according to Department of Buildings permits spotted by BuzzBuzzHome. [more]
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At least five retailers will open stores at Pier 57’s 19,000-square-foot headhouse after Memorial Day, the project’s developer Young Woo & Associates announced at an International Council of Shopping Center‘s RECon 2013 event attended by Crain’s.
The pop-up shops set to open include: Cold Press Coffee, Brooklyn-based fresh juice bar Butchers Daughter, and Gowanus-based eatery Fletcher’s BBQ. The headhouse is part of a 440,000-square-foot building on the pier next to Hudson River Park that Young Woo recently won the right to convert into a shopping center and cultural hub. [more]
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Half the homes at Long Island City’s luxury condominium Five27 are already in contract, and the excitement over sales reached such a frenzy that a prospective customer bum-rushed the door at the project’s opening, the New York Daily News reported. [more]
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Tax records reveal Bloomberg’s trio of Southampton homes. What NYC homeowners should know about refinancing a home. Signage pops up at Tribeca’s 7 Harrison Street project. And also at the Fulton Street transit hub. Living in the “Arrested Development” home has its perks and pitfalls. Read these stories and more after the jump.
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It’s a trophy property if there ever was one. A stately mansion hit the market in the Clinton Hill area asking a whopping $4.88 million — a record, according to StreetEasy. Despite the home’s relative grandeur, the most eye-catching detail in the listing photos is a stack of the current owner’s trophies (no, not the recently-dead kind, the sort you win at youth soccer tournaments) piled in the library. [more]













