From the May issue: 5:00 a.m. My eyes open at 5 and I get out of bed at 5:30. I’m a morning person and hit the ground at level 10. 5:45 a.m. I make some French-press coffee: half decaf and half regular, because I’m wired by nature. I drink three cups. While the coffee is steeping, I walk outside. I live on a bay in East Hampton. The other day, I walked to the garden to see what the deer didn’t get, but they had eaten part of my rhododendrons. They must have been really hungry this year. [more]
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Fort Greene is slated for a five-story, 32-room hotel along Park Avenue, according to Department of Buildings permits seen by Brownstoner.
The hotel will rise over three vacant lots between Cumberland Street and Carlton Avenue, and will be part of the Choice Hotels group which includes Comfort Inn, Quality Inn and Clarion Hotels, the owner told Brownstoner. [more]
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The U.S. Tennis Association has only one more step to take before it can expand its complex in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, DNAinfo reported. The proposal, which has been criticized by preservationists, now goes before the City Council after the Planning Commission signed off on it Wednesday.
In its $500 million plan, the USTA is looking to overhaul its 42-acre Billie Jean King National Tennis Center; replace the aging Louis Armstrong Stadium; build a Grandstand Stadium and two parking garages; and replace seven tennis courts. [more]
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A scion of the Gershwin family has sold his co-op apartment at 101 Central Park West for $5.37 million, the New York Observer reported.
Marc Gershwin, the son of George and Ira’s brother Arthur, lived in the 15th-floor classic seven apartment for three decades. In late 2012, brokers Lorraine Ding and Michele Gershwin of Akam Sales managed to find a buyer for the unit, which was listed for $5.75 million, but the buyer was ultimately rejected by the co-op board. They then found the current buyer, Eiko Adams, a resident of St. Croix in the Virgin Islands. [more]
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- Construction at 105-room conversion kicks off
- Orange Leaf franchise set for NYC expansion
- System to include co-op searches and more data
- Eklund, Serhant to appear on new TV show
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Half of the “golden” duplex at 860 United Nations Plaza that once belonged to notorious fraudster Alberto Vilar is back on the market with an asking price of $4.95 million, Curbed reported. [more]
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Developer lists China-inspired Bridgehampton home for $28 million. Trinity Prep School on Upper West Side looks to raise low-income tenant rents by 41 percent. Douglas Steiner’s planned apartment tower in the East Village could desecrate the dead, preservationists say. Brooklyn Navy Yard to host high-speed nighttime cycle racing. How eyewear store Warby Parker made the transition to brick-and-mortar. Read these stories and more after the jump.
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Top stories yesterday on The Real Deal:
1. Ben Shaoul’s Magnum unloads FiDi rental building for $25M
2. Shvo resurfaces as High Line developer
3. NYC players make $1.3B-plus bids for 650 Madison Ave. -
Times Square may be experiencing a mini technology boom, with tech companies including Yahoo and Microsoft snapping up 633,000 square feet of space in the neighborhood over the last 18 months, according to data provided to The Real Deal by the Times Square Alliance, a business improvement district group. [more]
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High demand for super-luxury homes has tilted the scales, if you will, in favor of tall, skinny residential developments, the Wall Street Journal reported.
With buyers shelling out $3,000 per square foot for apartments perched in the sky, it makes financial sense for the developers to build needle-like towers. Previously, builders acquired wide sites, since constructing tall properties on small sites was expensive, the Journal said. [more]
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Madison Square Garden gets 15-year permit. Townhouse at 294 West 4th Street asks $10.8 million. Starwood Capital Group in talks to buy seven malls from Westfield Group for $1 billion. The Muppets take Queens to star in museum exhibit. Cleanup workers try to restore Fort Tilden beach in Queens by the summer. Read these stories and more after the jump.













