Priciest, cheapest units to hit the market


From left: The most expensive listing at 640 Park Avenue and the cheapest at 91 East 208th Street

The most expensive Manhattan home to hit the market this week is $29 million apartment at 640 Park Avenue between 66th and 67th streets. The 18-room baroque-style residence, taking up the entire eighth floor, boasts 38 windows, spanning four exposures, traditional moldings, several wood-burning fireplaces and original hardwood flooring. A private elevator landing opens onto a vestibule leading to a 26-foot gallery with a fireplace. The unit is listed as a co-exclusive between Brown Harris Stevens’ senior vice presidents Nancy Elias and John Burger and Sotheby’s International Realty’s Serena Boardman.

The second and third most expensive listings to hit the market this week are both priced at $27.5 million. The second is on the 68th floor of the Time Warner Center at 25 Columbus Circle. The 4,000-square-foot property has 10-foot ceilings and features panoramic views of Central Park, the East River and west over the Hudson River. The three-bedroom, 5.5-bathroom unit is listed with Prudential Elliman’s Dolly Lenz.

The third costliest home is a 7,000-square-foot penthouse at 66 Leonard Street and Church Street wrapped by more than 4,000 square feet of landscaped terraces and a 35-foot long swimming pool. It is listed at Peter McCuen & Associates by Jim St. Andre.

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The cheapest home to hit the market this week is a two-bedroom, one-bathroom co-op in a pre-war building at 91 East 208th Street, listed with Keller Williams NY Realty’s Martha Valerio for $95,000.

The second is a studio at 66-15 Wetherole Street in the heart of Queens’ Rego Park, priced at $99,000 and listed with Shaun Rajabzadeh at Exit Kingdom Realty.

The third least expensive listing is an alcove studio at 102-17 64th Road in Forest Hills, Queens priced at $107,888 and listed with Linda Lew Chen and Olga Mayayeva, also of Exit Kingdom Realty. — Katherine Clarke