Priciest, cheapest units to hit the market

The priciest Manhattan home to hit the market this week is a five-bedroom, five-bathroom Upper East Side co-op unit, according to Streeteasy.com. The unit at 998 Fifth Avenue is on the market for $34 million. The home is being marketed by Kathy Sloane of Brown Harris Stevens. The pre-war building features a 24-hour doorman and a view of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The second most expensive unit is an eight-bedroom, eight-bathroom Lincoln Square condo at 80 Riverside Boulevard, which has an asking price of $13.25 million. The 7,200-square-foot unit has Alon Chadad of Nest Seekers as its listing agent.

The third priciest unit is a 3,430-square-foot, three-bedroom, three-bathroom penthouse condo at 166 Perry Street, with a listing price of $12.5 million. The Corcoran Group is exclusively marketing units at the West Village building.

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The cheapest Manhattan unit to come online this week is a 250-square-foot condo at 105 West 77th Street. The Upper West Side studio is on the market for $250,000, according to Streeteasy.com. David Calderazzo of Luxx Realty has the listing.

The second least expensive unit to hit the market this week is a 400-square-foot studio co-op at 136 East 36th Street in Murray Hill. Century 21 NY Metro’s Ashley Hancock and Thomas Jones are marketing the $269,000 unit.

The third cheapest home is a studio co-op at 457 West 57th Street. The unit, on the market for $275,000, is listed by Halstead Property’s Cedric Leake and Sidney Whelan. TRD