The Flatiron District penthouse featured in “Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps,” has gone into contract for close to its asking price of $15 million, the New York Post reported. The buyer is apparently a Wall Street executive who bought through an LLC.
The owner, another finance executive, listed the 6,500-square-foot four-bedroom loft at 31 West 21st Street last spring. It features a floating staircase and a 3,000-square-foot deck.
Jon Isaacs and Steve Ganz of Aligned Real Estate had the listing. [Post, 2nd item] [more]
Posts Tagged ‘aligned real estate’
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79 Horatio Street (left) and 104 East 10th StreetThe sale of a 6,750-square-foot townhouse at 79 Horatio Street in the Meatpacking District marks the beginning of a repositioning of the William Gottlieb family’s holdings of more than 100 downtown properties that brokers estimate to be worth as much as $1 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported. The townhouse, which closed last month for under $7 million, was listed in May, along with a three-story building at 104 East 10th Street, by Neil Bender, Gottlieb’s nephew. “We are currently disposing of two properties that do not fit with the company’s development and growth plans,” said Gregg Sullivan, a spokesperson for the estate, whose heirs have been feuding for years over property rights.
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Anthony Longo (insert) the CEO of CondoDomain, and a screengrab from the site (Click image for larger version)New York City is getting a new VOW-based brokerage company, in what may soon become a flood of companies taking advantage of the new technology.
Boston-based CondoDomain, a Web-based discount real estate brokerage, is now a member of the Real Estate Board of New York and offers a VOW, or virtual office Web site. That means that customers who log onto CondoDomain’s New York site can browse through all of the listings in REBNY’s database.CondoDomain founder and CEO Anthony Longo told The Real Deal that the appearance of VOWs in New York City has opened the floodgates for new companies like his to penetrate the lucrative New York City market.
“The VOW will lay the groundwork for companies like ours to come in and compete,” said Longo, who has had his eye on the New York market for years. [more]

