
City-Spaces’ 803 Ninth Avenue office (photo: Loopnet)
City-Spaces, a real estate brokerage that failed to pay employees during the real estate
downturn and then changed the firm’s name to gloss over that fact, has closed its doors.
In March, founder Israel Horowitz shuttered the firm’s one remaining office, at 803 Ninth
Avenue in Midtown, and said goodbye to his last 20 employees. At its peak, the firm,
which was founded in 2005, had four Manhattan offices and 150 employees, Horowitz
said.
The reason for the closing had to do with the $10,000-a-month rent for the Ninth Avenue
storefront, which was too steep, Horowitz said. But the nail in the coffin was an
investigation launched recently by New York’s Department of State, in Albany, which
regulates brokers’ licenses. [more]

Citi-Spaces has closed its East Village office at 174 Second Avenue, as well as its HQ at 55 West 39th Street.