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Full floor at exclusive Fifth Avenue co-op available for $30 million

2 East 67th Street
2 East 67th Street

The third floor of one of Manhattan’s premiere pre-war co-ops, 2 East 67th Street, appears to have been re-listed today with an asking price of $30 million, $8 million less than in 2009, according to Streeteasy.com.

The five-bedroom, five-bathroom unit was last listed by Greek pharmaceutical executive Athanase Lavidas, according to published reports. In 2008, the Fifth Avenue co-op was asking $43 million, and since that was not too long after Jonathan Tisch, the Loews Corporation co-chairman, famously dropped $48 million for the 11th floor of the grandiose building, that price might not have been unreasonable. In 2009, the price was chopped to $38 million, Curbed reported. As no relevant sales for that building appear in city records, it appears the Greek baron is the seller of the unit.

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Calls to listing brokers Serena Boardman and Pauline Evans of Sotheby’s International Realty were not immediately returned.

In 2010, Eduardo Safra, an heir to a global banking fortune, bought a pair of adjacent units on the fourth floor of the building for $18 million, according to previous reports. This disrupted the possibility, which published reports pointed out in 2008, of one buyer nabbing floors three through five in the co-op, a move some speculated would appeal to a buyer but not to the board at 2 East 67th Street. In 2008, the asking price for the combined floors was $117 million.

But the glamorous building is also known for it’s tough co-op board. In 2008 the New York Post listed 2 East 67th Street‘s board as one of Fifth Avenue’s “most powerful,” and called then-board President Arthur Carter, the original publisher of the New York Observer, “The Punisher.”

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