Trending
![False start: Mayor’s ally pitches, then pulls NYC property tax overhaul](https://static.therealdeal.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/ft_NY_Property-Tax-Overhaul-150x106.png)
![Tatiana Pino now owns Century Homebuilders after Sergio Pino’s death, her attorney says](https://static.therealdeal.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/ft_MIA_Tatiana-Pino-Century-Builders-Group-150x106.png)
![Brian Tuttle hit with $38M foreclosure on his Main Street mixed-use project in Royal Palm Beach](https://static.therealdeal.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Brian-Tuttle-Hit-With-38M-Foreclosure-on-Main-Street-Project_FT-Thumbnail-150x106.jpg)
![“Not even distressed” rent-stabilized property sells for peanuts](https://static.therealdeal.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/ft_NY_Inwood-Rent-Stabilized-Sale-1-150x106.png)
Buyer scoops up $54M penthouse at 443 Greenwich
Olshan Realty reports 28 contracts at $4M-plus last week
![Clockwise from top: 443 Greenwich Street, 33 East 74th Street and 995 Fifth Avenue](https://static.therealdeal.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/443greenwichPH.jpg)
Nathan Berman’s Metro Loft has found a buyer for its $54 million penthouse at 443 Greenwich Street in Tribeca.
The triplex was put under contract last week, according to Olshan Realty’s weekly market report, which said the ultra-luxe condo was one of 28 contracts signed at $4 million and up.
For the week of May 2 through 8, the total weekly asking price sales volume was $237.6 million. The average asking price was $8.5 million with an average discount of 5 percent. The average number of days on market was 275. During this week last year, 32 contracts were signed and the total asking sales volume was $222 million. The average unit during the first week of May 2015 was on the market 251 days.
The spread at 443 Greenwich, a 53-unit, seven-story condominium, is one of eight penthouses in the development and spans 8,908 square feet. Its $54 million price tag worked out to an asking price of $6,061 per foot. It has five bedrooms, six baths, and a 3,246-square-foot terrace with a plunge pool and second kitchen. The pad includes two private parking spaces. Cantor and Pecorella is marketing the development.
The No. 2 contract was a three-bedroom pad at 33 East 74th Street, a condo building in a row of brownstones next to the former Whitney Museum. It was asking $14.75 million. [Olshan Realty] – E.B. Solomont