A resale condo at Aman New York capped off a bustling week for Manhattan’s luxury market.
Unit 18A at Vlad Doronin’s luxury hotel-condo conversion, asking just under $30 million, was the priciest of 29 homes asking $4 million or more to find buyers last week, according to Olshan Realty’s weekly report.
The total was up from just 19 contracts signed in the previous period, abbreviated due to the Thanksgiving holiday.
The 3,700-square-foot apartment hit the market last September, asking just under $40 million. In January, the seller, an entity registered to an address in Budapest, Hungary, dropped the price to $35 million before lowering it again in June. The seller bought it from OKO Group in 2022 for $35 million.
Corcoran’s Connor Cuccinelli and Noble Black had the listing.
The building at 730 Fifth Avenue snagged its first resale in July, when Unit 23A sold for $64 million, up from the $51 million the seller paid for it earlier this year.
Two townhouses, each asking $12.5 million, tied for the No. 2 spot last week. One of them, a 17-foot-wide abode on the Upper East Side, was featured as the exterior of Holly Golightly’s apartment building in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.”
The property at 169 East 71st Street, which last traded for $7.4 million in 2015, hit the market in May asking $15 million. It’s currently configured as a two-family home with a garden-level apartment.
The home, built in 1910 and renovated in 2015, spans four stories and 4,500 square feet and has four bedrooms and four bathrooms. It also features an elevator and landscaped garden.
Corcoran’s Caroline Bass had the listing.
The other townhouse is at 23 West 12th Street in Greenwich Village. The four-story, 25-foot-wide property is divided into three apartments, including a five-bedroom triplex, studio and four-bedroom duplex.
The home, which hasn’t traded in more than two decades, also hit the market in May, asking just under $15 million.
Compass’ Nick Gavin, Ugo Russino and Allie Fraza had the listing.
Of the 29 properties, 17 were condos, five were co-ops and seven were townhouses.
The homes asked a combined $233 million, which works out to an average price of $8 million and a median of $6.5 million. The typical home was on the market for roughly two years and had a discount of 11 percent.
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