Skip to contentSkip to site index

NYC’s top deals: Naftali sells three more units at The Henry for $23M

TRD reports top transactions for Friday, Jan. 30, 2026

Miki Naftali and The Henry at 211 West 84th Street

There were 170 transactions totaling $303 million filed in New York City records in the 24 hours before 4 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 30, 2026.

🏆 Residential: The top home sale to hit records was at Naftali Group’s The Henry, at 211 West 84th Street on the Upper West Side, where September Thirteen Wealth LLC purchased a sponsor unit for $9.9 million. The 3,400-square-foot pad has five bedrooms and five and a half baths. It first went on the market in late 2024, with an initial asking price of $9 million. Compass’ Alexa Lambert, Alison Black and Lib Goss had the listing.

🏆 Commercial: The top commercial deal recorded in New York City was in the West Village. The New York University School of Law Foundation sold two townhouses at 63 and 65 Charles Street for $33.4 million. The buyer was C128 LLC, based in Grand Cayman. The foundation had owned the properties for some 30 years. Both buildings stand three stories tall and measure a combined nearly 9,300 square feet.

📊 Commercial: In the Garment District, an affiliate of the Witkoff Group sold a commercial condo at a 28-story office tower at 420 Fifth Avenue for $16.5 million. The buyer was T. Vakiflar Bankasi T.A.O., a Turkish bank. Witkoff bought the full-floor unit, along with three other floors — the four floors span 119,000 square feet — in 2006 for $61.8 million. The condo spans 29,250 square feet, pricing the deal at more than $560 per square foot.

📊 Residential: Naftali Group sold two other sponsor units at The Henry. Henna and Murtaza Haque, an attorney and financier, respectively, purchased a 2,800-square-foot unit for $6.9 million, about $2,500 per square foot. Additionally, 84th Street Bear Family, LLC purchased a 2,300-square-foot pad for $5.8 million, also about $2,500 per square foot. Compass’ Alexa Lambert, Alison Black and Lib Goss also had these listings.

📊 Residential: Dr. Carlos Cordon-Cardo, a cancer researcher, parted with a co-op at 73 Fifth Avenue in the Flatiron District for $5.6 million. The buyers were Andrew DiGeronimo, an investment manager, and Inna DeGeronimo, an attorney. The three-bedroom unit spans 3,400 square feet; it previously sold in 2020 for just under $5 million. Jeremy Stein with Sotheby’s International Realty had the listing.

By the Numbers: CRE prices edge up year over year

U.S. commercial property prices managed to close out 2025 with a small win.

Pricing for commercial assets inched up just 0.2 percent year over year in December, according to RCA’s commercial property index. However, they were down 0.4 percent compared to the month before.

The biggest winner among the main sector types was office, which saw prices up 2.8 percent year over year. The rise was fueled by suburban offices. Prices for those properties grew 2.7 percent compared to the year before — the largest yearly spike since August 2023, according to RCA. Meanwhile, offices in central business districts saw their pricing plunge 2.9 percent year over year.

If you like this digest, you can get it even earlier — every evening — by subscribing to TRD Data, here.

Recommended For You