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NYC’s top deals: CSC Real Estate buys Yorkville office for $64M

TRD reports top transactions for Friday, June 12, 2026

Salo Smeke and Alberto Smeke with 210 East 86th Street

There were 205 transactions totaling $470 million filed in New York City records in the 24 hours before 4 p.m. on Friday, June 12.

🏆 Commercial: The most expensive commercial sale to hit records was in Yorkville, where a nine-story, 73,300-square-foot office building at 210 East 86th Street traded for $64.1 million. The seller, an affiliate of Perlbinder Realty Corp., had owned the property for decades. The buyer was an LLC tied to CSC Real Estate. The sale works out to roughly $870 per square foot.

🏆 Residential: Miki Naftali’s Naftali Group had the priciest home sale to come online, with the sale of a sponsor unit at The Henry at 211 West 84th Street on the Upper West Side for $13.1 million. The buyer was Tausa Holdings 1, LLC. The unit measures 3,800 square feet, pricing the deal at roughly $3,400 per square foot. It has five bedrooms and five and a half bathrooms. It went on the market in March 2025 with an asking price of $13.1 million. Compass’ Alexa Lambert, Alison Black and Shelton Smith had the listing.

📊Residential: A wood-frame home at 158 South Oxford Street in Fort Greene sold for $11 million. The seller was an LLC linked to artist Marc Lambrechts, who had purchased the property in the 1990s with his late wife, Suzie Cho. The buyer was an affiliate of development firm the Loketch Group. Earlier this year, another developer filed plans to tear down the home, built in the mid-19th century, to replace it with an apartment building, according to Brownstoner.

📊Commercial: In the West Village, companies tied to Midwood Investment & Development purchased an 18,600-square-foot, one-story retail property with multiple units at 403 Avenue of the Americas. The seller was an LLC tied to Millsmith LLC and had owned the building for nearly 20 years.

📊Commercial: Congregation Beth Elohim offloaded what was the home of the Union Temple at 17 Eastern Parkway, which stands nine stories tall, in Prospect Heights for $17 million. The buyer was the Center for New Jewish Culture. The property measures about 61,400 square feet.

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