Seems like a very silly question. The obvious answer is if the taxes are lower than usual, you should it buy it, no? Well, the answer is not that simple. Recently, on a showing of a convertible 3bd condo on 5th avenue, I contemplated the question myself. There are 8 years left on the tax abatement for this building. So that means in this case the taxes will go up 20% every two years until they reach the market rate for taxes for the area. I think this is a point that not every buyer truly understands.
The NYT has an interesting article this weekend in the Real estate section about buildings that have misleading addresses. I live and work in a building at 400 Central Park west where the entrance is on 100 street. This is not too bad in my opinion because we do have frontage on Central Park west: both the side of our building, garden and a parking lot. However, our neighbors to the west at 392 and 382 CPW are actually located on Columbus avenue but have what we call a vanity address. Continue reading Manhattan buildings seek vanity addresses→
Thanks in no small part to the local private schools including Dalton(photo), several new developments on the Upper East side are experience a spike in their sales at this time. As parents begin to find out that their children have been accepted to schools on the UES, they start to make their plans to move to the neighborhood. Many of these parents are trading in their downtown apartments for family sized (2000 sqft or larger) apartments on the UES.
I have heard about this in relation to a spike of sales surrounding Avenues the World school which is located in the Chelsea area. Parents will be willing to commute for work but not for the children’s school according to the NYT article.
Bloomberg is reporting that buyers of luxury apartments from Downtown’s Stella Tower to One57 on Billionaire’s row are buying apartments to rent out. One such apartment was purchased on the 56th floor of Extell’s One57 for just over $10mm and is now on the lease market for $25,000 per month.
According to the streeteasy somewhere around 2% of the luxury condo purchases are being put back on the market for sale in an attempt to flip the property. This number has stayed consistent for the last several years. Developers of Manhattan luxury apartments price so accurately that flipping is pretty much out of the question. Recently, One Riverside Park on the upper west side, also an Extell Project entered the market and was slighly underpriced as evidenced by the velocity of contracts that were sent out immediately so they pulled it back off the market and raised the prices.
As a result, buying and then renting is the choice for investors. However, according to Jonathan Miller of Miller Samuel, there is not a demand for large luxury rentals so renting out and establishing a new rental price point could be a challenge and cut into the returns of the investor. Typically rates of return or cap rates hover around 3-4% for Manhattan apartments.
Apt 9BC at 101 CPW on Manhattan’s Upper West side has entered the market for $42mm. It offers 7000 +/- sqft plus exterior space, and 100 feet of frontage on Central Park. The property was purchased in 2003 for roughly $12mm and the owners spent 3 years renovated the apartment according to the broker. The monthly carrying charges for apt 9BC are $14,057 according to the listing on streeteasy.
The building itself is a prewar coop building with 18 floors and just under 100 units and occupies the block between 70-71 street on CPW. There are 4 other listings at 101 CPW for sale with 2 in contract. All 4 of the other properties are 3 bedrooms and the prices range from $4.99mm to $6.99mm.
Neil Patrick Harris has been busy and on February 22nd will host the Grammys. NPH gave a tour to Architectural Digest of his 5th avenue Brownstone which he purchased for $3.6mm. Click on the link below to see the article and video to see some of the below items.
How they managed two 4 year olds and a yearlong renovation
NPH’s secret office
Design of the townhouse to integrate new with classic details.
CurbedNY and YIMBY are reporting that three small townhouses will be demolished to make room for a 22 story condo building at 15 West 96 street. The building can be built without LPC approval because it is just outside of the historic district. Reportedly, each floor will house a full floor condo except for the duplex penthouse. Since it’s on the North side of the street, the southern exposures will be nice from these apartments and the views especially above the tree line should be excellent.
News about the NYC real estate residential and commercial markets provided and interpreted by an industry veteran licensed since 1999. Brian Silvestry of BSRG Inc. Licensed real estate broker