Ansonia
(2109 Broadway, Upper West Side) At one time one the largest residential buildings in the world, 18-floor Ansonia has a remarkably colorful history, which unfortunately falls outside of the scope of this site....
Apple Bank Condominium
(2112 Broadway, Upper West Side) Designed in 1928 by architects York & Sawyers in the
Florentine palazzo style, this landmark building was once the Central Savings
Bank. It has been restored to create 29 co....
The Chatham
(181 East 65th Street, Upper East Side) A 231,000-square-foot condominium tower includes 22,000 square feet of retail and 94 apartments (the entrances to the retail spaces are along Third Avenue).
The brick and lime....
Cielo
(York Avenue and 83rd Street, Upper East Side) A high-rise doorman building.
Columbia House
(238 West 108th Street, Upper West Side) The building has a true brick façade with a rear
glass curtain wall overlooking the South facing garden.
Diamond House
(170 East 77th Street, Upper East Side) An 11-story apartment building. The front entrance / lobby area combines
and constrasts a contemporary aesthetic with elements of art deco.
The Hampton House
(28 East 70th Street, Upper East Side) A mixed-use building. 11 full-floor condo apartments,
typically containing four bedrooms and five baths. The first
four floors house the flagship NYC Prada Store.
The Harsen House
(120 West 72nd Street, Upper West Side) A condo conversion with interior design by Andres Escobar. Family-size units are two bedrooms and bigger.
The Impala
(404 East 76th Street, Upper East Side) {1 available apt} A 31-story tower on First Avenue, a 7-story building on East 75th
street and a 7-story building on East 76th street.
Linden 78
(230 West 78th Street, Upper West Side) A condo building with only two units per floor (one per floor on the top 3 levels). Located just off Broadway.
Manhattan House
(200 East 66th Street, Upper East Side) A large post-war modernist building designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and Mayers & Whittlesley that, by some accounts, started "the age of white-brick monstrosities" in t....
The Mark
(25 East 77th Street, Upper East Side) A landmark pre-war mid-rise doorman elevator building.
Ruppert Yorkville Towers
(1619 Third Ave, Upper East Side) The Ruppert Yorkville Towers Condominium consists of 1258 residential apartments, 172 storage units and 1 commercial unit. Converted from rental to condo in 2003.
15 Central Park West
(Upper West Side) Perhaps one of the most talked-about developments of the 2000's in New York. Developed by Arthur and William Lie Zeckendo.
425 Fifth Avenue
(Upper East Side) A mixed-used 67-story residential tower with 2 floors of
retail and 4 floors of office space. There also are several
floors used as extended-stay residences.
43 West 64th Street
(Upper West Side) A 12-story building with loft-style apartments. Originally built in 1898, this building was converted into condos in 2003.
535 West End Avenue
(Upper West Side) A "pre-war-style" new construction condo with very large apartments
(up to 14,000 s/f), designed by architect Lucien Lagrange.