455 Central Park West "The Castle"
From A Cancer Hospital Built In 1887 To Luxury Condos Today - No Corners For Germs
In Sunday’s New York Times real estate column Big Deal by Josh Barbanel there’s an item titled Five Turrets, No Dungeons about a couple that recently bought and moved into their new $6.4 million turret condo at 455 Central Park West between 105th and 106th Street.
Jonathan Miller from Miller Samuel appraisers said the prices paid for the turret apartments were the highest prices paid for a coop or condo north of 96th Street. Of 19 condos there are 8 still available priced from $4.8 - $7.6 million. I have also heard that the Ariel the two new luxury glass towers going up on opposite sides of Broadway at 99th Street has a contract on a $7 million penthouse apartment.
Affluent buyers paying record prices are moving on up to deluxe apartments on the Upper Upper West Side. The apartment is over 5000 square feet with 3 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, a library, dining room, and family room; eat in kitchen, two terraces and a patio with 1000 square feet of outdoor space.
The French renaissance style chateau building has intricate wrought iron gates, arcaded loggia and imposing circular towers and slate roof. Built in 1887 for the New York Cancer Hospital, the first cancer hospital in the city.
The building has 5 round turrets because at the time it was built corners were thought to harbor germs. It later became a nursing home and asylum whose management was convicted of Medicaid fraud and it closed.
The building had been dormant and decaying for more than 25 years. Local neighborhood residents call it the castle.
In 2001 a Chicago developer Dan McLean who also built a development on Fisher Island off the Miami coast broke ground blending the landmark building with a new 26-story tower. The new building shares a lobby and courtyard with the chateau-style structure. Each turret condo has at least 1 circular room.
9/11 caused hardship and a halt to the project until Columbia University came to the rescue. The first 15 floors in the tower were bought by Columbia University. They bought 2 and 3 bedroom apartments for prominent professors and visiting dignitaries. They paid $45.38 million for 53 luxury condos an average of about $1 million per apartment.
Columbia a large owner of Manhattan real estate on the Upper West Side, Harlem, Morningside Heights and Upper Manhattan also bid on the property but lost by $200,000 to MCL companies.
Columbia has also recently put up Luxury Residential Towers on Broadway at 103rd and 110th streets and has major expansion plans including a new campus in the Hamilton Heights section of Harlem.
I attended a broker party a couple of years ago when they started selling. The remaining 44 apartments started at around $1.35 million. The building features include many amenities including valet parking, a concierge a health club and pool.
The Real Deal recently reported that condo sales have been slow. The building is opposite Central Park, the area is called Manhattan Valley adjacent to West Harlem and a few blocks east of Morningside Heights
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