Manhattan's New Condos by Asking Price Per Square Foot

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New Development

Manhattan’S NEW condos by ASKING price per square foot Address

Developer

Broker

No. of units

Average price psf

432 Park Avenue

CIM Group/Macklowe Properties

In-house

126

$6,894

157 West 57th Street, One57

Extell Development

In-house

94

$6,888

22 Central Park South

Elad Group

Brown Harris Stevens

7

$5,607

One Madison Park

Related Companies/HFZ Capital

In-house

53

$5,061

21 East 61st Street, Carlton House

Extell Development/Angelo, Gordon & Co.

In-house

68

$4,821

66 East 11th Street, Delos Living

Delos

Dolly Lenz Real Estate

5

$4,764

33 East 74th Street

Daniel E. Straus

Douglas Elliman Development Marketing

10

$4,582

11 East 68th Street, the Marquand

HFZ Capital

Douglas Elliman

40

$4,355

20 West 53rd Street, Baccarat

Tribeca Associates/Starwood Capital Group

Corcoran Sunshine

59

$4,112

33 West 56th Street, Centurion

Antonio Development/Stillman Development

New York Residence

47

$4,003

293 Lafayette Street, Puck Building penthouses

Kushner Companies

Douglas Elliman

6

$3,970

21 West 20th Street

Gale International Development

Halstead Property Development Marketing

14

$3,853 $3,749

150 Charles Street

The Witkoff Group

Douglas Elliman

91

12 East 13th Street

DHA Capital/Continental Properties

Cantor & Pecorella

8

$3,726

737 Park Avenue

Macklowe Properties

In-house

108

$3,719

56 Leonard Street

Alexico Group/Hines

Corcoran Sunshine

145

$3,302

400 Fifth Avenue

Bizzi & Partners LLC

Douglas Elliman Developments

190

$3,270

11 North Moore Street

VE Equities/Adjmi & Andreoli

Douglas Elliman

18

$3,188

180 Sixth Avenue, One Vandam

Quinlan/Tavros

Stribling Marketing Associates

25

$3,119

155 West 11th Street, Greenwich Lane

Rudin family/Global Holdings

Corcoran Sunshine

200

$3,098

60 East 86th Street

Principals at Glenwood Management

Corcoran Sunshine

15

$3,035

10 Madison Square West

WG 1107 LLC/ Vector Group Ltd.

Douglas Elliman

125

$3,033

71 Laight Street, Sterling Mason

Taconic Investment Partners

Douglas Elliman

33

$2,838

50 UN Plaza

Zeckendorf Development/Global Holdings Inc.

In-house

88

$2,785

505 West 19th Street

HFZ Capital

Corcoran Sunshine

35

$2,645

500 West 21st Street

Sherwood Equities

Corcoran Sunshine

32

$2,607

36 Bleecker Street, the Schumacher

Stillman Development International

Douglas Elliman

20

$2,586

1355 First Avenue, the Charles

Bluerock Real Estate/Victor Homes

Town New Development

27

$2,541

35 West 15th Street

Alchemy Properties

In-house

57

$2,531

245 West 14th Street, Village Green West

Alfa Development

Corcoran Group Marketing

27

$2,449

508 West 24th Street

Tamarkin Co.

Stribling Marketing Associates

15

$2,386 $2,349

50 Riverside Boulevard, One Riverside Park

Extell Development

Corcoran Sunshine

219

455 West 20th Street

Brodsky Organization

Corcoran Sunshine

8

$2,313

404 Park Avenue South

Kroonenberg Groep

Corcoran Sunshine

56

$2,093

160 East 22nd Street

Toll Brothers City Living

In-house

82

$2,067

5 Franklin Place

Elad Group

Cantor & Pecorella

53

$2,058

421 Hudson Street, Printing House

Mountbatten Equities

Corcoran Group

183

$2,023

22 Renwick Street

22 Renwick Associates

Brown Harris Stevens SELECT

18

$1,841

182 West 82nd Street

Naftali Group

Stribling Marketing Associates

11

$1,803

71 Reade Street

CBSK Ironstate

Douglas Elliman

17

$1,800

305 East 51st Street, Halcyon

HFZ Capital

Corcoran Sunshine

123

$1,735

101 Leonard Street, the Leonard

Bizzi & Partners LLC

Douglas Elliman

18

$1,699

151 West 21st Street, Chelsea Green

Alfa Development

Corcoran Group Marketing

51

$1,682

540 West 49th Street

Fortis Property Group

Halstead Property Development Marketing

114

$1,472

234 East 70th Street

234 East 70th Street Realty LLC

Corcoran Group

8

$1,428

One Morningside Park

110 Manhattan Equities LLC

Brown Harris Stevens SELECT

69

$1,370

264 Water Street

264 H2O BORROWER LLC

Marketing Directors

26

$1,081

Source: Data from CityRealty, StreetEasy, BuzzBuzzHome and TRD research. Includes projects that have come on the market in the last year in Manhattan and prime Brooklyn or recently launched projects with units remaining.

Michael Stern, CEO of JDS, told TRD in October that the project made financial sense because he already owned one of the parcels of his site, which he bought on a “disciplined” basis before land prices escalated. However, JDS and PMG did invest $177.8 million to acquire an adjacent building formerly owned by piano maker Steinway and its accompanying land lease, as well as $40 million for another nearby site. Sources said that kind of pricey buy-in means the developers must get top dollar in the 100-unit tower. Other projects slated for the corridor are another Extell building with 233 condos at 225 West 57th Street and a 65-story tower with rental and condo units by development company the World Wide Group at 252 East 57th Street. While the Extell and PMG/JDS projects are expected to target the top of the luxury market, the World Wide building may be more mid-range luxury, sources said. Saft said he’s confident that the 57th Street projects will be absorbed despite their price tags, even if sales take longer than they would in other neighborhoods. “I think we’re still very early in the cycle,” he said. “I say that 40 February 2014 www.TheRealDeal.com

because of the number of contracts that are still being executed, and the speed at which they’re being executed.” Some of the developers building mega-towers along the 57th Street corridor could also bifurcate the retail from the property and sell it off to make the numbers work. That’s not generally as viable an option for developers of smaller buildings on side streets, where retail is less valuable.

Unit shrinkage The shrinking availability of Manhattan land and increasing luxury prices are leading some developers to build smaller projects with larger units. All three new developments currently represented by Town are boutique condos with full-floor units, Heiberger said. Among them is the Charles, at 1355 First Avenue, where 27 full-floor residences are asking an average of $2,541 per square foot, according to StreetEasy. The website still has 13 active sales listings at the property. Alper said Witkoff has shied away from building giant towers and instead focused on acquiring property with some

kind of finite value proposition, like a view of a park or the river. Such a site is so desirable, he said, it’s partially isolated from market factors like inventory levels and interest rates. “Other than one project where we have 125 units, it’s been 50 or 60 units,” he said. “What our strategy has been over the last four months is buying irreplaceable sites. We’re not assembling sites on side streets or even on avenue sites.” Saft said the boutique condo play allows developers to justify paying higher land prices and to aim for higher-persquare-foot prices, because they can skip years of planning and turn the project around faster, thereby hedging against a declining market a few years out. “If you look around town, there are no buildings with 200 or 300 apartments,” he said. A quick turnaround ensures that the developer gets to market while the going is still good and interest rates remain low. “The whole history of New York has been boom-and-bust and boom-and-bust,” Saft said. “The guys who get in there first, and build and sell, are the ones that make the money. The ones that come in at the tail end of the cycle lose.” TRD


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