Welcome to the New RealTown! Submit Feedback
Member Login | Join RealTown
The Real Estate Network

Manhattan Loft Guy

New York, New York

on matters of interest to Manhattan coop or condo loft apartment dwellers, buyers, sellers, and others, especially about New York City real estate

Subscribe

Your E-mail Address:
Subscribe to:

Recent Comments

http://www.elegantugg.com/
<a href="www.elegantugg.com">ugg b...
RE: do any of you people know how to pray?
You are sharing most useful information. Now a day...
RE: Zillow - what it is and what it says about how it does Manhattan
    EVEN MORE PERFECT...WILL BUY <a...
RE: Zillow - what it is and what it says about how it does Manhattan
  I bought one kids <strong><a href...
RE: Zillow - what it is and what it says about how it does Manhattan
  <a href="http://www.maxugg.com/&qu...

Site Feed

RSS Feed

Manhattan Loft Guy

modesty rewarded, but 'how well?' remains the question

Aug. 29, 2009
Categorized in: pricing analysis
Sometimes Manhattan Loft Guy gets it right. I posed a question on July 8 that was answered very quickly: will pricing 25% below 2007 hit The Market in a sweet spot? The answer came in an update on StreetEasy the very next day: contract signed. It sure is

buying high, selling low (ouch) at 114 Spring Street

Aug. 15, 2009
Categorized in: Loft neighborhoods / SoHo
The Manhattan loft #2 at 114 Spring Street has (and has had) a lot to recommend it: prime Soho location, "1,900 sq ft", 12 foot barrel-vaulted ceilings, bright lights and cast-iron views, and a renovation described as "magnificent" (Venetian plastered wal

170 Fifth Avenue closes AT 2007 (maybe)

Aug. 13, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
If I am reading the listing descriptions and pictures correctly, the very recent sale of the Manhattan loft #5 at 170 Fifth Avenuefor $2.945mm was essentially flat since the February 2007 sale of #3 for $2,972,500. What has been preserved of the third flo

bidding war erupts VERY late, as 49 Warren St gut job closes

Aug. 10, 2009
This one is weird.... I began this post in my mind with a headline like "pricing it VERY right at 49 Warren Street" because the StreetEasy listing associated with the closed sale of this loft on July 29 begins on June 6 at $1.3mm, with an apparent contrac

2005 + 10%? that might work

Aug. 9, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
Tagged with: 1000ft, 2005, 2007, prime, square, windows
There's a lovely square loft newly available for sale in a prime Manhattan loft area that is asking about 10% more than the clearing price when it sold in June 2005. I think this is likely to be close enough that The Marketwill reward it with an offer off

attack of the Killer Comp (when 2005 pricing does not help)

Jul. 29, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
There's a pretty big Manhattan loft in a Chelsea corner that has been patient at an asking price around $1,100/ft for 3 months, which is just slightly less than the loft sold for in 2005. Ouch. It is a lovely loft, full of mints and proper proper names, w

29 East 22 Street closes but is the calendar off?

Jul. 22, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
Let's try something new for Manhattan Loft Guy. I give you two sales of same-size lofts in the same building, with condensed descriptions and listing histories, and you guess which one is from 2009 and which one is from 2005. Both are said to be "1,600 sq

down a million bucks, now pitching at a pre-2005 $625/ftaa

Jul. 20, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
There's a rather large Manhattan loft for sale at a new price that is $1mm less than the original asking price. When it came to market last Summer (happy birthday wishes are now in order) a smaller loft in the building had just cleared at about $850/ft. T

100 Reade Street sale is straight out of 2005 while wishing for 2008

Jul. 19, 2009
The first Manhattan loft is #5A at 100 Reade Street, which came to market in August 2008 (immediately pre-Lehman, for those who need that reminder) at $1.95mm and changed firms and prices (trying $1.8mm, $1.75mm, $1,7mm, $1.65mm) before finding a contract

50 Warren Street closes, off 45% from original ask + 14% off 2005 price

Jul. 11, 2009
It is fair to assume that the sellers of the Manhattan loft on the 3rd floor at 50 Warren Street were quite frustrated with how ... realistic ... they had to be to sell, considering that they started in February 2008 (the height of The Market, pretty much

will pricing 25% below 2007 hit The Market in a sweet spot?

Jul. 8, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
Tagged with: 2005, 2007, flip, neighbor
There's a lovely Manhattan loft newly offered for sale at about 15% above where it was bought brand new 4+ years ago. Why do I think this is a modest asking price? Neighbors downstairs sold their (identical) loft in 2007 about 25% above the new asking pri

shorn but sold at 109 Greene Street

Jul. 7, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
The Manhattan loft #2B at 109 Greene Street has sold three times since it was brand spanking new in 2005. This is going to get bumpy, but let's get out some facts (closing dates and clearing prices), then chew

73 Worth Street closes by biting a very large bullet in one bite

Jun. 26, 2009
Tagged with: 2005, closed, discount, worth
I wish I had a transcript for the negotiating that resulted in the June 12 closing of the Manhattan loft #4B at 73 Worth Street. The 'simple' facts are that it had been asking $3.2mm and the deal was done well south, at $2.69mm. $510,000, or 16% -- that's

4 months to close, 4 years to zero out at 260 West Broadway

Jun. 5, 2009
The Manhattan loft #5G at 260 West Broadway (the American Thread Building) slid through The Market this year, starting on January 8 and finishing on May 6. (Not as fast as the ten week close at 155 Hudson Street that I hit on May 28, but almost as quick a

at 65 West 13 Street, 3 years = off $20,000, but last year ...?

Jun. 3, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
If you drew a line between the fair market value of the Manhattan loft #8D at 65 West 13 Street (The Greenwich Condominium) from the sale in May 2006 at $2.22mm and the sale in April 2009 at $2.2mm, the line would be essentially straight. But that straigh

4 years = $15,000 at 477 Broome Street

May. 27, 2009
Categorized in: Loft neighborhoods / SoHo
The Manhattan loft #33 at 477 Broome Street recently delivered a new data point, with history: April 12, 2005 = $950k April 29, 2009 = $965k This history nearly precisely parallels the 2006-2009 history of a loft profiled a few weeks ago (May 8, at 2

into the way-back machine to close at 42 East 20 Street, down seven figures

May. 15, 2009
The bloom is definitely off the bull at 42 East 20 Street, a/k/a the Bullmoose Condominium, which was a huge success in the wave of Manhattan loft conversions in 2003. Another candidate for how the mighty have fallen.... Two recent sales suggest values he

pretty efficient (depressed) market at 505 Greenwich Street as both 6F and 7F sell, off 25%

May. 6, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
Here's another take on the theme of my neighborly competition thread: two all-but-identical Manhattan lofts at 505 Greenwich Street had overlapping marketing histories, prices and success, suggesting that even in this thin market The Market can be relativ

497 Greenwich Street sale was off a low ball?

Apr. 29, 2009
Categorized in: Loft neighborhoods / SoHo
The Manhattan loft #7A at 497 Greenwich Street closed on April 16, just less than a month after going to contract. Not many Manhattan residential real estate agents make Page Six (I hope), but that august source seems to think this sale happened after a l

more angst at $1,000/ft / feels like 2005 in Tribeca as contract (finally) signed

Mar. 27, 2009
Categorized in: Market Trends
I am going to mention this Manhattan loft contract signing while my eyes are still bulging; I will update with a clearing price when (if??) it closes and the price is available. My eyes widened -- but did not bulge -- when I saw that this awfully large l