This Senthus is looking at the Asti Cooperative Cooperative, in a stone's throw from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, looking for the next generation of owners-more than six decades after the market.
The newly included unit was worth $ 10 million at 1050 Fifth Ave. In the same family for this impressive period.
These owners, whose identities cannot be identified, purchased the semi -private house on the twenty -first floor when the building was completed in 1959. The three -hand views of the collaborative balcony are looking at Met, Central Park and Manhattan Skyline.
Tate Kelly and Josue Gonzalez from Coldwell Banker Warburg hold the list. The shed measures about 3000 square feet, according to Kelly, with another 311 square feet of the balcony.
The list is announced from three to five bedrooms, depending on the buyer's preferences, and 3.5 bathrooms. The large living room is characterized by a corner window from floor to ceiling with looks on a west and south horizon, and reach one of the three terraces.
The basic suite has a balcony overlooking Met.
Hidden Hall's wardrobe adds an additional character to the home – the door is mixed between the entry gallery and the official dining room.
“Nobody notices it when he walks,” Kelly told the Post. “Even if they did that, they do not realize that he is also a secret corridor for a bedroom.”
The multiple uses of rooms reflect many lives that live in this multi -generational home. Kelly said that one of the rooms had been used differently as a maid room, a nanny room, a play room and an artist studio.
Kelly said that the current owners bought the unit directly from the 1050 Fifth Ave. Bernard Spitzer. Sbezer, a real estate developer and father of the former New York Governor Elliot Spitzer, built luxurious cooperation with business partner Melvin de Leipman.
Kelly said that the family raised its children there, but they are less in need of loneliness as the family gets older.
“It was a real family house, and now that all the children have grown and left the city, the sellers no longer use it,” Kelly said.