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$3,800,000
This home has been sold
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Essentials
- Price$3,800,000
- TypeCondo
- Bedrooms3
- Bathrooms3.5
- Rooms5
- Approx. Sq. Ft.2,558
Key Features
- Duplex
- Terrace
- Elevator
- Pet friendly
- Central air
- Office
- Wood-burning fireplace
This spacious 3 bedroom loft like duplex features a woodburning fireplace and 600sf of private outdoor space off the living room allowing for incredible light and indoor-outdoor privacy. Great care was taken in restoring the 10 foot timber beamed ceilings, original cast iron columns and exposed brick, while incorporating modern luxuries like red oak floors, full length, custom designed, steel frame windows and a high-end Valcucine kitchen which vents out. Two separate entrances divide the loft into private and public spaces. Where uber downtown chic meets Centre Market Place -- home to Ric Pipino salon, trendy boutiques; Built by Wendy and No. 6 , historic O'Neal's restaurant and architecturally significant townhouse row designed by Sixx Design. Building provides private storage, bike room and full time super, who was profiled in the New York Times.
Additional features of this property include: 2 BR + Home Office.
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Agents
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Licensed RE Salesperson m (800) 964-7893 p (212) 941-2621
laurence.carty@corcoran.com Email Me
Soho/Nolita
From Canal Street to Houston Street, from Lafayette to the Hudson River.
Lofts! Lofts! Lofts! Many of SoHo’s expansive apartments were built in the 19th Century, when the use of cast iron for building fronts allowed for larger windows than in traditional brick buildings. The huge windows were used to shed light on factories and offices, which were then converted into the sun-flooded SoHo co-op and condo lofts we know today. In fact, the historic district in SoHo has the biggest concentration of cast-iron architecture anywhere in the world, although SoHo’s manufacturers have given way to artists, fashion designers and Wall Street types seeking light and space in their apartments.
136 Baxter Street
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Lafayette St - Canal St
7 mins
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Lafayette St - Canal St
7 mins
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Lafayette St - Canal St
7 mins
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Lafayette St - Canal St
7 mins
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Lafayette St - Canal St
7 mins
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Lafayette St - Canal St
7 mins
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Chrystie St - Grand St
7 mins
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Chrystie St - Grand St
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Lafayette St - Duane St
7 mins
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Lafayette St - Duane St
7 mins
Located on a quiet, almost secret, tree-lined street, this meticulously renovated red brick building erected in 1915 served as the stable for the City’s Police Building one block away. In 1927, it became a warehouse for used manufacturing goods and the new owner changed the name to the Grand Machinery Exchange. In 2007, it was converted into fourteen condominiums and, as one of the developers was an architectural historian, great care was taken in the conversion to preserve the thirteen-foot Southern Yellow pine ceilings, with heavy timber beams and exposed brick walls. To honor a bygone era, the architects also chose to leave the faded nomenclature on the exterior. The building is situated between Chinatown, SoHo, NoLita and Little Italy. It attracts sophisticated downtown buyers looking for privacy, exclusivity and hints of modern design with exterior pre-war sturdiness.
- Prewar
- Built in 1915
- 7 floors
- 14 units
- Elevator
- Pet friendly
- Landmarked
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