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99 Bank Street
99 Bank Street, West Village, Manhattan, NY 10014

Pre-war Co-op

126 units
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  • 126 residences
  • 7 stories
  • BUILT 1890

The Details About 99 Bank Street

Perfectly situated on Bank and Hudson, 99 Bank Street was designed by D&J Jardine for Peter M. Wilson and built in 1890. Known as the Ross Building, it was used by a range of commercial enterprises. Prior to its conversion to a residential building, it was a warehouse, showroom and sales training center for the General Electric Company. Amenities include a part-time doorperson (4pm-12am), l...

key features
  • Doorman
  • Guarantors allowed
  • Central air
  • Elevators
  • Central laundry room
  • Professional Units
  • Bike Room
  • Live-In Super

99 Bank Street Units

UnitsPriceBedsBathsHalf BathsInterior Sq.FtTypeContactFloorplan

Get to know the West Village

Contained within the boundaries of and constantly conflated with Greenwich Village, Manhattan’s West Village still stands apart as one of the borough’s finest neighborhoods. Its eastern and southern boundaries are topics of debate, so it’s probably easier to think of the West Village as the place in the city where the streets stop making sense. They quite literally go off the grid, running counter to the pattern north of 14th Street, and are often named — Bleecker, Waverly, etc. — rather than numbered. Some even are uncharacteristically narrow, sett-paved, or curved around corners. Combine those little quirks with the undeniably charming architecture — remarkably preserved by a series of Historic Districts — and you’ve got yourself, well, a village within a metropolis. Every aspect of the West Village sets it apart from the NYC environs, which is perhaps why it’s been the cradle of many pioneering cultural and social movements.

West Village Neighborhood Guide