The top Brooklyn building, the 93-storey Brooklyn tower, is a neo-Gototic giant with a big problem: it is practically a luxurious ghost city.
Tamara Peterson and her Pomeranian, Raise, are holding her on her 58th floor, but they are among the few calling this place at home, reportedly reported.
Peterson grabbed her one -year -old bedroom pillow. She is still waiting to sprinkle in the pool by circulating Guastavino’s cube, or emitting up the “tallest dog in the world” to 66 – with both stuck in oblivion, unfinished.
This executive assistant is not sweating it, anyway. Silverstein Capital Partners, new owners after winning the tower from JDS development in a 672 million dollars of last summer, has thrown some sweet fines.
“They’ve done things for us,” she told her curbed in an interview. “They know they are not over.”
Think that the free gym passes to other spots of life while the sharp athletic club of the 80,000 -square -foot building remains closed, plus “generous” cuts on its usual charges as there is not much to charge yet.
But don’t let freebies cheat on you – this skyscraper has drama.
Of the 143 condos, 19 have sold.
Located in 55 Fleet St. In the center of the city of Brooklyn, Silverstein is preparing to rebuild sales this spring with Corcoran Sunshine. The question remains whether the units will be sold.
“Always leave a bad smell,” the Maggie Marshall’s Maggie Mediator told The Outlet, inserting it at high prices in the sky.
Still, she is not writing it: “It’s not like you will have a seated empty building for the next 300 years. Will fill in; Depends only on the structure, renting or condo. “
It was once billed by its developer, Michael Stern by JDS, as “a symbol of the uninterrupted brooklyn machine and ambition”.
“If you look at the real estate market in Brooklyn as a whole, in the center of Brooklyn city is always a kind of return to other neighborhoods,” Brown Harris Arcov-A long time Borough Expert-Curbed. “Hard hard to get what is a return neighborhood and achieve a high level price.”
He acknowledges that bad views and conclusions are a draw, but he adds, “of course, the building has equipment and services and images, things you can’t get on a four -story walk on the slope of the park, but at the end of the day, there is a smaller pool you want to do.”
Financial mess did not help. JDS began sales in the spring of 2022 after years of Hype, but by 2023, when the first tenants were rented 398, the developer was already drowning. They tried to rent and 130,000 square meters of retail for over $ 600 million – without holders.
Condo sales were dragged, and by March 2024, JDS strangled a $ 240 million loan from Silverstein, which would also receive their $ 424 million mortgage. Foreclosure approached, but a settlement delivered Silverstein keys in July.
The luxury Brooklyn market is not dead, though – the comass mediator Ryan Garson points to 11 Hoyt as evidence. The tower of the tower has been largely due to prices, again. Either those labels fall, or silverstein can be rented condos to stop the blood of money.
Donna Olshan, a luxurious Manhattan follower, is not faded: she has seen flops as a high line rising from ash.
Adam Chang, who grabbed a bedroom with $ 1.3 million, doesn’t care about the empty flowers higher.
“There are fewer people in the elevator, but I don’t know who is complaining about it,” he said, loving his strong Greene Park and “Super-Frre staff
For Peterson, Quies is a bonus – Levi has been a silent dog without aliens of the corridor to YAP.
“Early peaceful here,” she says.
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Image Source : nypost.com