Inman

Eklund | Gomes brings homebuyer in priciest NYC deal since 2022

Credit: Extell Development and Eklund | Gomes Team

At Inman Connect Las Vegas, July 30-Aug. 1 2024, the noise and misinformation will be banished, all your big questions will be answered, and new business opportunities will be revealed. Join us.

A penthouse at New York City’s Central Park Tower on Manhattan’s Billionaires’ Row has closed for $115 million, the most expensive transaction to hit the city since 2022, The Real Deal reported.

The Extell-developed property first went under contract in January, The Wall Street Journal reported. Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes of the Eklund | Gomes Team at Douglas Elliman with team member Kent Wu brought the unidentified international buyer to the transaction, Eklund announced on Instagram.

TAKE THE INMAN INTEL INDEX SURVEY FOR JUNE

In 2023, there were no home sales in New York City above $100 million. The last properties to sell at that threshold in the city were a $188 million penthouse sold by hedge funder Daniel Och to Alibaba co-founder Joseph Tsai and two East 66th Street apartments, which sold for $101 million. Both deals were conducted in 2022.

The 12,000-square-foot duplex, which boasts 30-foot ceilings and Central Park views, was first marketed at $175 million last year. The asking price was later cut to $150 million before the buyer put in an offer.

[Inman Slideshow]

Extell Marketing Group and Corcoran Sunshine represented the listing.

Central Park Tower launched sales in 2018 and made headlines for becoming the world’s tallest residential tower, as well as having units with astronomical asking prices.

Another penthouse at the property first asked $250 million, but has since been reduced to $195 million. Ryan Serhant is the listing agent for that 18,000-square-foot triplex.

Gary Barnett of Extell told The Real Deal that the development group ultimately opted to let go of the “headline price” to “get serious” about selling the triplex.

The projected sellout of Central Park Tower was initially estimated at $4 billion, but with several units’ subsequent price cuts, that estimate was later downgraded to $3 billion, according to The Real Deal.

Get Inman’s Luxury Lens Newsletter delivered right to your inbox. A weekly deep dive into the biggest news in the world of high-end real estate delivered every Friday. Click here to subscribe.

Email Lillian Dickerson