Where's the Fizz? Bronfman Selling 1040 Fifth Co-op for Below Asking
- Original Real Estate Stories This Week on Observer.com
- Inside Nicholas Cage's Museum Tower Condo
- Bike Community Goes After John Liu Over Yassky's Bill
- Cold Case: The Domed Central Park Penthouse That's $7.25 M., Not $14.5 M.
- To Boost Its Coney Island Plan, Bloomberg Administration Buses in Supporters for City Council Hearing
The colossal Manhattan real estate story of Edgar Bronfman Jr., Seagram liquor grandson and Warner Music Group CEO, has finally taken a comparatively imperfect turn. Eight months after he sold his East 64th Street townhouse to a Russian oil billionaire for $50 million, even though he paid $4,375,000 for the property in 1994, his 11-room apartment at 1040 Fifth Avenue has gone to contract for somewhere between $20 and $21 million, a source said, well below the original $24 million asking price.
Meanwhile, the duplex penthouse he bought at the Carhart Mansion on East 95th Street last October for around $19 million, and put on the market in April for $24.5 million, is still unsold.
But don’t pity Mr. Bronfman: For one thing, he’ll probably make a profit on that Carhart penthouse. And consider that he bought the 1040 Fifth co-op for only $19.5 million this January; a profit of a few hundred thousand dollars over a few months isn’t exactly terrible. Still, it wasn’t an investment like that $50 million house, which Mr. Bronfman sold for 11.4 times what he paid during the ’90s.
Broker Alina Pedroso, who listed the apartment at 1040 Fifth back in January, one week after Mr. Bronfman bought it, had no comment, and the music executive declined an interview request.
He’ll be leaving behind a 27.5-foot-long living room (with a wood-burning fireplace), which connects to a gallery and a library (with another fireplace) and a dining room, which has a small door to the pantry, which connects to the kitchen, which connects to a maid’s room and then a hefty servant’s hall. Two of the co-op’s five bedrooms have their own walk-in closets; all have their own bathrooms.
On the downside, Mr. Bronfman’s buyers, described by the source only as “really nice people,” will have to pay an $8,614 monthly maintenance fee if they pass the co-op board and finish the deal.
mabelson@observer.com- More:
- Real Estate |
- Edgar Bronfman Jr |
- Manhattan Transfers



Box Office Breakdown: Ice Age 3 and Transformers 2 Play to a Tie, While Public Enemies Steals Third
The Week in DVR: Ricky Gervais Goes Ghost and Showgirls Remind Us Why Bad Movies Are Sometimes So Good
Suddenly, a Trillion Is Too Much?
Touré Writing Book About 'Post-Blackness' For Free Press
The Attorney General Isn't Doing Politics
The Gay Movement, After Marriage
Steliscop giantus
buy ambien - ambien buy diazepam - diazepam buy wellbutrin - wellbutrin alprazolam - alprazolam order prozac - prozac buy tamiflu - tamiflu lorazepam - lorazepam order nexium - nexium buy zoloft online - zoloft klonopin - klonopin
Thank you for the information
www.observer.com is very informative. The article is very professionally written. I enjoy reading www.observer.com every day. I was looking for the for the following services bad credit loans canada payday loans canadian payday loans cash advance loans faxless payday loans loans online payday loan online payday loans online payday loans canada payday payday advance payday loan payday loans pay day loans payday loans canada payday loans in canada payday loans online
bad credit cash loans
and discovered that payday loans can help in times when your credit sucks, but you urgently need cash.