A 64th-Floor Aerie at N.Y.C.'s 432 Park Avenue Lists for $90 Million
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A 64th-Floor Aerie at N.Y.C.'s 432 Park Avenue Lists for $90 Million
In 2016, Bennett LeBow and Jacqueline Finkelstein-LeBow bought two adjacent condos at 432 Park Avenue for nearly $44 million. Over the next three years, they invested about $40 million more to combine the units into a single custom residence, including one still unfinished space. The home spans the entire 64th floor and covers more than 8,000 square feet with four bedrooms, four bathrooms, and two powder rooms. Ceilings reach 16 feet, and 24 windows measuring 10 feet square wrap the residence with views of Central Park, the river, and the city skyline. A Savant automation system manages lighting, climate, shades, security, and audio. The interior includes high-end materials, custom European furnishings, and Italian hand-carved architectural details. The couple is considering relocating to Florida and listed the residence for $90 million.
"Ceilings soar to 16 feet, the highest in the building; 24 10-foot-square windows wrap the property, framing Central Park, river, and city skyline views; and a Savant automation system controls the lighting, climate, shades, security, and audio. The LeBows, who also own homes in New Jersey and the Caribbean, told The Wall Street Journal they are now considering a move to Florida because they are looking to change their lifestyle, listing their glamorous aerie for $90 million with Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes of The Eklund | Gomes team at Douglas Elliman."
"Occupying the entire 64th floor of the 96-story skyscraper, the residence sprawls over 8,000 square feet with four bedrooms and four bathrooms, plus two powder rooms. Acclaimed interior designer Tony Ingrao punctuated the spacious rooms with glossy sycamore, anigre, mahogany, and burled wood; custom-made furnishings and fixtures from Europe; and fluted pilasters and columns hand-carved in Italy."
"A private elevator landing leads into a vestibule, which opens through brass-and-glass doors into the entrance gallery. From there, a corner living room features Rosa Aurora stone floors, a star-shaped chandelier, a wet bar, and pocketing glass doors sliding to reveal a dining room beneath a recessed gold-leaf ceiling cove. The adjacent kitchen hosts a center island and Ga"
Read at Robb Report
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