Fine Fifth Avenue
Apartments

Exquisite Luxury 5th Ave
Apartments For Sale
Lined with expensive
park-view real estate and historical mansions, your Fifth Avenue
apartment is a symbol of wealthy New York.
In the early part of
the 1900s, the very rich of New York migrated to the stretch of Fifth Avenue
between Fifty-ninth Street and Ninety-sixth Street, the stretch where Fifth Avenue
faces Central Park.
Entries to the park
include Inventors Gate at 72d Street and Engineers Gate at 90th.

This area contains
many highly notable Fifth Avenue apartment buildings, many of them built in the
1920s.
A very few post-World
War II structures break the unified limestone frontage, notably the Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum between Eighty-eighth and Eighty-ninth Streets.
Many landmarks and
famous Fifth Avenue apartment buildings are situated along Fifth Avenue in the
Upper East Side.
The stretch of Fifth
Avenue from the 80s through 105th Street has so many museums that it has acquired
the nickname Museum Mile and includes such institutions as the Metropolitan Museum
of Art and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.
That area was known in
the early twentieth century as Millionaire's Row after the many mansions built
there, as the richest New Yorkers moved their residences north to face Central
Park.
Earlier, several
opulent Vanderbilt houses and other mansions were built in the 50s and in even
earlier times farther south.
The New York Academy
of Medicine is located at 103rd Street, and Mount Sinai Hospital is located at 98th
Street.
Fifth Avenue apartment
agents are slightly worried about who will be the next to take up the demand for
the Manhattan luxury apartments.
Rising unemployment,
particularly among New York's financial community, and the 20 percent hike in
property taxes is spoiling the party.
Ownership of luxury
Fifth Avenue apartments, a prized status symbol of America's corporate elite, has
fallen victim to the volatile stock markets, scandal and
recession.
Executives who once
set the business world on fire are being forced to sell up as their careers and
fortunes go up in smoke.
Others are taking
advantage of New York's red-hot property prices to stoke up their cash reserves in
one of the country's few remaining bull sectors.
The over all cost of
the majority of Manhattan luxury apartments dropped as the stock market tries to
recover.
The average cost of a
Fifth Avenue apartment fell 7.7 percent in the first quarter of 2009, a sign that
the stock market is still affecting the Manhattan luxury apartments
market.
Financial market
volatility, reduced corporate earnings and six rate increases by the Federal
Reserve are tempering apartment demand.
The declines comes
amid insecurity in the financial markets.
As a result, employees
of many banking and technology-related companies, who have helped fuel the Fifth
Avenue apartment market boom, are finding their compensation packages not as
valuable.
Some parts of the
Manhattan luxury apartment market remain strong, especially Fifth Avenue
apartments.
A luxury Manhattan
apartment is defined as a two, three or four-bedroom apartment on Park Avenue,
Fifth Avenue or Central Park West.
The
market is currently weakest is for the lower-priced Manhattan
apartments.
With Fifth Avenue
apartments fetching an average price of $7,500 per square foot, Fifth Avenue
apartments ranked third place in a new survey of the top 10 most expensive
residential streets in the world from Barclay's Wealth Bulletin.
From your new Fifth Avenue apartment, you'll enjoy a
picture-postcard vantage point of Central Park and the interesting configuration of
buildings on Central Park West.
And at every hour you'll have spectacular views of the verdant
Central Park and the fabulous Jackie Kennedy Onassis Reservoir.
The reservoir is very peaceful. and many Fifth Avenue apartment
owners jog around it every morning.
On Fifth Ave, you have the best of city, country and culture.
Walk three steps and you're in Central Park.
At night, it feels like you're in Paris. It becomes a very quiet
neighborhood.
Late on Sunday afternoons, 5th avenue's doormen snap to
attention as cars pull up with residents who had been away for the weekend.
Bicyclists soon arrive with delivery packages.
While Fifth Avenue runs from Washington Square Park in Greenwich
Village to 142nd Street in Harlem, the most prestigious and expensive residential
stretch of it faces Central Park on the Upper East Side.
Here, brick and limestone residential buildings share the avenue
with museums, consulates, private clubs, churches and synagogues.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, mansions were built on
this part of Fifth Avenue for families like the Astors, the Vanderbilts and
Marjorie Merriweather Post and her husband, E. F. Hutton.
Some of the mansions remain, but only a scant few are
still Fifth Avenue townhomes.
Andrew Carnegie's 64-room chateau at 2 East 91st Street was
converted into the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum of the Smithsonian
Institution in the 1970's.
Henry Clay Frick's Louis XVI-style mansion at 1 East 70th Street
has a collection of Old Master paintings.
And the French Renaissance-style Felix and Frieda Warburg House at
92nd Street is now the site of the Jewish Museum.
Historically, the most significant block on the avenue is from 78th
to 79th, which retains all four of its original mansions.
The Payne and Helen Whitney House, on this block, at 972 Fifth
Avenue, was designed in 1902 by Stanford White and is now the Office of Cultural
Services of the French Embassy.
Commanding the 78th Street corner of the block is the residence
designed by Horace Trumbauer for James B. Duke, now the New York University
Institute of Fine Arts.
Fifth Avenue apartment living became acceptable for the
wealthy after 1910.
When the land on Fifth Avenue became valuable, the mansions were
torn down and Fifth Avenue apartments went up.
Architects like Rosario Candela, Emery Roth and James Carpenter
designed grand apartments with high ceilings, fireplaces, sweeping staircases and
huge rooms.
High-floor Fifth Avenue apartments with vistas of the Central Park
reservoir, the pond and Central Park West are the most valuable and are scarce.
On a recent day there were about 136 Fifth Avenue apartments
available from 59th to 96th Streets.
Fifth Avenue apartments range from $250,000 for a one-room unit in
a hotel-service building to $46 million for a full-floor, prewar 16-room
apartment.
There were 16 listings at more than $10 million and 25 apartments
for sale at less than $1 million.
Fifth Avenue's apartments are predominantly prewar co-ops.
There are 63 co-op buildings and 5 Fifth Avenue condo buildings
from 59th to 96th Streets.
Two 1920's-era hotels, the Sherry-Netherland at 59th Street and the
Pierre at 61st Street, have co-op apartments, where owners have access to hotel
services.
The 27th floor of the tower of the Sherry-Netherland, which has six
extremely large rooms, was recently available.
There was also a seven-room apartment in the tower at the
Pierre.
Several Fifth Avenue apartment buildings, namely 825 Fifth, 1 East
66th Street and 3 East 77th Street, have private dining rooms for tenants.
While 5th Avenue has many luxurious buildings, three top Fifth
Avenue apartment buildings, in terms of size, quality of apartments, and price, are
820 Fifth, between 63rd and 64th Streets; 834 Fifth, between 64th and 65th Streets;
and 960 Fifth, at 77th Street.
At No. 820, where one is greeted by white-gloved doormen at the
brass front door, the fourth-floor apartment with tree views was on the market for
$30 million.
Maintenance is $13,271 a month.
This lovely 5th Avenue apartment building has a group of very
prominent residents.
A prospective shareholder should have a minimum of $100 million in
liquid assets.
Buying a Fifth Avenue co-op requires substantial assets.
Many of the Fifth Avenue apartment buildings are all cash, so no
financing is permitted.
You are going to need to put together a package of social and
business reference letters, a credit check and very substantial financial
disclosure.
Some buildings do not allow pets or welcome children.
Families tend to live farther north in the 80's and 90's.
There are many public and private schools on the Upper East Side,
like the highly rated P.S. 6 at Madison Avenue and 81st Street, Spence, St.
Bernard's, Dalton, Nightingale-Bamford, the Convent of the Sacred Heart and St.
David's.
There are five Fifth Avenue apartment rental buildings from 59th to
96th.
One-bedroom apartments rent for $4,000 to $6,000 a month,
two-bedrooms for $7,000 to $13,000, and three-bedrooms for $15,000.
North of 96th Street, the traditional, if fuzzy, boundary between
the Upper East Side and East Harlem, rents, like purchase prices, are often less
stratospheric.
At 1160 Fifth Avenue, between 97th and 98th Streets, a one-bedroom
apartment rents for $2,800 a month, a two-bedroom for $3,500 and a three-bedroom
for $6,500.
Residents of Fifth Avenue (or their housekeepers) do much of their
shopping on Madison Avenue, one block east, or they let their fingers do the
walking.
Among stores with a delivery clientele are Lobel's, the butcher;
Marché Madison; E.A.T.; Mitchell London; and Gentile's.
Madison Avenue in the 60's, where Givenchy, Jean-Paul Gaultier,
Hermès and Chanel have boutiques, feels like the Rue Faubourg St.-Honore in
Paris.
Higher up, Madison Avenue becomes cozier, with a Food Emporium at
87th Street, the Corner Bookstore at 93rd and many stores for children, coffee
shops, bistros and sidewalk cafes.
The only sidewalk cafe in sight on Fifth Avenue is the one at the
Stanhope Park Hyatt Hotel.
There are some food and T-shirt vendors on Museum Mile (outside the
Guggenheim Museum) that some residents find inappropriate for the neighborhood.
Noise has occasionally been an issue for people living on Fifth
Avenue when there is a pop concert on the East Meadow. There are fewer pop concerts
there now, she said.
When there are parades on Fifth Avenue, the debris is soon cleaned
up.
Crime has really dropped in the park.
Over the past 20 years, as Central Park has been restored, it has
made a Fifth Avenue apartment even more of a prime location to live.
In the summer, there are Philharmonic concerts in the park and
strolling in the Conservatory Garden.
Many Fifth Avenue residents volunteer to garden, give tours and
maintain the park's 21 playgrounds.
Fifth Avenue apartments are protected by the Landmarks Preservation Commission
in three areas: the Upper East Side Historic District, from 59th to 78th Street;
the Metropolitan Museum Historic District, from 78th to 86th Street; and the
Carnegie Hill Historic District, from 86th to 99th Street.
Above 99th Street, Fifth Avenue apartments offer a mixture of
prewar and postwar co-op and condo buildings and rentals, as well as low- and
moderate-income housing.
There are also institutions, like Mount Sinai Hospital, from 99th
to 101st Streets; the Museum of the City of New York, at 103rd Street; and El Museo
del Bario, at 104th.
Central Park ends at 110th Street.
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