New York Top Real Estate Deals: Wednesday, April 1, 2026

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There were 149 transactions totaling $231 million filed in New York City records in the 24 hours before 4 p.m. on Wednesday, April 1, 2026.

🏆 Commercial: The priciest commercial real estate sale was in Tribeca. An affiliate of Benchmark Real Estate Group parted with a mixed-use building at 74 Franklin Street for $11.3 million. The buyer was CTT 74 Franklin LLC. Standing five stories tall, the property spans about 9,800 square feet and has four apartments and ground-floor retail.

🏆 Residential: Slate Property Group had the top residential sale to hit records in the Big Apple, with the sale of a penthouse and a storage unit at The Katharine at 118 West 13th Street in Greenwich Village for $21 million. The condo measures just under 4,000 square feet and has four bedrooms, four full bathrooms and two half bathrooms. The unit’s second level has a recreation room and terrace. Its asking price was $22.5 million. Compass’ Leonard Steinberg, Amy Mendizabal, Calli Sarkesh, Herve Senequier and Niklas Hackstein had the listing. The buyer was an LLC.

📊 Residential: In Dumbo, banking executive Anita Saggurti and Cyrus Nentin, Meta’s director of investor relations, scooped up a penthouse at 51 Jay Street for $5.7 million. The seller, an LLC linked to Jonathan Redick, purchased the home in 2017 for about $6.1 million. The pad, a duplex, measures just under 3,000 square feet, and has four bedrooms, four and a half bathrooms and a parking space. It also has a 2,500-square-foot terrace. The unit’s last asking price was just under $6 million. Compass’ Rachel Greenstein, Suzanne Koxvold, Toni Nicolo and Mia Lieberman had the listing.

📊 Residential: Artur Kofman picked up a single-family, oceanfront home at 135 Beach 142nd Street in the Rockaways for just under $5 million. It measures about 5,800 square feet. The sellers were Gil Hillel Elbaz and Meital Elbaz, who purchased the home in 2014 for $2.5 million.

By the Numbers: U.S. housing pricing growth moderates ahead of spring buying frenzy

Home price appreciation continues to slow as the U.S. heads into its busy spring homebuying season.

Affordability concerns and rising inventory are helping to further shift the tide of the last few years, when sellers were in the driver’s seat.

In January, home prices inched up by 0.9 percent year over year, down from 1.1 percent the year before, according to the latest index from S&P Cotatility Case-Shiller. In real terms, however, this means that home values have dropped over the past year, as inflation climbed 2.4 percent year over year in January.

U.S. Home Price Growth Moderates

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