New York Top Real Estate Deals: Wednesday, March 4, 2026

0
3



There were 219 transactions totaling $467 million filed in New York City records in the 24 hours before 4 p.m. on Wednesday, March 4, 2026.

🏆 Residential: The priciest home sale to hit records was for a condo at 250 West Street in Tribeca, which sold for $21.4 million. The seller was Amirali Handjani, and the buyer was a trust. The seller had owned the unit since 2013, purchasing it for $10.5 million. The unit spans about 3,800 square feet and has four bedrooms, four and a half bathrooms and a 325-foot terrace. The sale pencils out to roughly 5,700 per square foot.

🏆 Commercial: The top commercial deal recorded was in the Mott Haven section of the Bronx. A more than 25,000-square-foot plot of land at 261 Walton Avenue sold for $29.7 million, according to the deed filed in public records. The buyer was Zeta Charter Schools. An affiliate of Knickpoint Ventures was the seller, and they were represented by Ariel Property Advisors’ Jason Gold, Victor Sozio and Gabriel Elyaszadeh. The property has about 181,000 buildable square feet, and the sale works out to about $140 per buildable square foot.

📊 Residential: In the West Village, a 4,700-square-foot penthouse at 495 West Street changed hands for $19.5 million. Both parties in the deal were LLCs. The seller purchased the pad in 2025 from artist Helen Marden for $16.5 million. The latest transaction works out to about $4,100 per square foot.

📊 Residential: A five-bedroom condo at 200 East 95th Street on the Upper East Side traded for $16.9 million. The unit was a sponsor unit in the property, which is known as The Kent and was developed by Gary Barnett’s Extell Development Company. The firm is also handling sales at the luxury tower. The unit has five and a half baths and a 1,400-square-foot terrace. It measures some 5,200 square feet.

📊 Commercial: Community League of the Heights, a group that helps low-income individuals, purchased a mixed-use building at 3601 Broadway in Manhattan. The property stands seven stories tall and has 18 apartments across nearly 21,000 square feet. The seller was Neighborhood Restore.

If you like this digest, you can get it even earlier — every evening — by subscribing to TRD Data, here.



LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here