Zeckendorf Development and Atlas Capital Group inked a $129 million deal at their buzzy 80 Clarkson development, The Real Deal has learned.
A buyer signed a contract to purchase multiple units at the 112-unit ultra-luxury project, according to multiple sources.
If it closes at that price, the sale would far surpass the record for the most expensive deal in Downtown Manhattan. A double-wide townhouse in Greenwich Village claimed that title last year when it sold for $73 million.
The deal also comes as wealthy buyers have pushed condo prices to new heights downtown.
Earlier this year, financier Harsh Padia and his wife, interior designer Purvi Padia, set a new threshold for the priciest condo deal below 14th Street when they sold their apartment at 150 Charles Street for $60 million. About six months later, a penthouse at Aurora Capital Associates’ 140 Jane Street entered contract with an $88 million asking price.
It was not immediately clear which units at the two-tower development were part of the deal.
The most expensive individual unit listed so far at the project is a 7,000-square-foot duplex penthouse asking $80 million in the building’s west tower, according to an offering plan filed with the New York Attorney General’s office. Unit 30, the development’s largest, is also asking $75 million.
The project is expected to have a projected sellout well over $2 billion.
News of the inked deal is the first to land in headlines since the West Village tower quietly launched sales earlier this year. The developers last year tapped Dan Tubb and Amy Williamson to head sales at the building, though the duo has kept information about its progress under wraps.
The few details to emerge about sales at the development have come from brokers’ Instagram posts, including one posted by Bespoke last month claiming the brokerage brought a buyer for Unit 24A asking $31 million.
Tubb and Williamson did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A spokesperson for the developer declined to comment.
Michael Balanevsky, a broker at Accent Holdings, brought the buyer, according to sources familiar with the deal. Balanevsky declined to comment.
Balanevsky works in both New York City and the Hamptons, and has established a “strong Russian clientele,” according to his website.
Katherine Kallergis contributed reporting.
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