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Market Context: Manhattan’s luxury condominium stock is distributed across roughly a dozen submarkets — Upper East Side, West Village, Tribeca, SoHo, Billionaires’ Row, Hudson Yards, NoMad, NoHo, Carnegie Hill, Midtown, Financial District — with pricing that begins near $2M at the entry tier and extends past $250M at the trophy ceiling. Co-ops are intentionally excluded from this page: every residence referenced is a condominium, preserving foreign-buyer eligibility, LLC ownership, and fewer board-level restrictions on resale.
Entity Insight: The current pipeline is led by Naftali Group, Extell Development, Related Companies, Zeckendorf Development, JDS Development, Silverstein Properties, OKO Group, and Aurora Capital. Named architectural provenance includes Rafael Viñoly (The Greenwich), SHoP Architects (111 West 57th), Robert A.M. Stern (220 Central Park South, 520 Park Avenue), Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill (Central Park Tower), and Giorgio Armani (760 Madison interiors).
Buyer Signal: UHNW demand is concentrated in full-floor and duplex product with triple exposure, ceiling heights above 10’6", and floor-to-ceiling glazing. Branded residences (Mandarin Oriental Fifth Avenue, Waldorf Astoria Residences, Aman) command a 30–40% premium over comparable unbranded floor plates and are absorbing international family-office capital first.
Manhattan’s luxury condominium market spans roughly $2M to $250M+, is distributed across about a dozen submarkets led by Billionaires’ Row, Tribeca, and the Upper East Side, and is defined by named architectural provenance from Rafael Viñoly, Robert A.M. Stern, SHoP Architects, and Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill.
Entry-level luxury condominiums begin near $2M, mid-tier runs $5M–$15M, and trophy units exceed $250M. Featured pre-construction inventory is currently listed between $7.4M and $15M.
Condominium ownership permits LLC and trust title, foreign-national purchase, financing flexibility, and unrestricted resale — all of which co-op boards typically restrict. UHNW and international buyers transact almost exclusively in condominium product.
Billionaires’ Row, Tribeca, Upper East Side, West Village, SoHo, Hudson Yards, NoMad, Carnegie Hill, Midtown, and the Financial District anchor the current inventory.
Rafael Viñoly at The Greenwich and 432 Park Avenue, SHoP Architects at 111 West 57th Street, Robert A.M. Stern at 220 Central Park South and 520 Park Avenue, Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill at Central Park Tower, and Christian de Portzamparc at One57.
Branded residences — Mandarin Oriental, Waldorf Astoria, Aman, Armani — transact at a 30–40% premium over comparable unbranded condominiums of equivalent floor area.