109 days on Market
Key Details
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Listed: Jul 31, 2024Last Price Change: ($200,000) on Sep 9Days on Market: 109Building Type: CooperativeNeighborhood: SoHo (Manhattan)Listing viewed 302 times
Monthly Maintenance:
$1,674
Est. Monthly Mortgage:
$10,613
Mortgage calculator
Total Est. Monthly Carrying Cost:
$12,287
Note: the above is based on a down payment of 20% ($400,000),
which is the minimum amount permitted by the building.
Description
Grand Loft Opportunity in Prime Soho!
Bring your architect and your dreams to a rare find in a classic cast-iron building at the heart of SoHo. It’s been decades since a residence like this has been available.
Imagine open spacious living with huge loft ceilings, a wall of oversized West facing windows, tree lined and looking out to Wooster Street, with original exposed brick walls, and elegant cast iron Corinthian columns. A chance to customize this space into your dream home.
Loft 2F also includes conveniences such as an in unit washer/dryer, an open eat-in kitchen, and a smart video Intercom that allows remote access to answer and open the entry door (and floor) from your phone remotely from anywhere. Nestled on a quiet cobblestone street in an intimate boutique coop, Loft 2F, with only two units on the 2nd floor offers unparalleled privacy. Plus, it’s pet-friendly and has very attractive maintenance fees. Originally built as a warehouse building in 1900, 80 Wooster Street is steeped in SoHo history as the first artist coop.
In the mid-1960s, Fluxus founder George Maciunas created this original coop and it became one of Manhattan’s most buzzing avante-garde hotspots – “the artist requires long unbroken spaces with high ceilings and adequate illumination,” he wrote in a manifesto, “and these needs can only be met by commercial lofts.” 80 Wooster Street was home to Trisha Brown, Jonas Mekas and Robert Watts among others, and hundreds of artists, including John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Philip Glass, Hermann Nitsch, Nam June Paik and Andy Warhol frequented and showed their work there. Close to some of the most fabulous restaurants, shopping and entertainment experiences in downtown Manhattan. It’s a place that combines history with modern living, inviting you to make it your own.
Loft 2F also includes conveniences such as an in unit washer/dryer, an open eat-in kitchen, and a smart video Intercom that allows remote access to answer and open the entry door (and floor) from your phone remotely from anywhere. Nestled on a quiet cobblestone street in an intimate boutique coop, Loft 2F, with only two units on the 2nd floor offers unparalleled privacy. Plus, it’s pet-friendly and has very attractive maintenance fees. Originally built as a warehouse building in 1900, 80 Wooster Street is steeped in SoHo history as the first artist coop.
In the mid-1960s, Fluxus founder George Maciunas created this original coop and it became one of Manhattan’s most buzzing avante-garde hotspots – “the artist requires long unbroken spaces with high ceilings and adequate illumination,” he wrote in a manifesto, “and these needs can only be met by commercial lofts.” 80 Wooster Street was home to Trisha Brown, Jonas Mekas and Robert Watts among others, and hundreds of artists, including John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Philip Glass, Hermann Nitsch, Nam June Paik and Andy Warhol frequented and showed their work there. Close to some of the most fabulous restaurants, shopping and entertainment experiences in downtown Manhattan. It’s a place that combines history with modern living, inviting you to make it your own.
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Apartment Amenities
- Western Exposures
- Washer/Dryer in apt.
Listing courtesy of
Coleman Real Estate Group
Pricing History
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