Note: the above is based on a down payment of 20% ($3,600,000),
which is the minimum amount permitted by the building.
Description
This rare and distinctive residence is unique to 1020 Fifth Avenue. There is virtually nothing else which compares to it - now or ever, on the market - all the way up and down Fifth Avenue. The buildings architects, Warren & Wetmore, designed 6 of its 13 apartments with rooms of noble proportions, as the 1925 sales brochure stated.
These 6 have a 20 by 40 foot salon, with a ceiling height of 18 feet. The eighth floor apartment includes one such treasured salon, facing Fifth Avenue and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. There were 14 original rooms, the others with ceiling heights of 10 feet, including 4-5 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, 5 staff rooms, formal dining room, kitchen, corner library with a magnificent southern and western outlook, and 4 fireplaces.
While the eighth floor apartment has been updated, it has not traded for decades and maintains a vast array of prewar details. It was featured on the cover of Architectural Digest in 1991, following a renovation by the world renowned architect and designer Peter Marino, highlighting his dramatic Louis XV-style paneling in the salon. As currently configured, the apartment has 9 rooms, with 4 bathrooms and 2 powder rooms.
One staff room remains, while 2 have been incorporated into the master suite and 2 others into a 4th bedroom now setup as a gym. The primary public rooms and bedrooms are true to the original floor plan. The apartment is in excellent condition and awaits its new 21st century owners.
Apartment Features: East exposure, North exposure, South exposure, West exposure, Full city view, Full park view, Prewar detail, Beamed ceiling, Floors - herringbone, Light - excellent, Walk in closets, Washer/dryer, Dishwasher Building Features: Central laundry room
All content above are visible to screen reader users, so you may ignore the show more button below.