The 10-story building at 16 Warren Street is only a few feet to the west of City Hall Park and is one of the handsomest new buildings in TriBeCa.
The building, which is called TriBeCa Townhomes, contains only 6 duplex apartments.
It boasts a modern facade with brise-de-soleil protruding shades and sidewalk landscaping.
The three-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath, 3,381-square-foot penthouse was priced in early 2009 at $6,500,000.
Apartments feature 12- to 16-foot-ceilings and gas-burning fireplaces and Brazilian walnut flooring. Kitchens have Sub-Zero and Miele appliances and pine cabinetry by Berloni.
Bathrooms have solar-powered hot water and Grohe and Dornbacht fixtures by Philippe Starck.
The building has bicycle storage and private storage and there is excellent public transportation in the vicinity as well as the J & R electronics stores across City Hall Park.
A2 Investment Group, headed by Joel Assouline and Vibeke Lichten, are the developers and Manuel Glas is the architect.
The site, which is one block south of Chambers Street, was formerly occupied by the TriBeCa Rock Club.
The building, which is called TriBeCa Townhomes, contains only 6 duplex apartments.
It boasts a modern facade with brise-de-soleil protruding shades and sidewalk landscaping.
The three-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bath, 3,381-square-foot penthouse was priced in early 2009 at $6,500,000.
Apartments feature 12- to 16-foot-ceilings and gas-burning fireplaces and Brazilian walnut flooring. Kitchens have Sub-Zero and Miele appliances and pine cabinetry by Berloni.
Bathrooms have solar-powered hot water and Grohe and Dornbacht fixtures by Philippe Starck.
The building has bicycle storage and private storage and there is excellent public transportation in the vicinity as well as the J & R electronics stores across City Hall Park.
A2 Investment Group, headed by Joel Assouline and Vibeke Lichten, are the developers and Manuel Glas is the architect.
The site, which is one block south of Chambers Street, was formerly occupied by the TriBeCa Rock Club.
Architecture Critic
Carter Horsley
Since 1997, Carter B. Horsley has been the editorial director of CityRealty. He began his journalistic career at The New York Times in 1961 where he spent 26 years as a reporter specializing in real estate & architectural news. In 1987, he became the architecture critic and real estate editor of The New York Post.