Thursday, July 18, 2013

Life at the San Remo apartments on Central Park West...

The San Remo apartments--shown above, -- what I call the "faux Cathedral" on Central Park West with Central Park's "faux castle" in the center... are some of three or so special apartment buildings on Central Park West alone  designed by  Emery Roth and built in the late 1920's and early 1930's. Its apartments are now the most expensive on a square foot basis of any building on Central Park West. 

While some of its huge apartments were subdivided during the depression, others of great size remain... with their 600 square foot living rooms and very large libraries and dining rooms, etc.

This building has a strong appeal to big celebrities and rich people--Demi Moore and Bruce Willis, Tiger Woods,  Stephen Spielberg and even Steve Jobs have owned apartments here...and I am sure the Board that approves new buyers expects them to live up to this kind of reputation...but is still supposedly more "lenient" than "old money" buildings on the Fifth Avenue side of the Park.

Woody Allen has a scene in "Manhattan" where fireworks at night illuminate the outlines of some Emery Roth buildings and other scenes with fireworks in the sky, set to Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue"..

  Next is a current real estate listing from the internet about what is going on at the San Remo--

Building: The San Remo at 145-146 Central Park West in Upper West Side

The San Remo at 145-146 Central Park West in Upper West Side
Co-op
Upper West Side

27 floorplans available
Past transactions

Owned by SAN REMO TENANTS CORP
138 units
28 stories
Built in 1930
THE SAN REMO
145 & 146 CENTRAL PARK WEST
The San Remo is the first twin-towered building to rise in New York and its precedent setting design gained it fame when it was built in 1930. Designed by the acclaimed architect Emery Roth, it was named for a hotel that previously occupied the same spot and converted into a cooperative in 1972.

Twenty-seven stories high, including the ten story towers, the apartments are grand in scale with huge entrance galleries, lofty ceiling heights, stunning prewar details, some duplex layouts and many residences with terraces. Its residents enjoy the finest white-glove service including 24 hour doormen, two magnificent lobbies, private and semi-private elevator landings, state-of-the-art health club, community room, laundry, and storage room. The San Remo is truly one of the premier masterpiece buildings on Central Park West in the finest location!

Description provided by Carol Levy



Architect:
Emery Roth & Sons

Building Amenities
Doorman Laundry in Building Storage Available
Elevator Live-in Super

 OK, now for an even bigger picture from Wikipedia...

The San Remo (145 and 146 Central Park West) is a luxury, 27-floor, co-operative apartment building in New York City located between West 74th Street and West 75th Streets which is three blocks north of the The Dakota. The San Remo is described by Glen Justice of the New York Times as "a dazzling two-tower building with captivating views of Central Park."[2] As a housing cooperative, its board has a "reputation for lenient admissions standards" compared to the conservative, old-money boards on the other side of the park.[3]

Past and present residents of the building include such famous personalities as Stephen Sondheim, Tiger Woods, Steven Spielberg, Donna Karan, Tony Randall, Demi Moore, Glenn Close, Dustin Hoffman, Bono, Steve Martin, Bruce Willis, Trey Parker, Eddie Cantor, Robert Stigwood, Marshall Brickman, Jackie Leo, Don Hewitt, Billy Squier, Dodi Fayed, Andrew Tobias, Aaron Spelling, and Hedy Lamarr. Rita Hayworth spent her last years there, in a unit beside her daughter's, Princess Yasmin Aga Khan. In 2007 same-floor residents Bono and Billy Squier went to court over a fireplace. Steve Jobs bought and renovated a penthouse apartment but never lived in it, ultimately selling it to Bono.

Apartments

When the San Remo was originally designed, it had a wide range of relatively luxurious apartment configurations. The apartments were accessed from opulent twin lobbies which contained terrazzo floors, marble walls and custom light fixtures of bronze and frosted glass. The building has two addresses, 145 and 146 Central Park West, because the building was designed so that each half of the structure is served by separate lobbies, eliminating the need for long hallways across the main floor. Most of the San Remo's first floor is used by the buildings' staff or leased out as doctors' offices.

The base of the building

The average apartment contained eight rooms spread over approximately 3,000 sq ft (280 m2). Ten and eleven foot ceilings were the norm. As originally designed, the lower 14 floors were typically divided into seven apartments – two on each of the side street wings of the building and three laid out along the front of the building facing Central Park West. There are numerous setbacks built into the far ends of each wing of the building, allowing for terraces for several of the units. The original layout of the Park-facing units was unusual; most full-block buildings on the avenue divided the park frontage into four units, not three. This allowed the San Remo's apartments to have very generous frontage along the park in addition to typically spacious interior layouts.

The largest units on these lower levels were the "C-line" units, which occupied the southeast corner of each floor. The C-line apartments contained 620 sq ft (58 m2) living rooms, 300 sq ft (28 m2) libraries and 500 sq ft (46 m2) dining rooms all facing the park. C-line apartments typically had four bedrooms arranged along the 74th Street (south) side of the building. These units were approximately 4,500 sq ft (420 m2) in total.

Above the 14th floor, the building began a series of setbacks, which allowed for terraces for the various units from floors 14 through 17. These units were typically larger floor space, with larger rooms, than the units on the lower floors.

The towers


The San Remo seen from west
At the 18th floor, the building splits into the San Remo's iconic 10-floor towers, which were inspired by the drum of the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates.[4] The twin tower design was innovative when first developed, and inspired a number of imitators over the years (including The Majestic, The Century, The Eldorado and—most recently—the Time Warner Center).

In the northern tower of the building there was one apartment per floor of approximately 2,500 sq ft (230 m2). These were typically 2 bedroom units, with all of the public rooms facing the park.
The floors of the south tower were slightly larger, and these apartments were two-storey units. In total, these two-storey units were approximately 6,000 sq ft (560 m2). rivalling the apartments in the best buildings of Fifth and Park Avenues (e.g., 834 Fifth Avenue), which typically ranged from 5,000 sq ft (460 m2) to 7,000 sq ft (650 m2).

The San Remo's south tower units had their public rooms on the lower level. The public rooms included 800 sq ft (74 m2) (36' x 22') living rooms, 290 sq ft (27 m2) (14' x 20.5') libraries, and 400 sq ft (37 m2) (17' x 24') dining rooms. There were also a breakfast room, kitchen, and several servants’ rooms on this level. A semi-circular staircase led past windows facing the park to the second level. Upstairs were four bedrooms, including a master suite with a bedroom of 360 sq ft (33 m2), and a large dressing room and bathroom, for a total of over 500 sq ft (46 m2), and additional servants' rooms. A separate back staircase connected the rear portion of the apartments, linking the servants' areas.

History of the building

The building's architect, Emery Roth, took advantage of new zoning regulations to build the first of New York's twin towered apartment blocks.[5] Each of San Remo's ten-story towers is topped with an English Baroque mansion in the manner of John Vanbrugh and capped with an homage to the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates. The Athenian monument was known to Roth from the reproduction that had featured in the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, 1893. Roth also designed The Beresford and other landmark apartment houses and office blocks in New York. Construction began in 1929, weeks before the market crash initiated the Great Depression. The San Remo's construction process took approximately two years. In 1940 both buildings were sold, for $25,000 over the existing mortgages.

The Great Depression

During the Great Depression, many of the larger units in the building were subdivided to make them easier to rent. All but one of the south tower two-storey apartments were divided into single floor units. Many of the larger C-line and E-line (northeast corner) units were also divided into smaller units. As a result, the total number of apartments in the building was expanded by approximately 20 units.

Conversion to a cooperative

The San Remo is now one of the most desirable and expensive apartment buildings in Manhattan. It converted to a coop in the 1970s, meaning that tenants in the apartments are actually shareholders in the corporation that owns the building. Owning shares entitles one to reside in a particular unit. Purchasing apartments (shares) in the building is a significant investment.

Recent history

Recent asking prices have ranged from a minimum of $3 million to a high of $24 million. The best apartments (large units with Park views or tower floors) are typically valued at $2,500–$3,500 per sq. foot. The San Remo has consistently achieved the highest sale prices per unit on Central Park West, and is the top coop building in terms of price per square foot on the Upper West Side, attaining prices of almost $5,400 per square foot for its penthouse units.

Many purchasers over the years have combined their units. Steven Spielberg, combined two Park-facing units on the 16th floor into a 6,000 sq ft (560 m2) unit with terraces. A unit was reportedly sold to professional golfer Tiger Woods for $28 million in April 2008. Dustin Hoffman occupies a three-storey unit created from several 74th Street facing units.

The 27th floor (top floor) of the north tower has been combined into a portion of the former mechanical space above it, creating a unique two-storey unit. In total, the apartment has 3,500 sq ft (330 m2) of interior space and 1,300 sq ft (120 m2) of terraces. This unit was purchased by Bono from Steve Jobs for $15 million.

Demi Moore owns the last remaining south tower two-storey unit, at the very top of this tower. Moore and then husband Bruce Willis purchased the apartment in 1987 from Robert Stigwood.[6] This unit was combined into a portion of the tower's mechanical and storage space above it (similar to the top floor unit in the north tower), creating a three storey unit with over 7,000 sq ft (650 m2) of interior space, multiple terraces and 360-degree views from all floors.

White San Remo

Education


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