A Gold Dome Caps This $25 Million Manhattan Penthouse Being Sold for Charity
In late 2001, Greg Carr doled out a little over $7.2 million for a New York City penthouse. Now the co-founder of Boston Technology is hoisting the Fifth Avenue aerie back on the market for a substantially higher $25 million, with proceeds from the sale going to his philanthropic projects in Africa. Lawrence Treglia and Claire Groome of Sotheby’s International Realty-East Side Manhattan Brokerage hold the listing.
Resting amid the top two floors of the Flatiron District’s 13-story Beaux-Arts Sohmer Piano Building, which was designed in the late 1890s by pioneering architect Robert Maynicke and is described in marketing materials as a “Renaissance rocket ship,” Carr’s lofty digs offer five bedrooms and an equal number of baths spread across almost 5,800 square feet of modernized living space boasting high ceilings and vast expanses of glass throughout. There’s also a private roof deck with a fire pit, plus a two-story octagonal room capped by a gold-leaf cupola offering picturesque views of the Empire State and Flatiron buildings and Madison Square Park.
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Other highlights include banks of elevators that open onto dual foyers traversed via a baronial limestone staircase crowned by a lengthy stretch of skylights. The living room is warmed by a fireplace, the formal dining room comes with a wall of cabinetry for storing china, and the kitchen features top-tier stainless appliances and an accompanying breakfast nook with a built-in banquette.
Tucked behind the kitchen is a gym with an attached bath, and down on the lower level is the spacious corner primary suite hosting three exposures, a dressing room with a ton of closet space, and a marble-clad bath sporting a copper soaking tub by Waterworks, along with a rainfall shower. Rounding it all out is a hefty $6,374 monthly maintenance fee, which covers the building’s doorman, security guard, and concierge services.
Per Bloomberg, the first to report the listing, Carr used the penthouse largely to host parties and fundraising events but has decided to sell because he now splits his time between Africa—where he’s spent more than $100 million of his own money to restore Gorongosa National Park’s biodiversity and support the surrounding communities—and a primary residence in Sun Valley, Idaho. “I work in Africa, and I go home for holidays in Idaho,” he said, “so it wasn’t leaving a lot of time for New York.”
Click here for more photos of Greg Carr’s Manhattan residence.
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