Buyer shells out $80M for ritzy NYC penthouse only to find out a new skyscraper will block stunning Central Park view

A pair of NYC real estate titans duped a client into buying an $80 million Park Avenue penthouse with a stunning Central Park view — rushing the sale before news broke that a high-rise next door would ruin the vista, according to a lawsuit.Arthur and William Lie Zeckendorf perpetrated “a brazen fraud” on the buyer of the five-bedroom, 6.5-half bath duplex at 520 Park Ave., the unidentified purchaser said in a Manhattan Supreme Court filing which seeks to undo the November deal.The 8,300-square-foot Upper East Side home, complete with solarium, private elevator, balcony and a fireplace, is billed as having “dazzling panoramic views from all four exposures,” according to a real estate listing.Well-heeled residents of the Park Avenue building include former UFC-owning billionaire Frank Fertitta, who bought one of the building’s four penthouse duplexes in 2017; James Dyson, the billionaire founder of the Dyson appliance company; and Bob Diamond, former head of Barclays.The full view of the Big Apple’s iconic green space is the duplex’s “defining feature,” the buyer, identified only as Park Ave.Condo LLC, said in the legal filing.But a 37-story skyscraper with 62 units planned by Extell Development and Solil Management on several combined lots next door “is all but certain to ruin the Penthouse’s unobstructed Central Park view,” according to the lawsuit.

It’s unclear when the new building is expected to be completed.The Zeckendorfs learned about the new building “given their status as part of a small circle of New York City real estate insiders,” and understood “that if the public ever caught wind of the Extell-Solil development, the penthouse would never sell — and certainly not at an $80 million price tag,” the buyer alleged.The “crown jewel” of the Zeckendorf’s 62-story building began as a triplex which the pair hoped would sell for well above $100 million, breaking a then-city record.But the $100 million benchmark was reac...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles