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The Most Expensive Condo Sale in Downtown Manhattan History

By

Cameron Holt

, updated on

July 18, 2025

A massive duplex apartment in Manhattan's West Village recently sold for a staggering $60 million and became the highest-priced condo ever sold below 14th Street. The sale wasn’t advertised on the public market. Instead, it changed hands quietly in an off-market deal.

This 5,840-square-foot residence sits inside 150 Charles Street, a well-known building that’s no stranger to high-profile buyers. In fact, celebrities like Bon Jovi, Ben Stiller, and Ryan Seacrest have already passed through its doors. But this latest deal isn't famous for the price tag that turned heads.

A Deal Eight Years in the Making

The sellers, financier Harsh Padia and interior designer Purvi Padia, bought the place in 2016 for $29.1 million from the building's developer, Alex Witkoff. Fast-forward eight years, and they doubled their money in a single sale. It’s not the kind of return most people see on Manhattan real estate anymore, which makes the deal even more unusual.

The transaction edged past the previous downtown record of $59 million, set in 2018 by billionaire Robert F. Smith for a penthouse at the Getty in Chelsea. While $1 million might not sound like a big margin, in the world of luxury New York City real estate, that sliver matters because it shifts market expectations, especially in neighborhoods like the West Village, where space is tight and inventory rarely includes multi-level, view-drenched homes like this one.

Inside the $60 Million Apartment

Image via Evan Joseph Studios/Evan Joseph

The apartment spans two floors and is lined with windows framing sweeping views of the Hudson River. It includes five bedrooms, five and a half bathrooms, and two large terraces. One standout feature is a spiral staircase that coils through a double-height dining room.

The main floor has a large living room and an adjoining library with a gas fireplace. The eat-in kitchen features veined marble counters and backsplashes, balanced by high-end appliances tucked into minimalist cabinetry. Upstairs, the primary suite is its own retreat, with two massive walk-in closets, a private study, and a bathroom that would make most spas feel underdressed.

The building itself doesn’t disappoint either. 150 Charles Street was designed by Cook + Fox Architects and completed in 2013. It stands 15 stories tall and has 91 units. Residents get access to full-service perks like a private covered driveway, concierge staff, a 75-foot swimming pool, and a fitness center that’s hard to rival.

What Sets 150 Charles Apart

Aside from views and amenities, one major selling point is the building's rare amount of private outdoor space. The grounds offer over 40,000 square feet of green space, landscaped and groomed to feel secluded even in the middle of downtown. For a buyer who wants the perks of a private estate without leaving the city grid, this kind of setup makes the math easier to justify.

The building has been a magnet for big names since it opened. But its sales history also shows that values here don’t follow the usual cycle. Units have been bought and sold at wide margins, and the demand curve isn’t entirely tied to the broader Manhattan market. When a 2016 sale at the building hit $34.4 million, it was the biggest transaction in the city that week. Now, less than a decade later, that number looks almost modest.

Luxury Downtown Is No Longer an Underdog

For a long time, downtown didn’t compete with Billionaires' Row or Central Park for record prices. That divide is narrowing. Properties like this one signal a new pattern: if a unit delivers on square footage, location, privacy, and pedigree, buyers will pay Midtown prices anywhere.

The buyers in this case worked with Compass agents Eric Brown and Zeve Salman. They saw value in a move-in-ready home with architecture and space that’s rarely matched downtown. It also helped that this wasn’t some cold glass box. There’s character throughout the home.

Parking spaces in the building reportedly cost around $500,000. This is a small detail, but it shows how tightly controlled access and convenience are. The building’s location on a West Village block means everything is at your fingertips without the midtown crowds.

A Record That May Not Stand Long

While this $60 million condo holds the current title downtown, it may not keep it for long. Inventory is tight, but so is supply, and more buyers are chasing space with fewer options. Developers may try to top it with future projects, but 150 Charles Street has a head start. It’s already proven itself as a place that has history, demand, and the kind of returns that don’t need explaining.

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