
Photo Credit: Coldwell Banker Warburg
This Nomad condo has a front-row seat to the Flatiron Building’s transformation into a luxury residential building. Asking $9,495,000, the three-bedroom, three-bath apartment at 212 Fifth Avenue has windows that perfectly frame the Beaux-Arts tower, in addition to 3,000 square feet of functional living space. The view will improve even further when the Flatiron Building reopens as a condominium, as the exterior will be illuminated for the first time ever.

Like its famous neighbor, 212 Fifth Avenue is also an office-condo conversion. Now home to 48 residences, the 24-story tower, designed by Schwartz & Gross with a Neo-Gothic facade, was one of New York City’s first skyscrapers and tallest buildings when constructed in 1913.
The three-bedroom on the 16th floor measures over 3,000 square feet. A book-matched marble foyer leads to the sprawling great room and kitchen on one end and the private bedroom wing on the other.
The living room boasts over 11-foot-tall ceilings, and several oversized windows.

The flexible open-floor plan seamslessly connects living, dining, and entertaining. The marble and wood-clad kitchen provides the best shot of the Flatiron Building, looking south down Fifth Avenue.


The 2,000-square-foot bedroom wing feautres Chevron floors, a laundry room and two bedrooms, both with en-suite baths.
The bright primary suite has a spa-inspired, windowed bath, two closets, and three exposures.
Located next to Madison Square Park, 212 Fifth Avenue offers amenities like a health and wellness center, a screening room, a golf simulator, and a residents’ lounge.
The luxury building has attracted several billionaires over the years, including Jeff Bezos, who owns a penthouse and three levels below it and a four-bedroom apartment at the building. As 6sqft reported, the Amazon founder owns $119 million worth of apartments at 212 Fifth Avenue.
[Listing details: 212 Fifth Avenue, 16B at CityRealty] [At Coldwell Banker Warburg by Ashley Reidy Quinn and Nick Montalbano]RELATED:
Photos courtesy of Coldwell Banker Warburg
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