Washington Heights-Inwood|News|
Washington Heights Development Site Sells For $21 Million
The site — which has West 165th and 166th street frontages — contains development rights for a 119,370-square-foot building.

The site — which has West 165th and 166th street frontages — contains development rights for a 119,370-square-foot building.

The city Landmarks Preservation Commission kicked off the process to landmark the Park Terrace West-West 217th Street Historic District.

HAP Investments’ new 39-unit condo building on West 167th Street offers a look at what's coming to Uptown.
The planned MADD Equities development will bring more than 600 apartments to Inwood.
The 10032 zip code is the only area in Manhattan where homes cost less than $500 per square foot, according to a PropertyShark study.
Developers had planned a 23-story, 114-unit apartment building at the site.
An affordable housing developer and the city will preserve the current Section 8 housing as part of a 40-year tax abatement.
Asbestos abatement work has begun at the Colliseum Cinemas on West 181st Street, and a retail tenant in the building has closed.
These "affordable" apartments at 516 West 162nd St. are only available to people earning roughly 130 percent of the area median income.
The six one-bedroom apartments are renting at $1,650 and $1,800 and are eligible for people earning higher than the area median income.
The new development will be built on Broadway and Fairview Avenue.
The new development will be built on an empty lot and contain 16 apartments.
The development, built on the site of a former church, could bring about 100 apartments to Washington Heights.
Local Congressman Adriano Espaillat called the plan a "Trojan Horse for Uptown."
The West 168th Street building will consist mainly of medical offices and a pediatric center.
The 280-square-foot greenhouse would occupy the grounds of the museum dedicated to medieval art and artifacts.
The Wadsworth Avenue building contains 54 apartment units.
Inwood is the only neighborhood where the median apartment rent is less than 30 percent of the median annual income.
The new apartment complex will be built on a site currently occupied by a parking lot.
Two neighboring buildings on Wadsworth Avenue sold for $4 million more than what the previous owner paid in 2014.
All 42 of the Wadsworth Avenue apartment building's units are rent-stabilized and most are for families.
The city plans to demolish the Inwood LIbrary on Broadway and replace it within an apartment building.
The two contiguous buildings occupy an entire block on Fort Washington Avenue between West 177th and 178th streets.
The six-story building contains 42 residential units, most of which are rent-stabilized, according to reports.
The building contains 12 apartment units and a ground-floor Chase Bank retail branch.
The same 52-apartment building sold for half the price in 2014, according to city real estate records.
Sources say the properties could be worth a total of $80 million.
Tenants of 13 recently-sold buildings are encouraged to attend the forum and learn their rights.
Two public workshops to discuss the redevelopment of the Inwood Library have been scheduled for Jan. 25 and 28.
The buildings — 139 Payson Avenue, 100 Cooper Street and 256 Seaman Avenue — contain 129 combined rental units.
The six-story Washington Heights building contains 84 apartment units. It's sale price is three times what it was bought for in 2010.
The real estate portfolio contains 289 apartments and a combined 199,000 square feet of air rights.
See which Washington Heights-Inwood landlords ended up on the city's list of the 100 worst in New York.
The 49-unit residential building is located on Isham Street near Vermilyea Avenue.
A report from StreetEasy analyzing July real estate data suggests the market is getting more buyer-friendly.
The Washington Heights home hanging off a cliff, known as the "pumpkin house," hits the market at a steep price.
A package deal for 13 Inwood buildings containing 359 residential apartments and two retail stores has been put on the market.
There aren't a lot of places in Manhattan where you can find a deal, but Washington Heights is your best bet.
A lottery opened Tuesday for six studios, six one-bedroom apartments and a two-bedroom apartment at affordable rates in Washington Heights.
A five-story building on West 161 Street sold for $7.2 Million.