STELLAR as distributed by MLS GRID / Listed By: Corcoran Puerto Rico
STELLAR as distributed by MLS GRID / Listed By: Corcoran Dwellings
NJMLS / Listed By: Taryn Byron, Corcoran Infinity Properties
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The elevator opens directly into a private vestibule. Beyond it, a thirty-foot gallery. Then the great room, fifty-five feet across, lined with oversized north-facing windows and the subdued certainty of a place designed for people who understand New York as a long game. Not performance. Permanence.
The building itself, designed by Lucien Lagrange and developed by Extell Development Company, borrows from the old grammar of Manhattan apartment houses - limestone, symmetry, restraint - while dispensing quietly with inconvenience. Everything here works exactly as it should.
Interiors by AD100 designer Katherine Newman lean toward understatement: white oak herringbone floors, coffered ceilings, hand-finished walls, millwork detailed with almost private precision. A corner library wrapped in leather and anchored by a gas fireplace feels less like an amenity than a place someone once intended to spend real time.
There are seven bedrooms. Seven-and-a-half baths. A kitchen and butler's pantry arranged for dinners that begin with twelve people and end with four. The primary suite occupies its own emotional climate entirely: marble, radiant heat, deep quiet, the faint impression that the city has fallen away somewhere below.
A deeded parking space in the private garage is available for separate purchase, with direct elevator access into the building - one of those conveniences that becomes, over time, impossible to imagine living without. The apartment may also be purchased furnished, artwork included, if one prefers to arrive all at once rather than gradually.
Residents of 535 West End Avenue have access to a twenty-four-hour concierge and doorman, an indoor pool, fitness center, spa, steam rooms, residents' lounge, recreation spaces, storage, and on-site parking. Yet the real luxury here may be the atmosphere itself. The calm.
Outside, the neighborhood remains what this part of the Upper West Side has always been: residential in the truest sense. Riverside Park a few moments away. The river. Schools people move across oceans to be near. Groceries, bookstores, cafés, routines established over decades.
Residence 10 is not trying to be downtown. It is not trying to be transient, theatrical, or new. It understands something older about New York - that the greatest luxury, eventually, becomes space, privacy, and the ability to close the door above the city and feel entirely removed from it.