West 71st Street, 10023 | Property for sale | Savills
Guide price $6,000,000(€5,478,840)

West 71st Street10023


    Key features

    • Ten (10) unit mixed-use investment property
    • Four-storey brick building
    • One office unit
    • One Studio
    • Five 1-Bedroom/1 Bathroom
    • Two 2 bedroom residential units
    • 8,446 square foot building
    • 0.042-acre parcel

    Ten (10) unit mixed-use investment property located at 114 West 71st street in New York, New York (the "Property").

    About this property

    • The Property is located in a historical district at the Lincoln Square neighborhood of Upper West Side Manhattan and consists of a four-story brick building that contains one (1) office unit that can be divided to two separate offices on the ground floor, one (1) studio five (5) 1-Bedroom/1- Bathroom and two (2) 2 bedroom residential units on the first to the fourth floors, all units are in a 8,446 square foot building on a 0.043-acre parcel. This unique opportunity is ideal for an investor looking to add value to the Property for great returns, or an end-user that want to benefit using the office space for his business and live one of the beautiful residential units. The Property is situated in an incredible urban infill location in the Lincoln Square neighborhood of Upper West Side Manhattan. 114 West 71st is positioned on the South of 71 Street in between Columbus Avenue Broadway. The Property enjoys convenient access to the MTA bus lines and several subway stations close by, the Metropolitan opera house and Center for performing arts, and the city's Neufeld playground. The Property is 0.2-miles from Central Park, basically one block away from Central Park.

    Local information

    • Ever wonder why an incalculable number of creative works are set somewhere between 59th and 110th streets, within Central Park West and the Hudson River? All New York City neighborhoods are created equal, but there's just something about the Upper West Side. Honestly, it's all in the details: Iconic architecture, city-defining structures like the Dakota, the San Remo, and the El Dorado. Cultural institutions and historical sites of immense international renown line the streets and avenues. Certainly, having two beloved greenspaces — Central Park and Riverside Park — at its horizontal edges doesn't hurt the reputation either. All of it and more is why so many New Yorkers choose to call the UWS home. It's also why, at times, this neighborhood can feel as much an attitude or mindset as it does a physical place.