Cooperative — one of New York City's earliest co-ops, organized for artists at construction · 1904
Central Park Studios
15 West 67th Street, New York, NY 10023
Buildings·Cooperative — one of New York City's earliest co-ops, organized for artists at construction

15 West 67th Street

15 West 67th Street, New York, NY 10023

At a glance
Year built
1904
Type
Cooperative — one of New York City's earliest co-ops, organized for artists at construction
Landmark
Designated
The Data Room

Every recorded sale at this building, 2004–2026

Bedroom-by-bedroom medians, the full transfer record, and how units trade against ask.

3BR · combo median
$3.5M
Recent range
$1.2M – $3.5M
Listing discount
6.8%
Recorded transfers
30

Central Park Studios at 15 West 67th Street is a landmark of New York housing history, not merely a handsome pre-war co-op. Built in 1904–05 and designed by Simonson, Pollard & Steinam, it was conceived from the start as a cooperative — among the very first in the city — and purpose-built for artists who needed the one thing ordinary apartments could not provide: vast, north-lit double-height studios. It stands on one of the most distinctive blocks in Manhattan, the West 67th Street Artists' Colony, a short, storied row of studio buildings that drew painters, writers, and performers for generations.

The architecture announces the building's purpose. Its neo-Gothic limestone front — Gothic arches, pinnacles, bosses, and gables across a two-story base — is unlike anything in the conventional apartment-house stock around it. Behind that façade are the residences the building exists for: soaring studio apartments with oversize atelier windows, abundant light, and the kind of vertical scale that simply does not occur in standard floor plans. Just 34 homes occupy the fourteen stories.

For buyers, the appeal is singular and scarce. This is not a building you choose for amenity count — it is one you choose for the apartments themselves: double-height living spaces, working fireplaces, original detail, and a place in one of the most important early chapters of the cooperative idea in America, a half block from Central Park.

Architecture and unit composition

The exterior is the building's calling card: a richly modeled neo-Gothic limestone front, with a projecting entrance vestibule ornamented in Gothic arches, pinnacles, bosses, and gables — a deliberately artistic face for a building made by and for artists. The fourteen-story structure was engineered around its studios, which is why the fenestration reads differently from a typical apartment house.

Inside, the residences are the point. The signature homes are grand-scale studio apartments with double-height ceilings and tall atelier windows that flood the rooms with light, many retaining working fireplaces, original hardwood floors, and fin-de-siècle detail. Some configurations are duplexes, taking advantage of the building's lofted volumes. With only 34 residences across fourteen floors, layouts vary widely — a function of a building designed for individual artists rather than a repeated stack of identical units — and each home tends to have genuine character rather than uniform planning.

Building operations

For a 34-unit building, Central Park Studios runs as a true full-service cooperative: a 24-hour doorman, a live-in resident manager, private storage, building laundry, and a landscaped roof deck with sweeping Central Park and skyline views. The roof terrace is a meaningful amenity on this block — a private outdoor room above one of the city's quietest, most architecturally celebrated streets.

The building permits pets, and pied-à-terre purchases are considered on a case-by-case basis — a posture consistent with a small, owner-occupied cooperative that has long housed both full-time residents and the occasional in-town home. Day to day, the experience is that of an intimate, attentively staffed building where the studios — not a roster of facilities — are the draw.

Local Law 97

Carbon-penalty exposure
🟢
Strong — under cap in both periods
2024–2029 annual penalty
$0 (under cap)
2030–2034 annual penalty
$0 (under cap)
Per unit / month range
See full Local Law 97 analysis — emissions history, scenarios, methodology →

Facade safety — Local Law 11

Local Law 11 / FISP · last inspection 2020–25
Safe
What this means for you

The facade passed its last inspection with no required repairs — nothing to budget for here, and no facade assessment on the horizon for roughly five years.

Inspection history
2005–10
SWARMP
2010–15
SWARMP
2015–20
SWARMP
2020–25
Safe
2025–30
Due
Next report due
by Feb 2028
On record
$38,000 in filing penalties
The three grades, in buyer terms
SafeGood for ~5 years — no facade assessment on the horizon.
SWARMPSafe now, repairs due on a deadline — budget for the work or a possible assessment.
UnsafeActive hazard: sidewalk shed and repairs now. Expect disruption and an assessment.

QEWI = Qualified Exterior Wall Inspector — the licensed engineer the city requires to sign the report (the independent expert, not the managing agent). Source: NYC DOB facade filings (FISP) · The Roebling Research Library.

See the full facade history →

Recent sales

Recent transfers at this building, curated by The Roebling Team research desk. Apartment-level facts are independently verified before publishing; sale prices reflect the recorded transfer amount at the NYC Department of Finance.

DateUnitApartmentPricePPSFvs. Ask
Jan 27, 20267FE
3 BR · 1.5 BA
$2,750,000-6.8%
Oct 22, 20245MW
3 BR · 2 BA
$3,450,000-1.4%
Dec 12, 20235RE
1 BR · 1 BA
$1,200,000-20.0%
Jul 29, 20212FW
3 BR · 2.5 BA
$3,995,000+14.1%
Aug 3, 20203RE
1 BR · 1 BA
$999,000-13.1%
Oct 16, 20186RE
1 BR
$980,000-17.3%
Oct 6, 20165RE
1 BR · 1 BA · 625 sf
$1,050,000$1,680/sf-12.1%
Nov 17, 20141ME
2 BR
$2,600,000-5.5%

Market read. Most recent trades (2016) cleared a median $1,680/sf across 1 sale. Median listing discount 4.9% from the last ask — a recurring negotiation gap worth pricing into any offer or listing strategy.

The retrade record

Lines that have traded more than once in the public record — the building’s appreciation arc, apartment by apartment.

8RE+107%
$875,000 2005$1,810,000 2010
6RE+38%
$712,000 2012$980,000 2018
4RW+38%
$659,000 2004$909,000 2011
3RE+28%
$780,000 2008$664,450 2012$999,000 2020
5RE · 625 sf+14%
$1,050,000 ($1,680/sf) 2016$1,200,000 ($1,920/sf) 2023

Other recent transfers

DateUnitPrice
Jan 21, 20212R$1,360,000
Jun 16, 20148REW$2,395,000
Sep 21, 20124FE$4,335,000
Feb 22, 20123RE$664,450
Jan 13, 20114RW$909,000
Jul 27, 20108RE$1,810,000
View all 30 recorded transfers, sortable

Full closing history with price-per-square-foot over time, the complete retrade record, and every line that has traded.

Sales sourced from NYC Department of Finance recorded transfers (BBL 1-01120-0022) and verified listing data. Apartment-level facts (line, condition, asking-price context) curated and cross-verified by The Roebling Team research desk. Not all transactions cross-verify with ACRIS records — sponsor and LLC purchases sometimes record at stipulated values rather than market price; square footage on co-ops is not officially recorded, figures shown are approximate.

What to know if you’re buying

This is a cooperative, so plan on a full board package, financial disclosure, and an interview. What you are buying is one of a very limited number of true double-height studio homes in Manhattan, inside a landmarked historic district — inventory that does not come to market often and that rewards patience.

Evaluate each apartment individually: ceiling height, window orientation, the condition of original detail, and whether the layout is a single-level studio or a duplex. The building permits pets and considers pied-à-terre use case by case, which broadens its suitability. The location is exceptional — a half block from Central Park, steps from Lincoln Center and the 1 train at 66th Street, and on a block prized precisely for its quiet and its architecture. For a buyer who values character, light, and provenance over a modern amenity suite, there are few addresses in the city like it.

What to know if you’re selling

Sell the story and the space. The building's status as one of New York's first cooperatives, its Artists' Colony pedigree, its landmark neo-Gothic façade, and — above all — the double-height studio interiors are differentiators no ordinary co-op can claim. Marketing should lead with the volume and light of the apartment, ideally photographed to convey the vertical scale that floor plans flatten.

Comparable analysis belongs against the other studio buildings of the 67th Street colony and the small pool of double-height pre-war homes near the park, not against conventional one- and two-bedroom co-ops. Scarcity works in the seller's favor: with so few of these residences in existence and turnover low, a well-presented home reaches a dedicated, design-literate buyer pool. The board process is standard for a small full-service co-op; a qualified, owner-occupant-minded buyer clears it cleanly.

Comparable buildings

If you're considering 15 West 67th Street, also evaluate these nearby Upper West Side and Artists' Colony cooperatives:

The Roebling Team at Central Park Studios

The Roebling Team at Compass specializes in the Upper West Side, Central Park West, and the rare studio cooperatives of the West 67th Street colony. We publish this profile because buildings this distinctive demand specialist representation — pricing a double-height studio, presenting a landmark home, and guiding a board package all require building-specific judgment.

If you're considering a purchase or sale at Central Park Studios, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point.

Considering a move at Central Park Studios?

Get the full picture on this building.

Current availability including off-market, the full comp set, and the board & financials read most listings don't show.

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Corey Cohen, Principal · The Roebling Team at Compass
646.939.7375 · c.cohen@compass.com