- Type
- Condominium
- Landmark
- No
Every recorded sale at this building, 2007–2026
Price-per-square-foot over time, the line- and floor-premium curves, and every recorded sale.
- Median $/sf
- $1,939
- Listing discount
- 3.2%
- Recorded sales
- 531
- On record
- 2007–2026
200 Chambers Street is one of the defining full-amenity condominiums of western Tribeca — a 30-story tower completed in 2007 by Jack Resnick & Sons and designed by Costas Kondylis, who reworked an earlier, taller scheme for the site into the building that stands today. Its position is its first argument: it sits at the western edge of Tribeca where the neighborhood meets the Hudson, a block from Washington Market Park and the Tribeca riverfront, and directly adjacent to the cobbled, low-rise streetscape of the Tribeca West Historic District without being constrained by it.
The building's second argument is its amenity package, which is genuinely deep for downtown — a skylit indoor pool, a landscaped roof terrace, a fitness center, a children's playroom, a residents' lounge, a planted courtyard with a water feature, and an on-site garage with direct elevator access to the lobby. That combination of resort-grade amenity and a top-rated school zone has made 200 Chambers a long-running first choice for downtown families who want condominium ownership, a doorman, and a pool without leaving the cobblestones.
For buyers, the appeal is a turnkey, professionally managed condominium in one of Manhattan's most consistently desirable neighborhoods — with the financing latitude and ownership flexibility a condominium provides, in a building large enough to sustain liquidity and a full service staff.
Architecture and unit composition
Kondylis designed 200 Chambers as a contemporary masonry-and-glass tower scaled to its waterfront-edge site, with floor-to-ceiling windows pulling in light and river-and-city views across its upper floors. The building holds roughly 252 residences across 30 stories.
The unit mix runs from studios through three- and four-bedroom homes, with sizes spanning from compact one-bedrooms of around 600 square feet to family-scaled layouts above 2,000 square feet. Interiors were delivered with nine-foot ceilings, central air conditioning, open kitchens, and in-unit Bosch washer-dryers — the modern-condominium specification that distinguishes the building from Tribeca's older loft-conversion stock. Higher floors capture Hudson River and downtown skyline exposures; lower and courtyard-facing homes trade the view for quiet and value.
Building operations
200 Chambers operates as a full-service condominium with a 24-hour attended lobby. The amenity program is the operational centerpiece: a bright skylit swimming pool, a fitness center, a residents' lounge, a children's playroom, a roughly 5,000-square-foot landscaped roof terrace, and a ground-level courtyard with a lit water feature. The on-site garage — with direct elevator access to the lobby — and bicycle storage complete the set. For a building of this size, the amenity depth is the durable differentiator and the reason the building retains its standing among downtown families and amenity-minded buyers.
Local Law 97
- 2024–2029 annual penalty
- $0 (under cap)
- 2030–2034 annual penalty
- $108,003/yr
- Per unit / month range
- $0 – $36
Facade safety — Local Law 11
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.
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 closings 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.
| Date | Unit | Apartment | Price | PPSF | vs. Ask |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 15, 2026 | 14G | 2 BR · 2.5 BA · 1,345 sf | $2,700,000 | $2,007/sf | -3.4% |
| Feb 24, 2026 | PHA | 3 BR · 3.5 BA · 2,201 sf | $5,350,000 | $2,431/sf | off-mkt |
| Oct 23, 2025 | 7AI | 4 BR · 3.5 BA · 2,800 sf | $5,950,000 | $2,125/sf | -0.8% |
| Aug 27, 2025 | 4D | 2 BR · 2 BA · 1,214 sf | $2,250,000 | $1,853/sf | -5.5% |
| Aug 7, 2025 | 17G | 2 BR · 2.5 BA · 1,345 sf | $2,436,500 | $1,812/sf | off-mkt |
| Jun 16, 2025 | 7U | 1 BR · 1 BA · 715 sf | $1,300,000 | $1,818/sf | -1.9% |
| Jun 3, 2025 | 24CDE | 5 BR · 4.5 BA · 4,650 sf | $8,650,000 | $1,860/sf | -3.8% |
| May 28, 2025 | 6AI | 4 BR · 4 BA · 2,823 sf | $5,900,000 | $2,090/sf | -1.6% |
Market read. Most recent trades (2026) cleared a median $1,939/sf across 1 sale. Median listing discount 3.2% 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.
Other recent transfers
| Date | Unit | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Feb 17, 2009 | 10B | $1,690,000 |
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 1-00142-7502) 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 from recorded condo declarations and offering plans.
What to know if you’re buying
The condominium structure is the starting point: purchases clear a right-of-first-refusal rather than a co-op board package and interview, financing is not capped by a co-op board, and pied-à-terre, investor, LLC, and out-of-state purchases are customary. For buyers who want ownership flexibility and a faster path to closing, that is the threshold appeal.
Diligence here centers on the amenity-heavy operating model. Common charges reflect the pool, the staff, and the extensive shared spaces — confirm the carrying cost against your use of those amenities, and review the building's reserves and capital posture, which matter for a 2007 tower now nearly two decades into its service life. Then weigh the specifics of your target home: floor and exposure drive both price and quality of life, and a river-view high floor is a materially different asset than a courtyard-facing lower unit. School-zone buyers should confirm current boundaries, since that draw is a meaningful part of the building's resale strength.
What to know if you’re selling
The amenity package and the family-friendly, full-service profile are the marketing core — a skylit pool, a roof terrace, a playroom, and on-site parking are a combination few downtown condominiums match, and they should lead the story. A river-view high-floor home markets on its exposure and scale; a courtyard or lower-floor home markets on value and quiet within a premium building.
Closing mechanics are condominium-standard — a sale clears through the right-of-first-refusal rather than a co-op approval process, a faster, more predictable path that appeals to the financing-flexible buyer this building attracts. With a large, liquid unit count, comparable analysis is well-supported by in-building trades; the seller's task is to position floor, view, and condition accurately against that recent set and against western Tribeca's competing full-amenity condominiums.
Comparable buildings
Buyers considering 200 Chambers Street should also evaluate Tribeca and Battery Park City's full-amenity condominium stock:
- 101 Warren Street — a major full-service Tribeca condominium nearby
- 111 Murray Street — a new-development Tribeca tower with deep amenities
- 200 Rector Place — a waterfront condominium in adjacent Battery Park City
- 300 Rector Place — a Battery Park City condominium with river exposure
- 100 Hudson Street — a Tribeca loft-conversion condominium
- 134 Duane Street — a boutique Tribeca condominium for contrast
The Roebling Team at 200 Chambers Street
The Roebling Team at Compass works Tribeca and the downtown condominium market — the full-amenity towers, the loft conversions, and the waterfront edge where Tribeca meets Battery Park City. We publish this profile because buyers and sellers at an amenity-rich family building like 200 Chambers deserve specific intelligence: how the amenity load prices into carrying costs, which exposures hold value, and where the building sits against its downtown peers.
If you're weighing a purchase or sale at 200 Chambers Street, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point.
Get the full picture on this building.
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