Condominium
200 Chambers Street
200 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007
Buildings·Condominium

200 Chambers Street

200 Chambers Street, New York, NY 10007

At a glance
Type
Condominium
Landmark
No
The Data Room

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

Carbon-penalty exposure
🟡
Moderate — manageable today, 2030 cliff likely
2024–2029 annual penalty
$0 (under cap)
2030–2034 annual penalty
$108,003/yr
Per unit / month range
$0 – $36
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
2010–15
SWARMP
2015–20
Safe
2020–25
Safe
2025–30
Due
Next report due
by Feb 2029
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 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.

DateUnitApartmentPricePPSFvs. Ask
Jun 15, 202614G
2 BR · 2.5 BA · 1,345 sf
$2,700,000$2,007/sf-3.4%
Feb 24, 2026PHA
3 BR · 3.5 BA · 2,201 sf
$5,350,000$2,431/sfoff-mkt
Oct 23, 20257AI
4 BR · 3.5 BA · 2,800 sf
$5,950,000$2,125/sf-0.8%
Aug 27, 20254D
2 BR · 2 BA · 1,214 sf
$2,250,000$1,853/sf-5.5%
Aug 7, 202517G
2 BR · 2.5 BA · 1,345 sf
$2,436,500$1,812/sfoff-mkt
Jun 16, 20257U
1 BR · 1 BA · 715 sf
$1,300,000$1,818/sf-1.9%
Jun 3, 202524CDE
5 BR · 4.5 BA · 4,650 sf
$8,650,000$1,860/sf-3.8%
May 28, 20256AI
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.

6A · 2,224 sf+133%
$2,459,074 ($1,106/sf) 2007$5,726,000 ($2,575/sf) 2017
11E · 868 sf+115%
$896,060 ($1,032/sf) 2007$1,240,000 ($1,429/sf) 2008$1,240,000 ($1,429/sf) 2010$1,925,000 ($2,218/sf) 2016
4H · 1,265 sf+99%
$1,288,086 ($1,018/sf) 2007$1,529,500 ($1,209/sf) 2010$2,200,000 ($1,739/sf) 2014$2,558,500 ($2,023/sf) 2017
5F · 752 sf+95%
$743,323 ($988/sf) 2007$970,000 ($1,290/sf) 2012$1,450,000 ($1,928/sf) 2018
17F · 752 sf+90%
$870,604 ($1,158/sf) 2007$1,650,000 ($2,194/sf) 2018

Other recent transfers

DateUnitPrice
Feb 17, 200910B$1,690,000
View all 531 recorded sales, 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 1-00142-7502) 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:

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.

Considering a move at 200 Chambers Street?

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