Cooperative · 1965
333 East 14th Street
333 East 14th Street, New York, NY 10003
Buildings·Gramercy·Cooperative

333 East 14th Street

333 East 14th Street, New York, NY 10003

CorridorGramercy
At a glance
Year built
1965
Type
Cooperative
Units
207
Floors
17
Landmark
No
Pets
Pet-friendly
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.

1BR median
$768K
Recent range
$530K – $2.2M
Listing discount
1.8%
Recorded transfers
146

333 East 14th Street, the cooperative held by Stuyvesant Owners, Inc., is a 17-story postwar apartment house built in 1965 on East 14th Street between First and Second Avenues, at the border where the East Village meets Stuyvesant Town. It converted to cooperative ownership in the late 1980s. Across roughly 207 apartments, it is one of the larger full-floor-plan postwar co-ops at this end of the neighborhood — the kind of dependable, mid-century building that supplies the East Village's everyday ownership inventory.

For buyers, the appeal is location and value. The building sits at a genuine crossroads — Union Square and its transit hub a short walk west, the Lower East Side and the East Village's restaurant-and-nightlife corridors close at hand, and the green and quiet of Stuyvesant Town's superblock directly adjacent. The postwar plans tend to be efficient and well-proportioned, with a number of larger studios, one-bedrooms, and combined layouts, and the co-op's accessible price points and pet-friendly posture broaden the buyer pool.

The board posture is the postwar-co-op standard — a board review process and a restricted sublet policy — and those terms shape both qualification and resale. They are worth confirming early.

Architecture and unit composition

333 East 14th Street is a 17-story white-brick postwar tower in the restrained mid-1960s idiom — efficient, full-height, and built for service rather than ornament. The building was renovated over the decades, and the upper floors carry the longer light and the open exposures that the surrounding lower-rise East Village stock cannot match.

The unit mix favors large studios and one-bedrooms, with a number of combined and larger layouts. Floor, exposure, and renovation state are the primary value drivers — the higher floors capture the best light and the longest views toward the East Village, Stuyvesant Town's greenery, and the Midtown skyline beyond.

Building operations

333 East 14th Street operates as a postwar cooperative under Stuyvesant Owners, Inc. A live-in superintendent is on site, with part-time doorman coverage, on-site laundry, bike storage, and third-party parking available nearby.

The board's policies follow the postwar co-op pattern. The building is pet-friendly. Subletting is permitted on a restricted basis, subject to board approval. The board reviews financials and the purchase application in the standard co-op manner; the financing cap, the precise sublet terms, and any flip tax are confirmed with the managing agent during contract review.

Recent sales

Because 333 East 14th Street spans roughly 207 apartments, turnover is regular and the building offers a useful run of comparables across its studio-and-one-bedroom mix. Pricing tracks the postwar East Village co-op market, read on a price-per-room basis against comparable lines in the building and the surrounding postwar stock, with floor, exposure, and renovation state the decisive variables. Higher-floor apartments with open exposures command the premium; lower and interior lines anchor the accessible end. The location at the Union Square / Stuyvesant Town crossroads and the pet-friendly posture tend to broaden the buyer pool; the board process and sublet restrictions belong in any pricing read.

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
Feb 20, 20269G
1 BA
$598,000-8.0%
Aug 25, 202510D
1 BR · 1 BA
$885,000-1.6%
Jul 1, 20256B
1 BR · 1 BA · 800 sf
$785,000$981/sf-1.8%
Dec 27, 20245E
1 BR · 1 BA
$783,000-2.0%
Oct 1, 20245N
1 BA
$530,000+1.0%
Sep 26, 202414KLM
4 BR · 3 BA · 2,000 sf
$2,200,000$1,100/sf-2.2%
Jul 30, 20242K
1 BR · 1 BA
$760,000+4.8%
Jul 10, 20245D
1 BR · 1 BA
$730,000-1.1%

Market read. Most recent trades (2025) cleared a median $967/sf across 1 sale. Median listing discount 1.9% 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.

10C · 750 sf+47%
$560,000 ($747/sf) 2013$825,000 ($1,100/sf) 2015
3D+40%
$583,000 2004$732,500 2007$657,500 2011$815,000 2019
10D · 810 sf+35%
$655,000 ($809/sf) 2008$825,000 ($1,019/sf) 2015$890,000 ($1,099/sf) 2022$885,000 ($1,093/sf) 2025
15D+30%
$670,213 2012$870,000 2021
4J · 850 sf+26%
$645,000 ($759/sf) 2007$810,000 ($953/sf) 2014

Other recent transfers

DateUnitPrice
Apr 30, 202615J$830,000
Feb 13, 20264K$750,000
Apr 17, 20254C$725,000
Jan 25, 20232E$700,000
Aug 29, 202210A$535,000
Jun 9, 202216N$590,000
View all 146 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 1-00921-0019) 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

The location-plus-value case is the core. A full-floor-plan postwar co-op at the East Village / Stuyvesant Town border puts Union Square, the Lower East Side, and the superblock's green all within easy reach at accessible price points.

Understand the board posture. This is a postwar cooperative with a board review process and restricted subletting. Confirm the financing cap and the current sublet terms with the managing agent before you commit.

Floor and exposure drive value. The upper floors carry the light and the views; benchmark each apartment against the best comparable lines in the building.

Confirm the specifics during contract review. The building is pet-friendly, but verify the pet rules, the exact sublet policy, and any flip tax with the managing agent.

What to know if you’re selling

Lead with the location and the layouts. The Union Square / Stuyvesant Town crossroads, the efficient postwar plans, and the pet-friendly posture are the rational hooks that widen the qualified-buyer field in this price tier.

Position each apartment on exposure and condition. Higher-floor open-exposure homes should be benchmarked against the best comparable lines in the building and the surrounding East Village co-op stock; renovated kitchens and baths command clear premiums.

Set expectations on the board process. The sublet restrictions and board review shape the buyer pool; pricing and marketing should account for them. Closing timelines are co-op standard — six to ten weeks from contract, with board approval the gating step.

Comparable buildings

If you're weighing 333 East 14th Street, these nearby East Village and Gramercy-area co-ops and condos make a useful comparison set:

The Roebling Team at 333 East 14th Street

The Roebling Team at Compass specializes in the East Village, Gramercy, and the broader downtown co-op and condo market. We publish this profile because buyers and sellers evaluating a postwar East Village cooperative deserve building-specific intelligence — the location, the service model, the board posture, and where individual lines and exposures sit in value.

If you're considering a purchase or sale at 333 East 14th Street, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point.

The neighborhood

For the full corridor — architecture, schools, transit, and pricing across Gramercy — read The Roebling Team Guide to Gramercy.

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