- Year built
- 1893
- Type
- Condominium
- Units
- 20
- Floors
- 5
- Landmark
- Designated
- Pets
- Pet-friendly (dogs and cats); confirm specifics at offer stage
- Subletting
- Permitted under the condominium bylaws
- Pied-à-terre
- Allowed
Every recorded sale at this building, 2003–2023
Price-per-square-foot over time, the line- and floor-premium curves, and every recorded sale.
- Median $/sf
- $1,852
- Listing discount
- -3.0%
- Recorded sales
- 18
- On record
- 2003–2023
67 Hudson Street is one of Tribeca's most recognizable buildings — the Renaissance Revival loft that Cady, Berg & See designed in 1893–1894 as a facility of New York Hospital, the city's oldest hospital. Its most photographed feature is not on Hudson Street at all: the third-story Staple Street skybridge, an enclosed brick-and-copper bridge that once let hospital staff move between wards and today ranks among the most-photographed spots in downtown Manhattan. Converted to residential use in the mid-1980s, the building carries that institutional grandeur into a small condominium of twenty loft residences.
For buyers, 67 Hudson offers something the newer glass towers cannot: authentic architectural provenance on a cobblestoned Tribeca corner, inside a boutique, deeded condominium. Ownership is by deed — no board interview, standard financing, and flexibility for pied-à-terre and investment use — and the building sits at the historic and photogenic heart of the district, steps from The Odeon, Locanda Verde, and Hudson River Park.
Building operations
For a five-story boutique building, 67 Hudson offers a fuller service package than its size suggests: doorman coverage, a common roof deck, bike storage, and building laundry, with in-unit washer/dryers permitted in the residences. Buyers should confirm current doorman hours and building services at the offer stage, since coverage in a small building can be tailored over time. The building is pet-friendly for dogs and cats.
Ownership is by deed. There is no board-approval interview to clear, financing is available through standard condominium lenders, and the bylaws permit pied-à-terre use, investment ownership, and subletting. As with any condominium, confirm the specifics of any transfer fee, sublet policy, and pet rules against the current governing documents before you sign.
Recent sales
67 Hudson Street is read on a per-square-foot basis, consistent with the Tribeca loft market. Value here rewards the features that define the building: ceiling height, light, corner and skybridge exposures, and the irreplaceable provenance of a landmarked former hospital. The building is boutique — twenty residences — so resale is genuinely thin, and the associated Staple Street compound has traded at the very top of the district's range in recent years, underscoring how much scarcity and pedigree command here. Because so few homes change hands, per-unit underwriting matters more than any building-wide average: the specific layout, floor, exposure, outdoor access, and renovation quality drive price, and a recent comparable trade of a similar footprint is the truest guide.
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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 13, 2023 | 5C | 1 BR · 1 BA · 648 sf | $1,200,000 | $1,852/sf | +2.1% |
| Jun 16, 2023 | PH | 2 BR · 1 BA | $3,137,950 | +8.4% | |
| Aug 25, 2022 | 3A | 935 sf | $4,000,000 | $4,278/sf | off-mkt |
| Aug 11, 2022 | 5B | 935 sf | $1,350,000 | $1,444/sf | off-mkt |
| Mar 14, 2022 | 1B | 2 BR · 1 BA · 992 sf | $1,215,000 | $1,225/sf | off-mkt |
| Jan 15, 2021 | 4C | 1 BR · 1 BA | $880,000 | +1.7% | |
| Feb 15, 2019 | 2B | 3 BR · 1 BA · 1,144 sf | $1,658,000 | $1,449/sf | +3.9% |
| Jun 4, 2015 | 1B | 2 BR · 992 sf | $1,250,000 | $1,260/sf | +13.6% |
Market read. Most recent trades (2023) cleared a median $1,852/sf across 1 sale. Median listing discount -3.0% over ask.
The retrade record
Lines that have traded more than once in the public record — the building’s appreciation arc, apartment by apartment.
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 1-00180-7502) 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 path is clean — deeded ownership, standard financing, no board interview, and bylaws that welcome pied-à-terre and investment buyers. What you are really buying is architecture and location: a landmarked Renaissance Revival loft on Tribeca's most photographed corner, in a building where homes rarely come to market. Be ready to move when the right layout appears, and underwrite the specific apartment — ceiling height, exposures, corner or skybridge outlook, and the condition of the renovation will determine value far more than any headline figure.
What to know if you’re selling
Few Tribeca buildings tell a better story, and that story is your leading asset — Cady, Berg & See, the former New York Hospital, the Staple Street skybridge. But the price is set apartment by apartment. Position your home against the most recent comparable trade of a similar footprint, and lead with what loft buyers pay for here: ceiling height, light, corner or skybridge exposure, and finish quality. In a thin-resale, landmarked building, precise pricing and strong presentation meet a small but committed pool of buyers who want exactly this address.
Comparable buildings
If you're considering 67 Hudson Street, also look at these Tribeca boutique buildings:
- 47 Hudson Street — boutique Hudson Street loft condominium nearby
- 55 Hudson Street — small-scale Tribeca loft building on the same corridor
- 16 Hudson Street — landmarked Tribeca loft conversion nearby
- 84 Hudson Street — Tribeca loft condominium a short walk away
- 134 Duane Street — landmarked Tribeca loft conversion nearby
- 100 Hudson Street — full-service Tribeca loft condominium
The Roebling Team at The White House Condominium
The Roebling Team at Compass works Tribeca block by block, and 67 Hudson Street is precisely the kind of landmarked, thin-resale address where local knowledge and accurate per-unit underwriting decide the outcome. If you're weighing a purchase or sale at 67 Hudson Street, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point.
The neighborhood
For the full corridor — architecture, schools, transit, and pricing across Tribeca — read The Roebling Team Guide to Tribeca.
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