Cooperative · 1907
The Riverdale
67 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10024
Buildings·Cooperative

67 Riverside Drive

67 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10024

At a glance
Year built
1907
Type
Cooperative
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.

4BR+ · combo median
$3.5M
Recent range
$2.9M – $3.5M
Listing discount
1.7%
Recorded transfers
29

The Riverdale at 67 Riverside Drive is a jewel-box Beaux-Arts cooperative on one of the most coveted stretches of the Upper West Side — the Riverside Drive blocks that look directly over Riverside Park and the Hudson. Designed in 1907 by George F. Pelham, one of the most prolific architects of New York's pre-war apartment era, it is a nine-story masterpiece of the Beaux-Arts manner: gray brick and limestone enriched with carved garlands, swags, and wrought-iron balconies, the ornament that gave the Drive its turn-of-the-century grandeur.

What sets the building apart is its intimacy and its outlook. It was planned with just four apartments per floor — some since combined into larger homes — and many residences face the park and river. The result is a boutique cooperative of roughly 37 homes where light, air, and one of the great residential views in Manhattan are the defining features. The building converted to cooperative ownership in 1979.

For buyers, the appeal is specific: a genuine Pelham Beaux-Arts building, generously scaled pre-war apartments, and direct Riverside Park frontage — a combination that the Drive offers and almost nowhere else does.

Architecture and unit composition

The Riverdale is a confident example of Pelham's Beaux-Arts work: a nine-story gray-brick-and-limestone front articulated with garlands, swags, and wrought-iron balconies, composed for the broad, planted boulevard it faces. The Drive frontage and the building's scale were designed to take maximum advantage of the park-and-river outlook, and the apartments reflect that orientation.

The original layout — four apartments per floor — produced large, gracious homes; over the years some have been combined, leaving a varied mix of substantial residences rather than a uniform stack. Many homes face Riverside Park and the Hudson, with the light and open views that define the corridor's value, and many retain pre-war detail — high ceilings, well-proportioned rooms, and period millwork. With around 37 residences across nine floors, the building has the settled, low-density feel that buyers on the Drive seek.

Building operations

The Riverdale is a service-conscious boutique cooperative rather than a full-staff amenity building, and its profile is honest about what that means. There is a long-tenured live-in superintendent — by all accounts attentive, and on-site for more than three decades — who accepts packages and keeps the building well maintained; there is, however, no doorman, and the entrance is approached by a flight of steps. Buyers who prioritize a 24-hour attended lobby should weigh that; buyers who value the character, scale, and view of a true pre-war Drive building generally see the trade-off as worthwhile.

The amenity package is well suited to the building's size: a newer landscaped roof garden with expansive Hudson River and Riverside Park views, private storage (with a storage cage that transfers with the sale of an apartment), bike storage, a common laundry room, and a video security system. The roof garden is a genuine asset — a private, planted outdoor room above the park. The building permits pets, consistent with its long-standing owner-occupied character.

Local Law 97

Carbon-penalty exposure
🟡
Moderate — manageable today, 2030 cliff likely
2024–2029 annual penalty
$0 (under cap)
2030–2034 annual penalty
$17,841/yr
Per unit / month range
$0 – $40
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
Safe
2010–15
SWARMP
2015–20
SWARMP
2020–25
Safe
2025–30
Due
Next report due
by Feb 2027
On record
$1,750 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
Feb 4, 20262AD
6 BR · 3 BA · 3,060 sf
$2,900,000$948/sf+3.6%
Sep 29, 20251A
3 BR · 2 BA · 2,360 sf
$2,950,000$1,250/sf-1.7%
May 7, 2025PARLOR
2 BR · 1.5 BA
$1,390,000-2.5%
Mar 31, 20255A
4 BR · 3.5 BA · 2,757 sf
$3,500,000$1,269/sf-29.3%
Jul 11, 20224C
3 BR · 1 BA
$1,320,000+1.9%
Jul 6, 20225C
1 BR · 1 BA · 900 sf
$1,300,000$1,444/sfoff-mkt
Jun 8, 20226C
2 BR · 1 BA
$1,406,000+8.6%
Oct 29, 20219B
3 BR · 2 BA
$2,995,000-6.4%

Market read. Most recent trades (2026) cleared a median $948/sf across 1 sale. Median listing discount -1.9% over ask.

The retrade record

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

5C · 900 sf+53%
$850,000 ($944/sf) 2021$1,300,000 ($1,444/sf) 2022
1C+48%
$975,000 2013$1,440,000 2022
8C · 1,150 sf+47%
$996,000 ($866/sf) 2008$1,460,000 ($1,270/sf) 2015
6C+43%
$980,000 2005$1,150,000 2013$1,406,000 2022
9A+24%
$1,750,000 2004$2,165,000 2010

Other recent transfers

DateUnitPrice
Aug 25, 20221C$1,440,000
Mar 29, 20183C$1,279,927
Mar 29, 20183B$2,895,073
Aug 15, 20179D$965,000
Feb 10, 20174C$1,295,000
Sep 25, 20131C$975,000
View all 29 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 1-01186-0095) 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. Underwrite the building for exactly what it is: a boutique, character-rich Beaux-Arts co-op with a live-in super and a roof garden, but no doorman and a stepped entry. That structure keeps carrying costs lean while still delivering attentive service — an appealing equation for many pre-war buyers.

Prioritize the apartment's exposure: a park-and-river-facing home here is the building's best expression, with light and views that anchor long-term value. The location is among the most desirable on the West Side — directly on Riverside Park, a short walk to the 79th Street crosstown service, the 1 train at 79th Street, and the Broadway retail-and-restaurant corridor. For a buyer who wants authentic pre-war Drive living with a private roof garden and pets welcome, this is precisely the kind of address that delivers it.

What to know if you’re selling

Lead with the architecture and the view. A George F. Pelham Beaux-Arts building on Riverside Drive, with a landscaped roof garden and park-and-river outlooks, is a marketing story few buildings can match — and a well-renovated, park-facing home that preserves its pre-war detail commands a premium. Photograph the view and the roof garden; they are the building's signature assets.

Price to the building's true peer set: the boutique pre-war cooperatives on the Riverside Drive blocks facing the park, not the large full-service avenue towers. Be candid about the no-doorman, stepped-entry profile — the right buyer values the trade-off, and framing it honestly attracts a well-matched audience rather than wasting time with mismatched expectations. The board process is standard for a small co-op; a qualified, owner-occupant-minded buyer clears it cleanly.

Comparable buildings

If you're evaluating 67 Riverside Drive, also look at these pre-war Riverside Drive and Upper West Side cooperatives nearby:

The Roebling Team at The Riverdale

The Roebling Team at Compass specializes in the Upper West Side's pre-war cooperatives — the Riverside Drive, West End Avenue, and Central Park West blocks. We publish this profile because buyers and sellers in boutique Drive co-ops deserve building-specific intelligence: the architecture, the view, the amenity profile, the staffing reality, and where pricing actually sits within the corridor.

If you're weighing a purchase or sale at The Riverdale, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point.

Considering a move at The Riverdale?

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