- Year built
- 1963
- Type
- Cooperative
- Units
- 191
- Pets
- Pets are welcome with board approval
75 East End Avenue is a 1963 full-service cooperative in the East End Avenue enclave — the quiet, sedate eastern edge of Yorkville that fronts Carl Schurz Park and the East River. The avenue itself is one of Manhattan's most insulated residential streets: low-traffic, tree-lined, and bracketed by parkland, with Gracie Mansion and the river esplanade a short walk north. The building sits mid-block between 82nd and 83rd Streets, putting open green space and river breezes directly at the door.
The setting is the building's defining appeal. East End Avenue trades the density and bustle of the central Upper East Side for a calmer, almost residential-suburban register within the city — a trade-off that a particular kind of buyer values highly. And the everyday infrastructure is close: the Second Avenue subway entrance at East 83rd Street is roughly two blocks west, with the restaurants and markets of York and Second Avenues, and Carl Schurz Park's playgrounds and promenade, all within a few minutes' walk.
For buyers, 75 East End delivers that location with a genuinely complete operation: a 24-hour doorman and a live-in resident manager, a fitness center, a landscaped roof deck, an attended garage, central laundry, a bike room, and storage — a deeper amenity package than many of its 1960s peers, at per-square-foot pricing well below the marquee Fifth and Park Avenue tiers.
Architecture and unit composition
The roughly 191 apartments span 20 stories in a postwar floor-plan vocabulary, with corner windows at the building's edges and the large picture windows characteristic of 1963 construction admitting generous light. The architectural envelope is restrained — the building's appeal rests on its location and amenity package rather than ornamental detail — but the layouts are practical and the light is a genuine asset.
Higher floors and corner lines capture the longest park and river views; eastern exposures look across Carl Schurz Park to the East River. Configurations run from one- and two-bedroom homes to larger family layouts, with renovation status varying apartment to apartment.
Building operations
75 East End Avenue operates as a full-service cooperative with a 24-hour doorman, a live-in resident manager, a fitness center, a landscaped roof deck offering skyline and river views, an attended garage with elevator access, central laundry, a bike room, and resident storage. The roughly 191-unit scale supports that robust amenity set and the operating stability of a well-run postwar cooperative. Pets are welcome subject to board approval.
Local Law 97
- 2024–2029 annual penalty
- $0 (under cap)
- 2030–2034 annual penalty
- $26,832/yr
- Per unit / month range
- $0 – $12
Facade safety — Local Law 11
Safe to live in today — but the last inspection flagged repairs that are due on a deadline, so facade work and its cost are coming. Whether that’s a real concern depends on the scope, the timing, and how the building plans to pay for it — reserves or an assessment — which is exactly what we’d dig into for you.
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
Sales context at 75 East End Avenue:
- Turnover is steady given the ~191-unit scale — a building of this size typically supports a consistent annual volume of trades across its unit mix.
- Pricing reflects the East End Avenue band: park- and river-facing and higher-floor apartments command the strongest premiums, with interior and lower-floor configurations at more accessible points.
- Park/river exposure, floor altitude, corner position, and renovation condition are the primary drivers of apartment-level value.
For the live, address-specific transaction record tied to this building's tax lot, see the auto-generated sales feed for 75 East End Avenue.
What to know if you’re buying
The East End enclave is the value story. A quiet premier address steps from Carl Schurz Park and the river, with full-service amenities, is the central case — at a basis well below the central UES avenues.
The amenity package is unusually deep for the era. A 24-hour doorman, fitness center, roof deck, attended garage, bike room, and storage distinguish this building from many 1960s peers; weigh them in your comparison.
Pets are welcome. The building permits pets with board approval — a meaningful factor for many UES buyers.
Exposure drives value. Park- and river-facing and corner lines command premiums; the eastern exposure over Carl Schurz Park carries strong view permanence.
What to know if you’re selling
Lead with the enclave and the amenities. The quiet East End address, park-and-river proximity, and the full amenity package — doorman, gym, roof deck, garage — are the marketing anchors.
Price against East End Avenue inventory. Comparable analysis should draw from the enclave's cooperatives, with adjustments for exposure, floor, and corner position.
Closing timelines are co-op standard. Plan on roughly 6–8 weeks from contract signing to closing, with board approval the gating step.
Comparable buildings
If you're considering 75 East End Avenue, also evaluate:
- 25 East End Avenue — nearby East End Avenue cooperative
- 40 East End Avenue — East End enclave peer
- 45 East End Avenue — nearby East End cooperative
- 120 East End Avenue — pre-war East End cooperative nearby
- 200 East End Avenue — large East End Avenue cooperative
The Roebling Team at 75 East End Avenue
The Roebling Team at Compass specializes in Central Park West, the Upper East Side, and the broader Park-facing Manhattan market. We publish this building profile because East End Avenue buyers and sellers deserve building-specific intelligence — architecture, amenities, board culture, and pricing at the apartment level — not generic market commentary.
If you're considering a purchase or sale at 75 East End Avenue, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point.
Get the full picture on this building.
Current availability including off-market, the full comp set, and the board & financials read most listings don't show.