The Turin (333 Central Park West)
333 Central Park West, New York, NY 10025
- Year built
- 1909
- Type
- Cooperative
- Units
- 69
- Floors
- 12
- Landmark
- Designated
- Subletting
- Permitted with board approval
Every recorded sale at this building, 2003–2025
Bedroom-by-bedroom medians, the full transfer record, and how units trade against ask.
- 3BR median
- $2.4M
- Recent range
- $2.1M – $3.8M
- Listing discount
- 4.7%
- Recorded transfers
- 54
The Turin at 333 Central Park West is among the oldest tier-one residential cooperatives on the upper end of Central Park West — a 1909 Italian Renaissance Revival composition that predates most of CPW's pre-war landmarks. Built when the upper stretch of CPW was still establishing its residential character, the Turin represents the early luxury apartment-house tradition pushed north of 90th Street, in a corridor that the Art Deco landmarks of the late 1920s and 1930s (the Eldorado, the Ardsley, 336 CPW) would later define more dramatically.
The building's most distinctive interior signature is its long entrance galleries — running from 8 to 35 feet — that produce gracious approach sequences to the apartments' primary living spaces. The extended galleries serve a practical purpose beyond their architectural effect: they offer substantial uninterrupted wall space that has historically appealed to art-collecting residents. In a market where wall space is genuinely scarce (Manhattan apartments typically maximize windows and minimize wall surface), the Turin's gallery configurations are a meaningful selling point for collectors and serious art-display owners.
At 12 stories and 72 apartments, the Turin operates at a scale between the smallest tier-one CPW landmarks (the Brentmore, Kenilworth, St. Urban) and the larger pre-wars further south. Its upper-CPW positioning — between 93rd and 94th — places it in the most residential stretch of the avenue, with daily-life conveniences distinct from the central CPW activity around the Museum of Natural History or the southern Lincoln Center corridor.
For buyers who want pre-war Italian Renaissance Revival architecture, generous wall space for art display, upper-CPW positioning, and a full amenity package (fitness center, children's playroom — uncommon in pre-war Manhattan buildings of this era), the Turin is a thoughtful choice.
Architecture and unit composition
The Turin's 72 apartments span one- to four-bedroom configurations. Pre-war signatures throughout: 10-foot ceilings in primary rooms, formal entry galleries (the building's distinctive feature, ranging from 8 to 35 feet long), library-living combinations, kitchens that have been renovated multiple times across the building's 116-year history.
The long entrance galleries are the Turin's architectural calling card. Where most pre-war Manhattan apartments have entry foyers of 6–10 feet that transition quickly into a living room, the Turin's galleries are deliberately extended — producing a processional sequence that organizes the apartment around an axial circulation spine. The configuration is well-suited to apartments that prioritize formal entertaining or to residents with substantial art collections requiring uninterrupted wall surface.
Park-facing apartments occupy the eastern flank with direct Central Park views from low to high floors. Many apartments offer direct Park views.
Building operations
The Turin operates as a full-service pre-war cooperative with 24-hour doorman, on-site superintendent, and an amenity package broader than most comparable-era CPW pre-wars: fitness center, children's playroom, dedicated storage room, and bike room. The amenity scope is notable — most 1909-era CPW pre-wars do not include in-building fitness or playroom facilities, reflecting either Turin-specific board investment in modernization or retrofitted use of former service spaces.
The building participates in the NYC Cooperative & Condominium Property Tax Abatement Program for qualifying primary-residence shareholders. Specific policy details (flip tax structure, financing cap, sublet fee) are not publicly published by the building; buyers should review the current proprietary lease and house rules during due diligence.
Local Law 97
- 2024–2029 annual penalty
- $0 (under cap)
- 2030–2034 annual penalty
- $0 (under cap)
- Per unit / month range
- —
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
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.
| Date | Unit | Apartment | Price | PPSF | vs. Ask |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oct 16, 2025 | 11 | 3 BR · 2.5 BA · 2,000 sf Closed Oct 7, 2025 at $2.1M — 8.70% under the $2.3M asking. Unit 11 — 3BR at 2,000 sqft = ~$1,050/sqft. | $2,100,000 | $1,050/sf | -8.7% |
| Sep 30, 2025 | PH121-122 | 4 BR · 3.5 BA · 3,753 sf Closed Sep 25, 2025 (recorded Sep 26) at $9.7M (recorded transfer; public listing data reported #PH121-122 closing at $9.995M with 'can't find government record' — the recorded transfer reflects $9.7M, $295K below SE-reported). PH121-122 penthouse — 4BR at 3,753 sqft = ~$2,585/sqft. The defining Turin trophy: previously listed at $11.499M (Nov 2017 NLA) and $10.775M (Jun 2019 NLA) before clearing at $9.7M in 2025. | $9,700,000 | $2,585/sf | off-mkt |
| Jul 11, 2024 | 24 | 3 BR · 2 BA · 1,850 sf Closed Jul 1, 2024 (recorded Jul 9) at $2.4M — 4% under the $2.5M asking. Unit 24 — 3BR at 1,850 sqft = ~$1,297/sqft. | $2,400,000 | $1,297/sf | -4.0% |
| Oct 4, 2023 | 62 | 2 BR · 2 BA Closed Sep 15, 2023 (recorded Sep 27) at $2.5M (recorded transfer; public listing data reported #62 closing at $2.7M with 'can't find government record' — the recorded transfer reflects $2.5M, $200K below SE-reported). | $2,500,000 | off-mkt | |
| Aug 15, 2023 | 66 | 4 BR · 2.5 BA · 2,550 sf Closed Aug 4, 2023 (recorded Aug 7) at $3.7625M — 4.75% under the $3.95M asking. Unit 66 — 4BR at 2,550 sqft = ~$1,476/sqft. | $3,762,500 | $1,475/sf | -4.7% |
| Jul 12, 2023 | 82 | Closed Jun 7, 2023 (recorded Jun 19) at $2.35M (recorded transfer; no public public listing data listing at this closing). | $2,350,000 | off-mkt | |
| Sep 12, 2022 | 42 | 2 BR · 2.5 BA Closed Sep 8, 2022 (recorded Sep 7) at $2.875M — 4.01% under the $2.995M asking. Unit 42 — 2BR. | $2,875,000 | -4.0% | |
| Sep 20, 2022 | 71 | 3 BR · 2,100 sf Closed Sep 7, 2022 (recorded Sep 15) at $3,025,267 (recorded transfer; no public public listing data listing at this closing). | $3,025,267 | $1,441/sf | off-mkt |
Market read. Most recent trades (2025) cleared a median $2,585/sf across 2 sales. Median listing discount 4.0% 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.
Other recent transfers
| Date | Unit | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Dec 17, 2019 | 115 | $2,750,000 |
| Jun 16, 2017 | 125 | $2,795,000 |
| Sep 2, 2016 | 25 | $1,775,000 |
| May 23, 2014 | 42 | $2,650,000 |
| Sep 23, 2013 | 11 | $2,695,000 |
| Mar 27, 2013 | 44 | $2,150,000 |
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 1-01207-0029) 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 long entrance galleries are a distinctive architectural feature. For art-collecting buyers, the wall space the galleries offer is genuinely rare in Manhattan and meaningful to evaluate.
Board approval is rigorous, consistent with mid-CPW co-op standards. Strong financial profiles and primary-residence intent are advantageous.
Amenity package is broader than typical 1909-era pre-wars. The fitness center and children's playroom are uncommon among CPW buildings of this vintage — useful for buyers who don't want to leave the building for these conveniences.
Upper-CPW positioning produces accessible per-sf pricing. The building's location between 93rd and 94th puts it in the same upper CPW corridor as the Ardsley (320 CPW) and 336 CPW; per-sf pricing tends to be more accessible than at the southern landmarks.
Renovation is constrained by historic district status and the building's age. The 1909 vintage means substantial original architectural detail to preserve.
View permanence is excellent. Central Park at the eastern flank; West 93rd and 94th are residential streets with stable building heights.
What to know if you’re selling
The long-gallery configuration is a real marketing advantage for collector buyers. Sellers should highlight the wall-space feature prominently in marketing — it appeals to a specific but committed buyer profile.
Pricing is competitive within upper-CPW pre-war inventory. Apartments compete primarily with peer upper-CPW co-ops; 336 CPW (immediately south) and the Ardsley (320 CPW) are notable comparables.
Buyer pool spans domestic primary-residence buyers who value pre-war architecture, upper-CPW location, and the building's specific amenity and gallery features.
Mansion tax effects matter on larger units. Most one- and two-bedrooms trade below the $2M mansion tax threshold; larger configurations transact above.
Closing timelines are co-op standard. 4–8 weeks from contract signing to closing.
Comparable buildings
If you're considering The Turin, also evaluate:
- The Ardsley (320 CPW) — Roth Mayan-inspired Art Deco co-op nearby
- 336 Central Park West — Schwartz & Gross 1929 Egyptian Art Deco co-op nearby
- The Eldorado (300 CPW) — Art Deco twin-tower landmark, south
- The Bolivar (230 CPW) — Neo-Georgian co-op, south
- The Manhasset (301 W 108th, not on CPW) — pre-war landmark with similar long-gallery configurations
The Roebling Team at The Turin
The Roebling Team at Compass specializes in Central Park West, the Upper West Side, and the broader Park-facing Manhattan market. We publish this building profile because CPW buyers and sellers deserve building-specific intelligence — architecture, board culture, transactional mechanics, and the realities of pricing at the apartment level — not generic market commentary.
If you're considering a purchase or sale at The Turin, a 30-minute consultation is the right starting point. We'll bring the full context this page provides plus the transactional specifics your situation requires — financial structuring, board approvability, comparable analysis at the apartment level, and the pacing strategy that fits your timeline.
Get the full picture on this building.
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