A Roebling Team guide · By Corey Cohen, Principal of The Roebling Team at Compass · 2026

Working inventory of East Village residential coop/condominium buildings (25+ units)

The East Village is structurally distinct from Greenwich Village proper — east of Broadway / Lafayette, south of 14th Street, north of Houston, west of the East River. The corridor's cooperative and condominium inventory at 25+ units clusters around East 12th-14th Streets, the Astor Place / NoHo border, and select cross-streets. This index lists the verified East Village 25+ unit coop/condo buildings on theroeblingteam.com plus the additional working inventory pending individual dossier expansion.

Anchored Tier — Full dossiers on theroeblingteam.com

Working Inventory — Additional 25+ unit East Village coop/condo buildings

These qualify for full Roebling dossiers. The Drive Library carries folders for several buildings as noted.

Address Year / Conversion Architect Type Units Drive
EVE — East Village East (170 Second Avenue) Condo
219 East 7th Street Coop
436 East 13th Street Coop
425 East 13th Street 2010 TF Cornerstone Condo
48 Bond Street Condo
10 Bond Street Condo
77 East 12th Street Coop
66 East 11th Street Coop
17 East 12th Street Coop
18 East 12th Street Coop
44 East 12th Street Coop
12 East 12th Street Coop
37 East 12th Street Coop
125 East 12th Street Coop
407 East 12th Street Coop
438 East 12th Street Coop
35 Cooper Square Condo
Cooper Square Hotel area (25 Cooper Square) verify residential
210 Bowery Condominium Condo
287 East Houston Street Condo
219 East 12th Street verify
1 Avenue B Condo
100 Avenue A Condo
170 Second Avenue Condo

Why East Village inventory matters

The East Village's coop/condo inventory at 25+ units represents a substantial transactional volume in the broader Greenwich Village / Astor Place / Tompkins Square Park corridor. While the trophy market is dominated by Manhattan's prewar Park Avenue and Fifth Avenue inventory, the East Village transacts at materially different price points with structurally different buyer demographics:

Lower price band — sub-$2M one-bedrooms and sub-$5M two-bedrooms predominate across the East Village 25+ unit inventory, distinguishing the market from the trophy Park / Fifth / CPW corridor.

Younger buyer demographic — first-time buyers and second-residence buyers in the creative / media / tech industries cluster in the East Village 25+ unit inventory.

Cultural anchor sites — Christodora House (1928 settlement house, Tompkins Square Park direct frontage), Stewart House (postwar Greenwich Village border), Zeckendorf Towers (1987 Union Square North) each carry distinct cultural and architectural-history positioning.

The Roebling Team — East Village advisory

The Roebling Team has expanded East Village coverage to support the corridor's distinct buyer and seller demographic. We cross-reference the The Roebling Research Library offering plan and house rules for buildings where we have documents (noted in the Drive column above) during diligence.

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


Sources: The Roebling Research Library (offering plans, house rules, financial statements, board minutes, internal transaction records); publicly recorded NYC building data.

Specific situation? Let's talk.

This guide is the framework. Every transaction has variables that need a specific playbook — building, board, timing, financial structure. A 30-minute consultation gets you the playbook for yours.

Corey Cohen
Corey Cohen
Principal · The Roebling Team at Compass
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