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Alleged Mold at 530 Park Avenue?

Started by InterestedParties
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 42
Member since: May 2013
Were the alleged mold issues ever resolved at 530 Park? How has the brokerage dealt with this in its presentation to buyers? Or do buyers even care? http://nymag.com/nymetro/realestate/features/realestate2004/n_9985/
Response by greensdale
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 3804
Member since: Sep 2012

Ooh, alleged mold.

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Response by greensdale
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 3804
Member since: Sep 2012

>"By December 2001, life in her $4,600-a-month rent-stabilized apartment (it’s an exception to the $2,000 rent-stabilization cap)"

She's rent stabilized. Interesting. Also, there's no $2000 rent stabilization cap.

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Response by columbiacounty
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 12708
Member since: Jan 2009

SE, why?

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Response by greensdale
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 3804
Member since: Sep 2012

Who would have thought a thread about mold would have attracted C0lumbiaC0unty as a defender?

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Response by columbiacounty
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 12708
Member since: Jan 2009

SE, why?

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Response by Fairway
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 156
Member since: Feb 2011

I had athlete's foot 11 years ago

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Response by greensdale
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 3804
Member since: Sep 2012

>I had athlete's foot 11 years ago

Those darn terrorists.

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Response by InterestedParties
almost 13 years ago
Posts: 42
Member since: May 2013

So no one has any updates then about what the ultimate findings were? It just seems like there's a big sales push for apartments in this building, but there's still no information about all the crazy allegations from the renters. Were these ever proven? Dismissed?

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Response by fieldschester
almost 10 years ago
Posts: 3525
Member since: Jul 2013

Aby J. Rosen, the Manhattan real estate developer and art collector, is well known for exhibiting works from his collection at the landmark Seagram Building and at Lever House, both on Park Avenue, as well as at 530 Park Avenue, a 19-story residential condominium. He also has five pieces by Picasso in his Manhattan home, and a controversial, 33-foot-tall bronze sculpture of a pregnant woman with an exposed fetus on the grounds of his estate in Old Westbury, on Long Island.

That $2.5 million, 13-ton sculpture by Damien Hirst is one of 200 artworks that have put Mr. Rosen at the center of another controversy — this one involving unpaid taxes.

The New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, announced a $7 million settlement with Mr. Rosen on Tuesday for failing to pay taxes on $80 million in artwork that he had bought or commissioned since 2002.

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Response by fieldschester
almost 10 years ago
Posts: 3525
Member since: Jul 2013
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