![]() Koehn, by selling to a nonprofit organization, the professor avoided having to pay a transfer tax and saved himself $35,000. Eventually both parties were offering $2.45 million. Matthewman countered with $2.275 million the nonprofit matched that. Matthewman offered $2.1 million the nonprofit countered with $2.15 million. Matthewman and a nonprofit agency that wants to turn the building into offices. Tiger Koehn of Benjamin James Associates, the professor had put the place on the market because he wanted to get out of the city altogether. The seller, a professor at New York University, had been renting the townhouse’s three apartments while spending most of his time in the Hamptons. Selling: $2.45 million.īLAME THE TAX MAN When musician and producer Stuart Matthewman, who started scoring full-length movies last year with Twin Falls Idaho, tried to move his family from their downtown loft apartment to this Federal-style townhouse between Seventh and Greenwich avenues, he found himself in a bidding war that he ultimately lost. (The seller’s broker was Eileen Foy, also of the Corcoran Group.)Īsking: $2.3 million. Baron was not convinced, the deal closed on April 10. When the lawyer’s wife finally came to take a look, she explained that she and her husband had moved so many times that by now each knows exactly what the other looks for. “If my husband did that to me, I’d kill him,” she told The Observer. The buyer, a lawyer in his 40’s who had been living in Washington, D.C., came to the open house and decided to take it on the spot, after only a brief consultation with his wife via cell phone, much to the astonishment of Ms. SHE’LL HAVE THE TWO-BEDROOM APARTMENT A redheaded couple in their early 30’s had outgrown this two-bedroom apartment with an eat-in kitchen and southern views from the living room, so they decided to take their two little girls and two charming cats and move to Westchester, according to their broker, Emma Baron of the Corcoran Group. A source told The Observer that although the couple was essentially pre-approved to buy the apartment, and were recommended by the head of the co-op’s board, real estate developer Richard Cohen-who lives on the eighth floor with his wife, Fox News Channel anchor Paula Zahn-there will be a formal interview on June 7.Ĭharges: $1,030 50 percent tax deductible. The Coles submitted their financials and references to the building’s board on May 11. Schneider, Laurance Kaiser IV, president of Key-Ventures Real Estate, wouldn’t comment on the deal. One broker described the length of time it took the place to sell as “quacky.” The Coles’ broker, Claire Kaufman of Alice F. The apartment is being sold by private investor Laurence Schneider. Brokers said that the Coles picked the apartment at 927 Fifth, which has been on and off the market since 1992, most recently for $11.1 million, over a five-story townhouse at 3 East 82nd Street priced at around $7 million. Cole also helped found the Golf Club of Purchase. HELP USA’s 40 locations serve communities across the United States and to date have served over 350,000 men, women and children.The Coles, who have three children, have not owned an apartment in the city while living at Five Chimneys, a home in Purchase, N.Y., where Mr. Since 1992, she has led HELP USA, the national nonprofit leader in both homeless prevention and development of permanent supportive service housing for special needs populations including veterans, and survivors of domestic violence. In collaboration with national communities of gun violence survivors, faith leaders, political leaders and nonprofits, the film has served as a catalyst for awareness and advocacy on the subject of federal and state legislative reform across the country. For this film, she was awarded two Emmy® awards and a Peabody.Ĭuomo Cole’s 2011 documentary, Living for 32, about gun laws in America, was short listed for an Academy Award® and premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival. military, which served as a catalyst for federal legislation and enacted federal policy reforms. This groundbreaking documentary about the epidemic of rape and sexual violence in the U.S. Cuomo Cole worked with the same film team, executive producing the 2014 Oscar® nominated documentary, The Invisible War. The award winning film has been lauded as a powerful investigation into the epidemic of sexual assaults on college campuses. Most recently, she executive produced The Hunting Ground, directed by Kirby Dick. In her career, she has tackled such relevant subjects as gun violence, homelessness, veterans’ PTSD, Domestic Violence and sexual assault. Maria Cuomo Cole is the award-winning producer of the feature documentary, Newtown, which will be premiering at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival.
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