@@Ornatetooth0475 it's not like I have that much money And I am just saying that sometimes I do think to do something ( that I should not be doing ) well I just think and never do it . So thinking and doing are two different things so I am not jumping
Bro when he opened the door and stuck his hand outside my anxiety went insane, this guy is trying to give me a heart attack. I am so terrified of heights.
I could actually feel my stomach bunching up in my throat. Living over 1,000 feet up and watching the camera pan down to the street below... I would take a ground floor apartment in a suburb any day over being ripped off of $64,000,000 I don't even have to live there.
@@sonarchy343 agree, I'm far from radical left ideas, but when you juxtapose that with people really struggling for basic needs, the inequalities are staggering!
@@callmeaj3077 You can‘t open the windows. It‘s a door, because it is not able to open completely. There is a safety system so that it only opens a little bit.
$7,875 per square foot. Google sez: "In October 2023, the median listing home price [in Manhattan] per square foot was $1.5K". So this $63m apartment is 525% over average. It would be $12m if priced at average.
You are missing out. New York is likely one of the best cities in the world. So much great food, amazing people. There is such an energy to it. It is an awesome. Maybe not the prettiest architecture but really it is great.
@@Doomscrolled No thanks i think the city with 120k inhabitants half an hour from here is a crowded mess. Let alone a city with half as many people in it as the entire damn country i live in.
$63M for this penthouse is highway robbery. The whole place cost less than $2M in raw value, you're paying the remaining $61M to live in a NYC high-rise
@@km86640 You kind of missed my point, though. I'm not arguing that location shouldn't be factored into a property's value, I'm saying there's no location on Earth that's worth ~$61M
I remember always wondering this. So many of these penthouses have tubs next the window, and I was afraid that certain people would take advantage of this with their cameras. On one video (granted, for one of the other slender skyscrapers), they said that the windows were reflective, so no one could see inside. Now I'm wondering if all skyscraper penthouses have the same thing.
@@ntatenarinWhy are you so afraid that people will see you naked? Most Americans are so cocky and yet afraid to be seen naked. What is there to hide? Let them watch as long as they are not touching you! 😂😂😂
This is absolutely not why our economy is failing. Uneducated people like you should not be voting because you are easily manipulated by the people who are causing our economy to fail.
@@chrislimnios9180 That is ridiculous. Just because someone is willing to pay for it does not mean that the price is justified. We have laws against price gouging for a reason.
@@Floedekagealso, you sound like a commie. Bet you wanna "tax the rich" or eat the rich. Whatever the hell you people like to say. I think your just jealous because you are poor?
I wouldn't even consider buying this human running cage if I had the money for it. It's a little cage with a view on some park. I'd buy a nice plot of land and have my own house built on it. WITH park, not with just the view. LOL
They're more about the view than anything really. You pay that so you can sit up there and look out the window while feeling like the king of the world.
Yeah thats how Eric Clapton's son died. Was playing with the cleaner he jumped on a couch and ran out of a window. Fell on the roof across the street from the 53d floor. Highrise living is not for me man >.>
I dont even understand why people use these people.. you can sell it yourself, your bank usually have all the info needed. Its not like the talk them into buying it. If they want it, they want it.
@@AndrewTSq The building is selling it; and they use these clowns to do it. There is no Commission; high-profile RU-vid salesman get paid by the ads ran on their videos, not by the seller.
Crazy if a person spent 63 million for that I can think of getting so much more for that kind of money there's 340 thousand acres of land cheaper then that in the USA right now
Beleive me, it gets old after a few months and feels normal. I stayed in many multi million dollar homes for weeks at a time. It is nice but all the space really is not needed. I just ended up identifying some of the brands used such as the sink tap and bought that for my house. Trash compactor is useful also. Those auto open cabinets are a joke to me in how much I need that. I would take a million of that money and buy a 100 acre farm and get another million worth of equipment along with a crew to do the work then sit on the other 60 million for when needed.
@@jstewart627I feel like being in somewhere like New York would be pretty awesome but I’m actually with you, I’ve stayed in some pretty huge mansions myself and you soon realise that there’s something to be said for just having room that you need and feeling a certain cosyness
Except these super tall “pencil skyscrapers” have a huge problem. Wind. All these famous super tall buildings along Central Park remain practically uninhabited for two reasons: firstly, most units are owned by foreign billionaires looking to park their money in a safe investment. Second, they’re downright uninhabitable because their very small size (in terms of width/length) causes them to sway uncontrollably on most days. Notice how at every one of these showings in super tall apartments, the staging never sets out anything on top of the tables or counters, because it would soon get knocked over and show the potential buyer that they can’t so much as set their plate down on the dining room table.
Park Avenue duplexes, which were the top of luxury in NYC back then, were selling for $4-5 million. In today's money, that is about $16-20 million. So, yeah prices went up but so did the height of buildings, the number of amenities and the size of properties.
No, I found a listing for a studio in another building for $125,000 in a famous new building in 1980. It wasn't overlooking Central Park, and it was tiny compared to this.
I'm an HVAC Technician, I worked in alot of homes with wealthy or rich home owners. The stuff I seen in these people's homes is unbelievable. I would like that life style, but I'm happy my blue collar living.
@@AreaCode4hoe8 Marble bathrooms, golden chandeliers, kitchens bigger than my living room. TVs big as an entire wall, spiral stairs cases, toilets that shoot water into your but, personal chiefs and maids. 5 car garages, backyards with a nature walk, hot tubs, pool with water falls, etc. What do You do for a living, just curious?
@@lex6794 I got to say those things do sound luxurious and make sense but not surprising haha. It’s as if I was expecting some dirty secrets type of answers haha. And I’m a machine operator for a box company. Curious as to what made you ask?
Why? I know it's nyc and with it is hella problems but that is one of the nicest penthouses I've seen. If I had the money I would love it here, that or a mansion on a hill looking down on a city
$1 Million house on the ground is plenty amazing, no need to spend the extra 62 Million to live high up. Me saying this with my measly net worth of $5000
Good god, imagine trying to remove dust and spiders from 22 feet. I have a building with a 27 foot ceiling and I have to tie various types of handles together to even reach it. What I can't clean, I just accept.
Dude, do you think that dust removing would be any concern for the owners? I am pretty sure they can afford house keeper who could take care of entire house.