The billionaire sheen of 220 Central Park South is getting scuffed by a decidedly unglamorous neighbor dispute this vacation season.
Gainsborough Studios, the landmarked 1908 co-op subsequent door at 222 Central Park South, is suing Vornado Realty Belief over harm allegedly attributable to years of professional quality development on the ultra-luxury supertall, the New York Submit reported. The co-op is in search of no less than $3 million to cowl repairs it claims Vornado agreed to pay for however refuses to reimburse.
The allegations paint a vivid image of what occurs when a 70-story tower rises beside a 16-story historic constructing.
Excavation for 220 Central Park South started in 2014 with blasting by bedrock to create three underground ranges about 50 toes beneath grade, in keeping with the criticism filed in Manhattan Supreme Court docket. By the tip of that 12 months, Gainsborough’s constructing had shifted downward and eastward, twisting practically an inch on the prime, per the criticism.
That motion, the swimsuit claims, triggered a cascade of issues: cracked foundations, damaged home windows, chipped skylights, air-con points and harm to the historic facade.
Whereas the repairs have since been accomplished, Gainsborough says it paid the prices itself regardless of agreements signed in 2008 and 2014 that required Vornado to cowl construction-related harm.
Residents and board members didn’t mince phrases.
One longtime resident instructed the Submit the constructing was “mainly…molested by the entire thing,” whereas board president Tod Williams, whose structure agency occupies the bottom flooring, mentioned the blasting “felt like a seismic shift” and compelled staff to put on noise-canceling headphones for greater than a 12 months.
Vornado disputes accountability. In courtroom filings, its lawyer mentioned any harm was attributable to “intervening acts of third events,” not the developer’s work. Vornado declined to remark to the publication.
The stakes are modest by Billionaires’ Row requirements. Gainsborough’s $3 million declare is a rounding error in comparison with the roughly $3.5 billion in gross sales at 220 Central Park South, which value about $1.5 billion to build. The tower is dwelling to 9 of the 20 most costly residential gross sales in New York Metropolis historical past, together with Ken Griffin’s record-setting $238 million buy and an $82.5 million deal this year.
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