When a rental constructing in West Harlem was listed for $1.375 million, Jay Martin flagged it.
“Lower than the value of a Kia Telluride,” he tweeted. “$57,000 per unit.”
Martin wasn’t advertising the property. The New York Condo Affiliation exec was noting the devaluation of rent-stabilized buildings and mocking the claim that “the tenants can simply take them over.”
“Right here’s a 24 unit constructing an proprietor is operating away from underneath this regime,” he wrote, daring tenants to purchase it.
The put up appeared like landlord propaganda to X consumer jkitsallgood. He couldn’t discover the itemizing for 502 West one hundred and thirty fifth Avenue on-line, and $57,000 per unit appeared impossibly low. “This is likely fake,” he declared.
It isn’t. Even earlier than the Hire Pointers Board delivered on Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s promise to freeze the hire, the per-unit value of rent-stabilized buildings resembled that of a luxury SUV.
One instance: Chaim Eli Bleeman simply bought three Bronx buildings with 252 residences for $16.7 million, or $66,000 per unit. The client of 3572 and 3576 Dekalb Avenue and 3224 Grand Concourse was Bronx GS Properties LLC.
For the West Harlem property, data present a rocky however not unusual historical past. Particular person homeowners traded it a number of instances from 1969 till 1987, when town filed to foreclose for unpaid property taxes.
These 18 years coincide precisely with my childhood, from beginning to commencement from Midwood Excessive Faculty. Occasions had been robust in New York, and it seems the constructing’s fortunes sank with town’s. In these days, you walked with one eye wanting down for dogshit and the opposite wanting up for muggers.
Something not nailed down — and plenty of issues that had been — had been routinely stolen. I as soon as left a pink tricycle in entrance of our stoop for a minute; gone. Thieves would dig crops out of gardens in Park Slope. My low-cost 10-speed vanished from a gated lot at Brooklyn School. Our minivan was boosted from in entrance of our home and later discovered plagued by crack vials.
However 502 West one hundred and thirty fifth Avenue survived. After 4 years on the “in rem” checklist, its again taxes had been paid and town dropped its foreclosures try.
As New York regained its footing, the constructing’s prospects improved. Two mortgages totaling $510,000 had been paid off. Fred Marolda purchased the property in 2001 and bought it two years later for $1 million.
In April 2019, Nice Neck–primarily based Klosed Properties — Steven Kachanian, Jacob Namdar and Adam Hajibai — purchased the constructing from the Pecora household for $3.6 million, or $144,000 per unit, and borrowed $2.5 million in opposition to it. This marked the excessive level of 502 West one hundred and thirty fifth.
“It was a terrific value-add deal,” recalled Jack Zalta, who brokered the 2019 sale, “till the legal guidelines modified.”

The primary half of that 12 months was absolutely the worst time to purchase a rent-stabilized constructing. That June, the state legislature and Gov. Andrew Cuomo shocked the business by enacting the Housing Stability and Tenant Safety Act. The worth of 502 West one hundred and thirty fifth has since fallen by greater than 60 %. Rising rates of interest performed a job.
In 2024, the homeowners obtained an extension of the $2.5 million mortgage at 8 % curiosity, reflecting the rise not solely in charges however in threat. It’s onerous to see how that mortgage ends effectively.
The curiosity alone is about $700 per unit, per thirty days. It’s no marvel the constructing was listed.

Martin sniffed that if the 24 tenants want to purchase it, the value involves $1,600 apiece, per thirty days, for 3 years. Just like their rents, most likely. “So why isn’t this taking place?” he requested, rhetorically.
He answered that underneath the HSTPA and Mamdani, working bills will exceed hire income. Possession would value tenants greater than renting.
If that had been the case, the constructing would don’t have any worth. We’re not fairly there but. As consultants instructed TRD’s Lilah Burke, it’s nonetheless true that “buildings aren’t free.”
Not but. However they had been within the Eighties, again when “in rem” unfold just like the plague and town foreclosed on and bought buildings for $1 every.
Might it occur once more? If nothing adjustments, how couldn’t it?
Learn extra
Doomed to fail: Why Rent Guidelines Board always gets it wrong
Tenant rep uncovers magic solution to rent stabilization crisis
Why tenants never protest high property taxes
