One Hanson's Penthouses Tower Units Hit the Market
The crown jewels inside Brooklyn’s most visible landmark have finally been listed. Stribling has started advertising two penthouse units—which are being called the Clocktower Residences—at One Hanson Place. The priciest of the pricey is a 4-bedroom, 3 1/2 bath going for $4,775,000; the other pad, a 2,848-square-foot 3-bedroom, is fetching a cool $4,095,000. Stribling notes…

The crown jewels inside Brooklyn’s most visible landmark have finally been listed. Stribling has started advertising two penthouse units—which are being called the Clocktower Residences—at One Hanson Place. The priciest of the pricey is a 4-bedroom, 3 1/2 bath going for $4,775,000; the other pad, a 2,848-square-foot 3-bedroom, is fetching a cool $4,095,000. Stribling notes that both are just below One Hanson’s gilded dome and feature panoramic views of the Manhattan skyline and Brooklyn as well as fancy appliances and finishes. The speed at which these luxurious spreads sell will certainly say something about how the highest of high-end condos are faring in Brooklyn right now. (As for possible buyers: Brooklyn still welcomes you, Oprah.) Bathroom shot and a floorplan for the $4.775 mil unit on the jump, and there’s an open house tonight if you can’t get enough One Hanson gawking. Update: A reader alerted us to the fact that these aren’t the actual penthouse units, though they are in the tower portion of the building. There are three units like this one on the 29th through 31st floors. The actual penthouses are in floors 33 to 36.
One Hanson Units Top Out at $4.775MM [Set Speed]
Clocktower Residences [Stribling] GMAP
Closing Bell: Move-In Day at One Hanson [Brownstoner]
One Hanson Update: Smaller Units Selling Best So Far [Brownstoner]
The bathrooms look really dated – and straight out of home depot.
Am I the only one who thinks the finishes are really mediocre (looking at the bathrooms specifically)?
For example — the prices are much higher in this Manhattan “trophy” condo, at 200 Eleventh Avenue, but this is luxury you can ask multiple millions for:
http://www.prudentialelliman.com/MainSite/NHD/NHDInfo.aspx?id=205&loc=0&PageName=amenities
If I were wealthy I would have three or more kids, and a couple of dogs, and a big house with lots of private outdoor space. Not to mention a competent staff whom I would treat very well and a couple of cars, one for snow, one for summer, one for evening ocassions. I don’t think I would want a penthouse on Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn.
I wouldn’t even pay this much for this space in Manhattan.
Totally agree, 10:25. And buyers at this level might want an entrance a bit more grand than the tiny hallway the floorplan calls a foyer.
10 AM…Penthouse just doesn’t scream family to me. I have one child with one on the way and when I think about a home I want outdoor space, even if it is just a patch.
10:01…Of course not. In fact weren’t there a series of articles (NYTimes?) about the new trend amongst the wealthy is having 3 or more children?
Gorgeous – but too expensive – 1500 a sq ft is just not reasonable at this location. Views are amazing sure, but the apartment isnt all that unique and no outdoor space or private elevator. They have great views in DUMBO too why am I moving here?
If the rest of it is as badly designed as the bathroom in the photo, I think they’ll be on the market for a while. Five million dollars and the bathtub is crammed in next to the sink cabinets?
This is a quite ordinary albeit large apt in Brooklyn priced for Chelsea/Soho. Fail to see how this is going to move at this price. What would be the advantage of buying on top of the Atlantic train station of saying owning in a converted warehouse in Soho?