Broadway producers Jordan Roth and Richie Jackson are selling their Superior Ink condo.
The couple’s apartment at 400 West 12th Street was the priciest home in Manhattan to land a signed contract last week, with an asking price just under $20 million, according to Olshan Realty’s weekly report.
Roth, the son of Vornado Realty Trust’s CEO Steven Roth, and his husband paid $13.3 million for a unit in the building in 2010 and bought another on the same floor for $9.5 million six years later. The couple combined the apartments into a 4,100-square-foot, four-bedroom abode.
Unit 15CD also has three bathrooms, a media room and a library overlooking the Hudson River. Roth and Jackson listed the apartment in January.
Corcoran’s Deborah Grubman, David Adler and Paul Albano had the listing.
Roth was previously the majority owner of Jujamcyn Theaters and oversees production at other theaters in New York. Jackson is an author and producer, including the Tony Award-nominated Harvey Fierstein’s Torch Song.
Amenities at the 57-unit condo, developed by Related Companies in the early 2000s, include doormen, a garage, fitness center and landscaped roof deck.
The building, which launched sales in 2007, attracted a star-studded list of buyers, including designer Marc Jacobs, actress Hilary Swank and internet billionaire Mark Shuttleworth. Last year, a trust tied to hedge fund billionaire Glenn Dubin paid $16 million for a five-bedroom apartment.
The West Village condo was one of 29 deals inked for homes in the borough asking $4 million or more, up from 27 in the previous period. Of the properties, 22 were condos, three were co-ops and four were townhouses.
The second most expensive home to find a buyer was a condo at 111 West 57th Street, asking $17.25 million. The 4,500-square-foot apartment asked more than $20 million when the developers, JDS Development, Property Markets Group and Apollo, began marketing units off of floor plans in 2016.
Unit 35 has three bedrooms and three bathrooms. It also features a great room with 14-foot ceilings and views of Central Park.
The Nikki Field Team with Sotheby’s International is heading sales at the building, where 40 of its 60 units have closed for an average of $4,100 per square foot. Pending deals at the tower have topped weekly contract reports seven times this year.
Amenities at the Billionaires’ Row supertall include a fitness center, pool, terrace and private dining room.
The homes’ combined asking price was $213 million, for an average price of $7.4 million and a median of $6.4 million. The typical home spent more than 800 days on the market and was discounted 13 percent from the original listing price.
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