


They paved paradise and put up a parking lot — now you can buy that lot in the heart of Tribeca’s historic district for $82 million.
Next up: Build an office tower there, a boutique condo building or even a single-family mansion with a curb cut.
Or at the very least, have some bragging rights. With that $82 million asking price, according to StreetEasy, this currently marks the high-gloss neighborhood’s priciest property for sale — at least for residential use.
It’s all at 56 North Moore St., which is presently a five-floor parking garage. Whatever end use you choose, you can keep parts of the current structure, such as the car elevator.
“You can build a single-family mansion with 20-foot ceilings in the kitchen and watch your Porsche float by,” quipped broker Ryan Serhant of Serhant.
If the end use is ultimately residential, paying the asking price would cost more than buying the city’s current most expensive single-family mansion: an $80 million Gilded Age mansion at 1009 Fifth Ave. Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, once the wealthiest man in the world, bought that residence for $44 million in 2010 — and is looking once more to sell it.
In Tribeca, Serhant is co-listing this property with Bernadette Brennan, also of Serhant. They share the listing with Avison Young brokers Charles Kingsley, James Nelson, Eric Karmitz, Erik Edeen and Noah Kossoff.
The property, situated on an 8,850-square-foot mid-block lot, comes with city-approved plans to construct two additional stories and more than 75,000 square feet of buildable interior space.
Built in 1914, the building has a red-brick facade, 100 feet of frontage on cobblestoned North Moore Street — and also delivers pre-approved plans to create more than 3,000 square feet of outdoor space.
“It’s the most unique opportunity for development in Tribeca,” Serhant said.