[
Image via LoopNet]
For months now we've been hearing that 20 St. Mark's Place was in the process of being sold.
And now details on the sale of the historic building between Second Avenue and Third Avenue are public.
Real Estate Weekly noted last week that
Klosed Properties is the new owner. There wasn't any mention of the price. According to public records, it appears that Klosed Properties paid about $5.6 million for the building, which includes a 2nd-floor co-op that also served as an art studio.
We don't know
too much about this real-estate company. Among their newer properties in their vast portfolio: 837 Second Ave., which was home
until last spring to the original, 90-year-old Palm Restaurant. As several news outlets reported, workers wiped away the Palm's iconic murals and magazine covers that lined the walls
last August. Klosed principal Steven Kachanian told
The Real Deal the following about the Palm space in August: "We're working with some high-end tenants looking to do some major work to the property."
So what does the sale mean for the lone tenant at No. 20 — the 40-year-plus old Grassroots Tavern? They are staying put. The bar's majority owner, Jim Stratton, also owned the building. According to a source with some background of the deal, the bar has a lease for the next five years... with an option after that for renewal.
[
An early morning look at the Grassroots from last month]
The other retail tenant in the building, Sounds,
closed in October after 36 years in business. (Sounds owner Brian Fair
died in early December after a short stint in the hospital.)
20 St. Mark's Place,
known as the Daniel LeRoy House, was built in 1832. It received landmark status in 1971... and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. (Find more history of the Greek Revival house
here.)
Previously on EV Grieve:
The last record store on St. Mark's Place is closing
So long Sounds
RIP Brian Fair, owner of Sounds