Milton Coste

43 Greenwich Village Pre-War Apartments

Classic NYC charm with high ceilings and original details in Greenwich Village, Manhattan

All NYC Greenwich Village
43 results
18 E 12TH Street #7B For Sale
Paul Anand at Brown Harris Stevens Residential Sales LLC
$4,000,000

4 bd · 3 ba · 2,982 sqft · Condo

18 E 12TH Street #7B, New York City

MLS: RLS20097742 RLS at REBNY
65 W 13TH Street #5E For Sale
Robert A Jackson at Corcoran Group
$3,250,000

2 bd · 2 ba · 2,080 sqft · Condo

65 W 13TH Street #5E, New York City

MLS: RLS20090373 RLS at REBNY
125 W 12TH Street #4D For Sale
Marc Nayor at Platinum Forbes Global Properties
$1,350,000

3 bd · 1 ba · 744 sqft · Co-op

125 W 12TH Street #4D, New York City

MLS: RLS20075170 RLS at REBNY
840 BROADWAY #10FL For Sale
Daniel Alan Davis at Corcoran Group
$3,980,000

3 bd · 2 ba · 3,000 sqft · Co-op

840 BROADWAY #10FL, New York City

MLS: RLS20049738 RLS at REBNY
39 5TH Avenue #5CD For Sale
Jeffrey Jude St.Arromand at Serhant
$3,699,000

3 bd · 2 ba · Co-op

39 5TH Avenue #5CD, New York City

MLS: RLS20074435 RLS at REBNY
41 Fifth Avenue #9F For Sale
Laurie K Silverman at Sothebys International Realty
$1,150,000

1 bd · 1 ba · Co-op

41 Fifth Avenue #9F, New York City

MLS: RLS20080640 RLS at REBNY
21 E 10th Street #5A For Sale
Danny Sayegh at Compass
$1,299,000

2 bd · 1 ba · Co-op

21 E 10th Street #5A, New York City

MLS: RLS20083250 RLS at REBNY
26 W 9th Street #2-A For Sale
26 West 9th Street Sales Gallery at Reuveni LLC
$1,975,000

1 bd · 1 ba · 706 sqft · Condo

26 W 9th Street #2-A, New York City

MLS: RLS20097861 RLS at REBNY
26 W 9th Street #3-C For Sale
26 West 9th Street Sales Gallery at Reuveni LLC
$2,025,000

1 bd · 1 ba · 720 sqft · Condo

26 W 9th Street #3-C, New York City

MLS: RLS20097881 RLS at REBNY
26 W 9th Street #2-B For Sale
26 West 9th Street Sales Gallery at Reuveni LLC
$2,100,000

1 bd · 1 ba · 781 sqft · Condo

26 W 9th Street #2-B, New York City

MLS: RLS20057293 RLS at REBNY
45 5th Avenue #14C For Sale
Robert Khederian at Compass
$975,000

1 bd · 1 ba · Co-op

45 5th Avenue #14C, New York City

MLS: RLS20096419 RLS at REBNY
25 5th Avenue #12F For Sale
Fabienne Lecole at Compass
$2,475,000

2 bd · 1 ba · 988 sqft · Condo

25 5th Avenue #12F, New York City

MLS: RLS20090644 RLS at REBNY

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This information is not verified for authenticity or accuracy and is not guaranteed and may not reflect all real estate activity in the market. ©2026 The Real Estate Board of New York, Inc., All rights reserved.

Listings are updated approximately every 15 minutes. Data displayed by Keller Williams NYC.

RLS at REBNY

Pre-War Apartments for Sale in NYC: Classic Architecture, Generous Layouts, and Enduring Character

Pre-war apartments for sale in New York City represent a category of residential real estate defined by architectural craftsmanship that has not been replicated in modern construction. Built before 1940, these buildings feature ceiling heights of 9 to 12 feet, plaster walls with genuine mass and sound-dampening quality, herringbone or parquet hardwood floors, formal entry galleries, and often wood-burning or decorative fireplaces. The layouts of pre-war apartments were designed for a different style of living: separate formal dining rooms, butler's pantries, maids' rooms, and oversized bedrooms are characteristic of the larger units. As a Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker at Keller Williams NYC with over 25 years selling pre-war cooperatives and condominiums, I can tell you that pre-war apartments consistently attract buyers who prioritize architectural detail and layout depth over amenity counts. The most significant concentrations of pre-war apartments for sale in NYC are found on the Upper East Side, Upper West Side, and Washington Heights, where large Art Deco and Beaux-Arts buildings line broad avenues and side streets. Brooklyn's Brooklyn Heights and Park Slope also have exceptional pre-war housing stock, including both cooperatives and fee-simple rowhouses with original details intact.

What distinguishes a pre-war apartment from a post-war apartment in NYC?

The dividing line is roughly World War II, with pre-war buildings constructed before 1940 and post-war buildings from the late 1940s onward. Pre-war buildings typically have smaller floor plates with fewer units per floor, thicker walls, more ornate lobby and facade details (limestone, brick, carved stone), and larger room sizes relative to overall apartment square footage. Post-war buildings, especially those built in the 1950s-1970s, generally have lower ceilings (8 feet versus 9-10+ in pre-war), concrete construction, and more uniform rectangular layouts. Pre-war apartments command a premium in Manhattan specifically because the inventory is fixed and original details are irreplaceable. Browse current listings filtered by building age to compare the two.

Are pre-war buildings cooperatives or condominiums?

The vast majority of pre-war apartment buildings in New York City are cooperatives. Condominium ownership as a legal structure did not become common in NYC until the 1960s and 1970s, so most buildings converted to residential ownership before that era were organized as co-ops. This means buyers of pre-war apartments typically go through a board approval process and purchase shares in a cooperative corporation rather than fee-simple real estate. A small number of pre-war buildings have converted from co-op to condo over the decades. If cooperative board approval is a concern, ask your broker to identify which pre-war buildings on your shortlist are condominiums. Our NYC buyer's guide covers the co-op application process in detail.

What should I inspect in a pre-war apartment before buying?

Pre-war construction introduces specific inspection considerations that do not apply to newer buildings. Lead paint is present in most pre-war apartments built before 1978, and sellers are required by federal law to disclose its presence. Plaster walls may show hairline cracking from building settlement, which is cosmetic in most cases but worth noting. Original windows in landmark buildings may have restrictions on replacement through the Landmarks Preservation Commission. Electrical systems in older buildings may still have knob-and-tube or early armored cable wiring that does not meet modern code. A qualified home inspector with NYC co-op experience should walk through the unit and, where possible, the building's common mechanical areas before you sign the contract.

Broker Tip: Understand What "Original Details" Actually Means

When a listing advertises "original pre-war details," look carefully at what has actually been preserved versus what has been replicated. True original herringbone floors, original plaster medallions, and working fireplaces add genuine value and cannot be reproduced at any reasonable cost. Renovated kitchens and bathrooms in pre-war apartments are a plus for livability but do not add the same premium as preserved architectural features. I always advise buyers to prioritize layout and bones, because a pre-war apartment with its original gallery entry, 10-foot ceilings, and intact parquet floors can be renovated to any style. Apartment that has been fully modernized at the cost of its original character cannot easily be restored.

Milton Coste, Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker

Milton Coste

Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker

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Milton Coste, Licensed Real Estate Associate Broker, KWNYC