
Rare Billionaire's Row haven for the middle class faces crushing 450% rent spike: ‘Basically death'
Hirsch, now 61, paid about $400,000 for a two-bedroom co-op with his wife, Jill Strauss, and settled into a solid, if unflashy, brick building that offered middle-class New Yorkers a toehold in Midtown Manhattan.
Today, from their apartment window, Hirsch can see the silhouettes of Central Park's sky-piercing condominiums — the homes of the ultrawealthy, many of them empty more often than not.
He calls his address 'Thousandaires' Row,' a nod to how dramatically the economic profile of the neighborhood has shifted. But the joke has worn thin.
In July, an arbitration panel determined that the annual ground rent for Carnegie House should increase from $4.36 million to roughly $24 million, reports the Wall Street Journal.
9 At Carnegie House, a once-affordable co-op building on Manhattan's now ultra-luxurious Billionaires' Row, longtime residents are facing financial ruin after an arbitration panel ruled to increase their annual ground rent from $4.36 million to roughly $24 million — a 450% spike.
Matthew McDermott
If upheld by a court, that 450% hike could send monthly costs for residents like Hirsch soaring — from about $5,000 to $13,000, he said.
It's 'basically death,' Hirsch, who is also the co-op board president, told the Journal in an interview.
Carnegie House, like roughly 100 other co-op buildings across New York City, sits on land the residents don't own, The Post previously reported.
9 The midcentury building sits on leased land, a structure once intended to help middle-class New Yorkers buy homes, but now increasingly weaponized by wealthy landowners amid soaring land values.
Matthew McDermott
These long-term ground leases, once pitched as a path to homeownership for the city's middle class, have become a liability as land prices skyrocket and lease resets arrive.
The Ground Lease Coop Coalition estimates that more than 25,000 New Yorkers live in such buildings, many of which are now approaching lease renegotiation periods — or expiration dates altogether.
'When we signed the ground lease years ago, the land value and the neighborhood were entirely different,' David Jordan, 83, a retired engineer who has lived in Carnegie House for two decades, told the Journal.
'None of us, even the professionals who were advising us, could have foreseen the kind of explosive land inflation that's happened.'
9 Residents like Richard Hirsch and his wife Jill Strauss, who bought their unit for around $400,000 in the 1990s, could see monthly costs jump from $5,000 to $13,000.
Matthew McDermott
The current lease terms stem from a 2014 deal, when an entity tied to real-estate investors Rubin Schron and David Werner paid $261 million for the land beneath Carnegie House.
At the time, brokerage CBRE described the site as offering 'unique future potential to construct a luxury retail, hotel and condominium tower.'
The sharp rent increase came after failed negotiations between the co-op and the landowners, who are now represented by a limited liability company.
'We remain open to good-faith discussions with Carnegie House residents should they wish to approach us,' James Yolles, a spokesman for the landowners, told the Journal.
Yolles denied any plans to redevelop the site and noted that residents benefited from lower purchase prices because of the lease structure, adding that tenants have been aware of the potential rent increase when they purchased their homes.
9 Bir and Gohli Madan.
Matthew McDermott
Gohli and Birinder Madan previously told The Post their plans to sue the co-op board of Carnegie House on West 57th Street in an attempt to save their home. But their case was later dismissed, court records obtained by The Post show.
Still, many owners say they relied on attorneys and banks, who didn't raise red flags.
'I relied on my lawyers to look at this,' Hirsch said. 'It's not like I had a ton of experience. No bank was saying this was an issue.'
The last time the rent reset was in 2004, residents said, and the increase was modest. But the recent arbitration ruling has left longtime owners stunned and panicked.
9 Many owners, especially elderly residents on fixed incomes, fear being forced out or losing their homes entirely if the co-op defaults.
Matthew McDermott
A one-bedroom apartment that sold for $535,000 in 2015 is now listed for $189,000, according to public records.
Sandy Dell, 70, bought her unit in 1998 for about $150,000. Now, she's afraid to invest in basic upkeep.
'I desperately need to paint and replace the carpeting,' she told the Journal. 'But I'm afraid to spend money on anything like that, because I don't know what's going to happen with the apartment.'
For Lou and Barb Grumet, the building's accessibility and proximity to hospitals made it an ideal place to grow old. They purchased their apartment in 2011 for roughly $780,000.
9 The land, now controlled by firms linked to developers Rubin Schron and David Werner, was purchased in 2014 for $261 million and marketed as a future luxury development site — leading some residents to suspect an intentional squeeze.
Matthew McDermott
'We were going to live here till we die,' Lou said. But their monthly costs are expected to more than double — from $3,700 to $9,000.
'No one dreamed of the craziness that's happened here,' he said.
If the co-op defaults, the building could revert to rent-stabilized apartments, and shareholders would lose their equity — though they'd still owe their mortgages.
What happens next is murky, as few buildings have undergone such a deconversion. Yolles said the landowners believe they can negotiate new rents directly with tenants. But tenant advocates argue that doing so would breach rent-stabilization rules.
9 Though residents were aware of the lease, they were blindsided by the scale of the increase. Some apartments have plummeted in value, with a one-bedroom now listed for just $189,000 — less than half of what it sold for in 2015.
Taidgh Barron/NY Post
The co-op board has vowed to challenge the rent increase in court and is working alongside the Ground Lease Coop Coalition to push for legislative relief.
A 2024 bill introduced by State Sen. Liz Krueger and Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal proposed caps on rent hikes and expenses when leases expire. The broader bill stalled, and a narrower version — offering fair rent terms but no cap — failed to reach a floor vote this year.
The Real Estate Board of New York opposed both versions.
'Unconstitutionally meddling in longstanding contracts for the benefit of a small handful of largely wealthy homeowners and real-estate speculators in Manhattan is bad public policy amid a housing crisis — or anytime,' Zachary Steinberg of REBNY told the Journal in a statement.
9 Legislative efforts to rein in such lease terms have stalled, as powerful industry groups like REBNY argue that changing contracts retroactively is unconstitutional.
UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Yolles echoed that point, suggesting that not all residents are financially vulnerable. Some investors, he said, recently bought in at steep discounts betting that lawmakers would intervene and values would rise.
Krueger rejected the criticism. 'It hasn't been a problem until now, so now we have to intervene,' she said.
'Losing the equity is the least of my problems,' Dell added. 'It's finding another place that I can afford at this point in my life.'
9 Advocates warn that Carnegie House is just one of thousands of NYC co-ops sitting on similar ticking time bombs, threatening to displace residents and erode affordability in an already strained housing market.
Getty Images
She has no desire to leave Manhattan.
'I lived here way before this was Billionaires' Row,' she said. 'I hate that it's called that.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
What To Expect From Thursday's Report On Inflation
Key Takeaways Inflation, as measured by Personal Consumption Expenditures, likely accelerated to its highest level since February. Tariffs on toys, sporting goods, furniture, and other items are being passed on to consumers, pushing prices up. The inflation rate remains well over the Fed's goal of 2% a year, though it's fallen significantly since Federal Reserve's preferred measure of inflation likely heated up in June, as tariffs started to push up consumer prices. A report from the Bureau of Economic Analysis on Thursday is expected to show consumer prices as measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditures index rose 2.5% over the last 12 months as of June, according to a survey of forecasters by Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal. That would be up from a 2.3% increase in May, making for the highest annual inflation since uptick would echo the increase in inflation as measured by the Consumer Price Index, which was reported earlier in the month. Inflation has fallen significantly since hitting a 40-year peak in 2022, but remains above the Federal Reserve's goal of a 2% annual rate. The Fed uses "Core" PCE inflation as its benchmark, and that figure is expected to come in at an annual increase of 2.7% for June, the same as in said some merchants may have been able to avoid raising prices for customers, at least temporarily, because they stockpiled inventory before the tariffs went into effect. The June inflation report could show some early signs of those costs now being passed on to consumers."The latest data showed clearer evidence that tariffs are leading to higher prices for core goods components, including recreational goods, household furnishings, and toys, among other categories," economists at Deutsche Bank, led by senior U.S. economist Brett Ryan, wrote in a commentary. What This Report Could Mean For the Federal Reserve Stubborn inflation could prompt the Fed to keep interest rates higher for longer than financial markets anticipate. Fed officials have kept the central bank's interest rate higher than usual, putting upward pressure on interest rates for all kinds of loans. The high rates are designed to discourage borrowing and spending and quash the post-pandemic surge of inflation. The possibility that President Donald Trump's tariffs could set off a fresh wave of inflation has kept Fed officials from cutting rates this year, a decision that Trump has frequently criticized. Traders are betting the Fed will hold its key fed funds rate steady when the Federal Open Market Committee meets Wednesday, according to the CME Group's FedWatch tool. The tool forecasts rate movements based on fed funds futures trading data. Inflation running hotter or cooler than expectations could affect the rate outlook. Investors are pricing in a 65% chance of a rate cut in September, according to CME. Read the original article on Investopedia Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Melden Sie sich an, um Ihr Portfolio aufzurufen. Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten Fehler beim Abrufen der Daten


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Harvard in talks with Trump admin to pay up to $500M over campus antisemitism
Harvard University could pay as much as $500M in a deal with the Trump administration following months of tense back-and-forths over billions in stripped federal funding and research grants, two sources familiar with the negotiations told The Post. Last week, Trump said the Ivy League school 'wants to settle' after seeing Columbia's funding restored in exchange for paying a $200 million fine to settle civil rights violations. The administration had clawed back $2.6 billion in federal funding earlier this year, saying the university had discriminated against Jewish faculty, students and staff by not protecting them from antisemitism on campus. The specific terms in the ongoing negotiations were not immediately made clear by either side, nor was a precise timeline given. However Trump said in June that the government could forge a deal with Harvard 'over the next week or so.' Harvard is still pursuing its lawsuit against the administration over the loss of federal research funds, which it claims could lead to damaged careers and the shuttering of labs on the Cambridge, Massachusetts campus. However Education Secretary Linda McMahon both expressed confidence of a future settlement. 'We're hoping that Harvard will come to the table,' McMahon told NewsNation's 'Morning in America' on Thursday. 'We're already seeing other universities that are taking these measures before investigation or before our coming in to talk to them.' This is a developing story. Please check back for more information.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Washington Post fact checker Glenn Kessler takes buyout after nearly 3 decades – and paper has no replacement
The man behind The Washington Post's 'Pinocchios' is leaving the paper without anyone to fill his shoes. Glenn Kessler, the editor of The Fact Checker, announced Monday he has taken a buyout, ending his lengthy career at the Post. Advertisement 'After more than 27 years at The Washington Post, including almost 15 as The Fact Checker, I will be leaving on July 31, having taken a buyout,' Kessler wrote on his Facebook page. 'Much as I would have liked to keep scrutinizing politicians in Washington, especially in this era, the financial considerations were impossible to dismiss.' Kessler said he wrote or edited more than 3,000 fact checks as editor and chief writer of The Fact Checker. 'When I started in 2011, there were only a handful of fact-checking organizations around the world, and I have been thrilled to watch the movement expand across the globe. So many of these brave and diligent fact checkers have become good friends,' Kessler wrote. 4 Portrait of Glenn Kessler. Washington Post Advertisement 'My fact checks were routinely the most-read articles on The Post's website. I had my detractors, from both the left and right, but many readers appreciated my efforts to sort out the truth in political rhetoric,' he added. Kessler revealed he attempted to stay on a contract basis long enough for his bosses to find a successor for a smooth transition, to no avail. 'I didn't want The Post to have a gap in fact-checking coverage during this fraught period in U.S. history. But we couldn't work out an agreement,' he wrote. 4 Glenn Kessler, the editor of The Fact Checker, announced Monday he has taken a buyout, ending his lengthy career at the Post. Christopher Sadowski Advertisement Washington Post executive editor Matt Murray appeared onboard with hiring a new fact checker in an exchange with Kessler, according to a source familiar with the matter. Kessler's next chapter will involve him writing books, and he's open to freelance and consulting work. 'In 2018, when the Fact Checker team was compiling a database of more than 30,000 Trump claims, I told the New York Times that 'I have the best job in journalism,'' Kessler wrote. 'I still believe that, and I'm sorry to leave without a replacement lined up. But it's the right time for me. I hope The Post finds someone to carry on this important project.' The Washington Post did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Advertisement 4 Kessler's next chapter will involve him writing books, and he's open to freelance and consulting work. The Washington Post via Getty Images Murray implemented a new round of the paper's Voluntary Separation Program (VSP) in May, hoping that most veteran staffers would be enticed by the exit offer. The program is set to end this week. According to a VSP document previously viewed by Fox News Digital, nine months of base pay would be given to staffers employed for 10-15 years, 12 months of base pay for 15-20-year veterans, 15 months of base pay for 20-25-year veterans and 18 months for anyone who has worked at the Post for more than 25 years. All of them would also receive 12 months of pay credit in their Separate Retirement Account (SRA). Other high-profile writers who've taken the buyouts include columnists Jonathan Capehart, Catherine Rampell, Philip Bump and Joe Davidson. Also fueling the exodus from the editorial pages was the initiative by the Post's billionaire owner Jeff Bezos to promote 'personal liberties and free markets' and vowing not to publish pieces opposing those principles. 4 Other high-profile writers who've taken the buyouts include columnists Jonathan Capehart, Catherine Rampell, Philip Bump and Joe Davidson. Christopher Sadowski Bezos' directive, which was announced in February, led to the immediate resignation of Post opinion editor David Shipley. Others resigned in protest and a mass cancellation of subscriptions by liberal leaders rocked the paper. The paper faced similar backlash last fall when Bezos blocked the paper's endorsement of then-Vice President Kamala Harris shortly before the election. Earlier this month, Washington Post CEO Will Lewis sent a memo to staff issuing an ultimatum for those contemplating adapting to the paper's new direction. Advertisement Also fueling the exodus from the editorial pages was the initiative by the Post's billionaire owner Jeff Bezos to promote 'personal liberties and free markets' and vowing not to publish pieces opposing those principles. Bezos' directive, which was announced in February, led to the immediate resignation of Post opinion editor David Shipley. Others resigned in protest and a mass cancellation of subscriptions by liberal leaders rocked the paper. The paper faced similar backlash last fall when Bezos blocked the paper's endorsement of then-Vice President Kamala Harris shortly before the election. Earlier this month, Washington Post CEO Will Lewis sent a memo to staff issuing an ultimatum for those contemplating adapting to the paper's new direction.