443 Greenwich Street
1882 Tribeca warehouse. Christopher Peacock kitchens. 48-inch Wolf range. Original Carolina yellow pine beams from 1882. Celebrity privacy and underground drive-in garage.
| Building Type | landmark conversion |
| Era | Victorian (1880–1900) |
| Governance | Condominium |
| Board Approval | Not Required |
| Year | 1882 (converted 2017) |
| Architect | Charles C. Haight (1882–1883); CetraRuddy Architecture (conversion) (conversion by CetraRuddy Architecture) |
| Interior Designer | CetraRuddy Architecture |
| Landmark | Yes |
| Units | 53 |
| Price Range | $4.5M - $22.0M |
| Design Register | Historic Conversion |
| Flooring | 8-inch wide white oak throughout; original 1882 Carolina yellow pine beams and columns exposed above |
| Kitchen | Christopher Peacock (with 2-inch thick Calacatta marble islands; wood and fluted glass cabinetry) |
| Countertop | 2-inch thick Calacatta marble island; traditional in-fill cabinetry |
| Backsplash | Calacatta marble |
| Appliances | Wolf + Miele + Sub-Zero |
| Appliance Suite | 48-inch Wolf range with vented hood, Miele dishwasher, built-in Miele coffee maker, convection oven/microwave, Sub-Zero refrigerator; dual dishwashers in larger units |
| Bath Fixtures | Custom; limestone inset powder room entry; blackened steel feature wall |
| Bath Stone | Marble throughout; powder room with blackened steel and limestone |
| Ceilings | 11–14 ft |
| Windows | Mahogany thermopane windows (Landmark-approved); original arched window openings; antique bronze doors with pillowed light antique brass doorknobs |
| Smart Home | Not specified |
| Collections | 53 residences (45 lofts 2,900–4,250 sq ft; 8 penthouses 5,000–9,300 sq ft); landmarked Romanesque Revival facade; underground private drive-in garage with valet (electric charging); 4,000 sq ft landscaped courtyard by Hank White; LEED certified; amenities: 71-foot indoor pool, 5,000 sq ft roof terrace, hamam (Turkish bath) |
| Lobby | Metropolitan celebrity address: Tom Brady, Gisele Bündchen, Justin Timberlake among known buyers. 1882 book bindery warehouse by Charles C. Haight converted by MetroLoft/Nathan Berman. Underground private drive-in garage provides unmatched arrival privacy. Original 1882 Carolina yellow pine beams exposed in every unit's ceiling. |
443 Greenwich Street has achieved a rare dual status: architectural landmark and celebrity enclave. Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen, Justin Timberlake, and many A-list figures have owned here — drawn not by the building's public profile (the limestone Romanesque Revival facade is discreet) but by its underground private drive-in garage, which makes arrival and departure genuinely private at a level no doorman building can match.
The architecture of the 1882 book bindery warehouse creates a living environment unlike any other in Tribeca: original Carolina yellow pine beams and columns from 1882 exposed above 8-inch white oak floors. Christopher Peacock kitchens — the same British bespoke maker specified at 520 Park Avenue — with 48-inch Wolf ranges and 2-inch thick Calacatta marble islands. Antique bronze doors with pillowed doorknobs in light antique brass. Mahogany thermopane windows (Landmark-approved).
- Original 1882 Carolina yellow pine beams and columns are the building's defining element — design must engage, not conceal them
- Christopher Peacock kitchen is premium British bespoke — renovation should match or exceed this quality tier
- 48-inch Wolf range signals professional cooking — culinary infrastructure, ventilation, and storage should support this
- Underground drive-in garage means arrival sequence is entirely different from any doorman building
- Celebrity client profile means privacy, art display, and entertainment infrastructure are primary design priorities
- 8-inch wide oak floors create an unusually solid visual base — appropriate for the building's industrial scale
