
The case was settled quietly the next year. The would-be buyer, who was in contract for a $46.25 million apartment, was a member of the Beckmann family, the owners of the Jose Cuervo tequila brand, according to sources familiar with the suit. The anonymous buyer of unit 84B cited a “catastrophic water flood” that caused major damage to the 83rd to 86th floors in 2016 as grounds to back out of the deal. Abramovich’s apartment several floors below the leak, causing an estimated $500,000 in damage, she said. Czarnecki said he was “not at liberty to comment.”Īfter the first incident, water seeped into Ms. Four days later, a “water line failure” on the 74th floor caused water to enter elevator shafts, removing two of the four residential elevators from service for weeks. 22, was caused by a “blown” flange, a ribbed collar that connects piping, around a high-pressure water feed on the 60th floor. There have been a number of floods in the building, including two leaks in November 2018 that the general manager of the building, Len Czarnecki, acknowledged in emails to residents. “That’s how I went up to my hoity-toity apartment before closing.” “They put me in a freight elevator surrounded by steel plates and plywood, with a hard-hat operator,” she said. She was disappointed with her purchase on Day 1, she said, when she left her home in London in early 2016 to move into what she expected to be a completed apartment, and found that both her unit and the building were still under construction. Abramovich and her husband, Mikhail, retired business owners who worked in the oil and gas business, bought a high-floor, 3,500-square-foot apartment at the tower for nearly $17 million in 2016, to have a secondary home near their adult children. The construction manager, Lendlease, said in a statement that they “have been in contact” with the developers, “regarding some comments from tenants, which we are currently evaluating.” ‘High-Rise Hell’: Elevator outages in one luxury tower have turned daily life upside down and trapped residents with mobility issues inside their apartments.Testing the Limits: Only three of New York’s 25 tallest residential buildings - and none of the towers on Billionaires’ Row in Manhattan - have completed safety tasks required by the city.Supertalls: Brooklyn Tower will be the city’s first supertall outside of Manhattan, but concerns about supertall construction are still fresh in buyers’ minds.

A 642-Foot Mystery: The architect named on a number of large projects in New York City, including a new Manhattan hotel, never worked on many of them, a Times investigation found.The Skyscrapers Shaping New York City A recent building boom has transformed the city’s skyline, and its impact will echo for years to come.
