Skip to main content
The Corcoran Group, a Luxury Real Estate Company, Logo

447 E 57 ST. CORP.
447 East 57th Street, Sutton Area, Manhattan, NY 10022

Pre-war Co-op

23 units
This is a carousel. Use Next and Previous buttons to navigate.
  • 23 residences
  • 15 stories
  • BUILT 1928

The Details About 447 East 57th Street

Beautiful Rosario Candela prewar cooperative. It has a full time doorman and two elevators.

key features
  • Doorman
  • Common garden
  • Elevators
  • Laundry in every apartment

447 E 57 St. Corp. Units

UnitsPriceBedsBathsHalf BathsInterior Sq.FtTypeContactFloorplan
MAISONETTE$6,500,000551Co-op
PH$5,000,0003412700Co-op
12 FL$4,995,000451Co-op
13 FL$4,175,00045Co-op
15A/B$2,862,500443350Co-op
5-6A$2,800,00033Co-op
13A$2,495,000222300Co-op
3B$2,250,000221600Co-op
MAISONETTE
5 BD | 5 BA
$6,500,000
PH
3 BD | 4 BA
$5,000,000
12 FL
4 BD | 5 BA
$4,995,000
13 FL
4 BD | 5 BA
$4,175,000
15A/B
4 BD | 4 BA
$2,862,500
3B
2 BD | 2 BA
$2,250,000

Get to know the Sutton Area

Sutton Place and the area surrounding it is, in a word, small. Concentrated on 53rd through 59th streets between First Avenue and the East River, the neighborhood has a “blink, and you’ll miss it” quality. That characteristic, however, makes residing on and around Sutton as desirable a prospect as you’ll find. It’s where the Midtown East mindset definitively ends, but the Upper East Side doesn’t quite begin — a tranquil outpost nestled between worlds. Effingham B. Sutton built townhouses here in 1875, hoping to establish a residential community. Yet, it wasn’t until names like Vanderbilt and Morgan arrived in the 1920s that the neighborhood began to fully form. Famed architects like Mott B. Schmidt, Rosario Candela, and Emery Roth would go on to build beautiful townhouses, which pair with the luxurious apartment buildings of the 1940s and 50s to continually define and draw folks into this singular riverside setting.

Sutton Area Neighborhood Guide