Diehard Dem Fund-Raisers Selling 720 Park Spread for Around $37 M.

This article was published in the October 6, 2008, edition of The New York Observer.

Diehard Dem Fund-Raisers Selling 720 Park Spread for Around $37 M.
PatrickMcMullan.com

It would take tightly shut eyes and a gargantuan leap of faith to not be at least slightly panicked about the tiptop of New York City’s high-end real estate. Lawsuits over record-breaking condos at the Plaza are flying back and forth; star townhouses are languishing on the market; and brokers who barely six months ago wondered aloud when we’d be seeing $100 million deals are quietly complaining about having to sing lullabies to angst-ridden clients.

But all is not lost. A source said Monday that the Democratic Party fund-raising stars Carl Spielvogel and Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel are in contract to sell their seventh-floor apartment at 720 Park Avenue for around $37 million, though they paid only $20 million just two years ago.

Reached on Monday evening, Ms. Diamonstein-Spielvogel, a member of the Landmarks Preservation Commission from 1972 to 1987, was exceptionally unamused about being phoned. “I am not prepared to talk about it. I am not prepared to talk about it,” she repeated. Her stately, unsmiling monotone was fairly terrifying. “I am surely not discussing this.”

When told that a source had said her apartment would be selling for $37 million, she said, “That’s not accurate.” Which part? “The number. Bye.” She hung up. Afterward, a second source said the price could be slightly higher or maybe a tad lower than $37 million.

Mr. Spielvogel, an advertising executive turned car dealership magnate, served as an ambassador to Slovakia for eight months at the end of Bill Clinton’s second term. The couple’s posh fund-raisers for the president and his wife, held 10 floors up in the Spielvogels’ previous 720 Park apartment, reportedly forced the co-op board to ban residents from inviting officials requiring Secret Service protection without prior approval. “I find it very creepy to have men with guns in the lobby,” a neighbor, Ellen Graham, said in 2001. “Besides, anything to keep the Clintons out.”

In mid-2006, the couple bought the current 720 Park spread two weeks after selling their previous one for $18.7 million. This time around, their apartment hadn’t been on the market, but according to old reports, the place has 14 rooms, 5,780 square feet, five bedrooms, two maids’ rooms, a library, a powder room with a private sitting area, plus about six other bathrooms.

mabelson@observer.com

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yankwitter (not verified) says:

Mr. Spielvogel, an advertising executive turned car dealership magnate, served as an ambassador to Slovakia for eight months at the end of Bill Clinton’s second term. aoc gold with ultima online gold but also uo gold. The couple’s posh fund-raisers for the president and his wife, held 10 floors up in the Spielvogels’ previous 720 Park apartment, reportedly forced the co-op board to ban residents from inviting officials requiring Secret Service protection without prior approval.

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