A grand $28M residence at the Ritz-Carlton (one of only 12) is up for grabs in New York City

Occupying an entire floor above the hotel, the rare Central Park South residence has more than 1,200 square feet of terraces, protected park frontage, and Ritz-Carlton service in a building with just 12 private homes.

Georgie Mihaila
9 Min Read
Brown Harris Stevens

A full-floor residence at 50 Central Park South is now on the market, offering one of the rarest combinations in Manhattan real estate: true scale, protected Central Park frontage, and the service infrastructure of The Ritz-Carlton.

Residence 27 spans 6,829 square feet of interior space and more than 1,200 square feet of outdoor terraces, with open exposures in all four directions. The home is listed for $28 million by Raphael De Niro and James C. Flowers of The De Niro Group at Brown Harris Stevens.

One of only twelve private residences in the building, the apartment occupies its own floor — a level of privacy increasingly uncommon along Central Park South.

A full-floor home with Central Park-facing terraces

Brown Harris Stevens

Above the hotel component at 50 Central Park South sit just twelve private residences.

Not twelve per floor. Twelve total.

That degree of scarcity is almost unheard of along Central Park South, where newer towers may contain dozens — sometimes hundreds — of condominiums. Residence 27 occupies its own floor, reinforcing a level of exclusivity that is structural, not symbolic.

One of only twelve private residences in a globally recognized address

Brown Harris Stevens

The Ritz-Carlton name carries global recognition, but this particular address holds a distinct place in New York’s architectural and cultural landscape.

Rising at the corner of Central Park and Sixth Avenue, the building has anchored one of Manhattan’s most prominent intersections for generations. Few residential addresses in the city are as instantly identifiable to an international audience.

Originally completed in 1938 and rooted in the architectural legacy associated with Emery Roth’s Ritz Hotel lineage, the structure brings pre-war gravitas to a market often dominated by contemporary glass supertowers.

Its proportions, masonry presence, and relationship to the park feel established rather than newly inserted.

A full-floor layout with four exposures

Brown Harris Stevens

Residence 27 benefits from east, north, south, and west exposures, a configuration that ensures natural light throughout the day.

Full-floor living eliminates adjacent residential walls, offering a level of quiet and privacy that remains difficult to achieve in most Manhattan condominiums.

A 53-foot terrace overlooking Central Park and over 1,200 square feet of outdoor space

Brown Harris Stevens

Among the home’s most notable features is a 53-foot terrace facing directly onto Central Park.

It provides uninterrupted green views and a rare outdoor vantage point above one of the most famous landscapes in the world. The terrace functions as a true extension of the entertaining spaces rather than a symbolic balcony.

In total, the residence includes over 1,200 square feet of private terraces. Outdoor space at this scale, particularly along Central Park South, is exceptionally uncommon.

These terraces create multiple zones for dining, gathering, or quiet retreat above the city.

Architectural design with a sculptural entry sequence

Brown Harris Stevens

The interiors were conceived by Thierry Despont, whose work is known for disciplined proportion and material refinement. Rather than chasing trend or spectacle, Despont’s approach emphasizes permanence and architectural coherence.

Arrival begins with a private elevator landing and transitions through a bronze entry into a gallery framed by custom Lalique windows.

The sequence establishes separation from the building’s public spaces and introduces the residence with restraint and craftsmanship.

A grand living room anchored by marble

The principal living room is centered on an antique marble fireplace, offering scale without excess. Floor-to-ceiling French doors open directly onto the park-facing terrace, reinforcing the home’s continuous dialogue with Central Park.

Brown Harris Stevens
Brown Harris Stevens

A paneled library with Lalique detailing

Adjacent to the living room, a richly paneled library incorporates a discreet Lalique-detailed bar. The room balances intimacy and formality, functioning as both private study and refined entertaining space.

Brown Harris Stevens
Brown Harris Stevens

A dining room positioned for skyline views

The formal dining room occupies the northwest corner, capturing open park and skyline views.

Its placement reinforces the residence’s orientation strategy, with entertaining spaces positioned to absorb the most dramatic perspectives.

Brown Harris Stevens

A chef’s kitchen designed for daily use

The kitchen connects seamlessly to a breakfast room and secondary terrace.

Generous work surfaces, refined cabinetry, and practical adjacency to service areas reflect a layout intended for consistent use rather than occasional display.

Brown Harris Stevens

With a breakfast room and a nearly 40-foot secondary terrace

A second terrace measuring nearly 40 feet in length extends from the kitchen and breakfast room, offering additional outdoor space that feels private and removed from the park-facing entertaining areas.

Brown Harris Stevens

A 2,000-square-foot primary wing

The entire east wing of the apartment is devoted to the primary suite, spanning approximately 2,000 square feet, and incorporating everything from the main bedroom to an office, sitting room, boutique-style dressing rooms and luxuriously-appointed bathrooms.

This separation creates a residence within the residence, insulated from the home’s public zones.

Brown Harris Stevens
Brown Harris Stevens

Park-facing primary bedroom

The primary bedroom overlooks Central Park directly, maintaining protected views that are unlikely to be compromised by future development. The vantage point reinforces the lasting value of this address.

Brown Harris Stevens

Dual dressing rooms and private office

The suite includes dual dressing rooms designed at boutique scale, along with a private office and sitting room. The arrangement supports long-term living, not simply short-term occupancy.

Brown Harris Stevens
Brown Harris Stevens

Dual onyx and marble bathrooms

Two primary bathrooms finished in onyx and marble provide both symmetry and discretion.

The materials reflect traditional luxury rather than contemporary flash, aligning with the building’s architectural tone.

Brown Harris Stevens

A separate southwest wing for guests

Two additional bedroom suites are positioned in the southwest wing, maintaining distance from the primary suite. This wing also houses utility and laundry functions, preserving the clarity of the entertaining spaces.

Brown Harris Stevens

Ritz-Carlton services without hotel intrusion

Residents access the building through a separate residential lobby and benefit from dedicated staff distinct from hotel operations.

Owners may opt into services such as dining, fitness, spa facilities, and in-home assistance, preserving autonomy while maintaining access to hospitality infrastructure.

Brown Harris Stevens

A rare Central Park South configuration

Full-floor homes with protected park frontage, substantial outdoor space, architectural pedigree, and global name recognition rarely become available at this address.

With only twelve private residences in the building, opportunities to purchase here are infrequent.

Brown Harris Stevens

Scale resolved with discretion across 14 rooms

At 6,829 square feet across fourteen rooms, Residence 27 offers substantial scale without resorting to spectacle.

Its value lies in proportion, separation, service, and permanence, qualities that define the most enduring addresses along Central Park South.

Brown Harris Stevens

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With a decade-long career as a digital content creator, Georgie started out as a real estate journalist for Multi-Housing News & CPExecutive. She later transitioned into digital marketing, working with leading real estate websites like PropertyShark, RENTCafé and Point2Homes. After a brief but impactful stint in the start-up world, where she led the marketing divisions of fintech company NestReady and media publisher Goalcast, Georgie returned to her first passion, real estate, and founded FancyPantsHomes.com