Photo: Borja B. Hojas/Getty Images
Cary Fukunaga is looking to get out of Hudson Square. The director put his three-bedroom, three-bath penthouse at 570 Broome Street on the market this week, asking $9 million.
Fukunaga, who bought the floor-through in 2019, is best known for his work on the first season of the HBO crime thriller True Detective and directing the James Bond film No Time to Die, but he has been quiet in the years since several women accused him of grooming and inappropriate behavior on set. (Fukunaga has denied the allegations.) According to city records, Fukunaga paid $5.8 million through an LLC for his spot in the 25-story high-rise, which was built in 2019 and designed by Tahir Demircioglu.
The penthouse comes with a pair of private terraces and floor-to-ceiling windows that have uninterrupted views of the Hudson and World Trade Center. There’s a private elevator landing, and the space, per the listing, was designed and furnished by a “renowned movie set producer.” (Unclear if it was the set producer’s idea to go overboard with chevron tiling in the bathrooms.) And in the “big if true” marketing department, the building apparently is self-cleaning and purifies the surrounding air thanks to a titanium-oxide spray treatment on the stone façade.
It’s unclear why Fukunaga is listing his apartment now, but he isn’t the only upper-floor resident looking to sell at No. 570. A separate listing in the building offers a $15.5 million package deal for Fukunaga’s apartment and Penthouse B, which according to property records is owned by Alex Ali Tahsili. The buyer, however, would have to do the heavy lifting of actually combining the spaces. Per many brokers I’ve talked to recently, there isn’t much of an appetite for that kind of project at sky-high price points these days, so who knows how that’ll go.
A listing shot shows the sleek design choices in Cary Fukunaga’s penthouse with the marble and mint-green chef’s kitchen.
Photo: Compass
A listing shot of Fukunaga’s apartment shows the Hollywood-caliber furnishings that apparently were chosen by a movie set producer.
Photo: Compass
This listing photo of Fukunaga’s penthouse shows one of the private terraces that gets uninterrupted views of the Hudson.
Photo: Compass
