A wall of billowy white curtains separates the high-end dark-wooded kitchen from the rest of the common living area. The home comprises four bedrooms, with a number of luxury amenities that hint at expensive taste: a 32-foot-wide great room with an onyx fireplace, a spa, a media room, an 800-square-foot outdoor patio, and a private garage. He became more serious about selling the townhouse in 2017, when he lowered the asking price to $20 million before then, he reportedly said, he wouldn’t have sold “without being paid such a stupid amount of money compared to what it’s worth.” Wilzig told the the Wall Street Journal that he didn’t actually want to part with the property when he first put it on the market in 2014, but was curious to see if he could find foreign investors interested in shelling out the big bucks that he’d seen other houses in the area going for. The home is currently in contract for $12.65 million, which translates into a substantial profit, even if it’s not the original, steep $44 million asking price. ![]() ![]() Alan Wilzig, an ex-banker depicted as a minor character in Martin Scorsese’s 2013 flick The Wolf of Wall Street, recently closed an impressive deal-for a Tribeca townhouse that he bought for $3.35 million back in the mid-2000s.
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