The Fabulous Apartment From This Season of Succession Is For Sale

Photo credit: David Russell/HBO
Photo credit: David Russell/HBO
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One of the greatest joys of watching Succession—besides bearing witness to the supreme dysfunction of the billionaire Roy family—is getting to revel in their fictional 0.001 percenters' lifestyle. Some markers of wealth and status are discreet—their unflashy taste in jewelry; their understated, but very expensive, Loro Piana baseball caps; their logo-less Cucinelli vests. Others are about as subtle as a diamond-encrusted sledgehammer—private jets (with perfect cell service!), helicopters, their yacht, and their many, many impressive homes.

Photo credit: Macall Polay/HBO
Photo credit: Macall Polay/HBO

By now fans of the HBO cult hit—which was rcently renewed for a fourth season—are familiar with Logan's Fifth Avenue duplex penthouse and his beloved summer palace in the Hamptons. We've also been to Lady Caroline Collingwood's grand old English estates and the Roys' London townhouse. And we've seen Kendall, Shiv, Roman, and Connor in their respective Manhattan castles in the sky.

Photo credit: Travis Mark
Photo credit: Travis Mark

With the recent premiere of Succession's third season, there is another stunning property to add to the long list of the Roy family's vast real estate holdings: Kendall's ex-wife Rava's apartment, which, over the first two episodes, he coopts and turns into a situation room for plotting his second coup against his father. The best part? This one is actually for sale—for a cool $23 million and change.

So what does that actually buy? First, a coveted address in Tribeca: the Woolworth Building. In 2015, French architect Thierry Despont designed 32 loft-style residences atop the landmark 1913 tower with amenities like wine storage and a 50-foot lap pool that was once Frank W. Woolworth's own private pool.

Photo credit: Travis Mark
Photo credit: Travis Mark

This unit, Pavilion A—listed by Sotheby's—has more than 6,700 square feet of interior space, a 2,770-square-foot terrace, five bedrooms, six skylights, soaring ceilings, a 52-foot-long great room, and panoramic views.

All these wonderful details aside, consider the bragging rights of living in an actual Roy home. Who can put a price on that?

Photo credit: Travis Mark
Photo credit: Travis Mark

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