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	<title>Observer &#187; Co-C.E.O. of Imax Shown the Door At 888 Park Avenue Board Nixes $13 Million Purchase By Imax Films Executive and Wife</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Co-C.E.O. of Imax Shown the Door At 888 Park Avenue Board Nixes $13 Million Purchase By Imax Films Executive and Wife</title>
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		<title>Co-C.E.O. of Imax Shown the Door At 888 Park Avenue Board Nixes $13 Million Purchase By Imax Films Executive and Wife</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2000/11/coceo-of-imax-shown-the-door-at-888-park-avenue-board-nixes-13-million-purchase-by-imax-films-executive-and-wife/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 27 Nov 2000 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2000/11/coceo-of-imax-shown-the-door-at-888-park-avenue-board-nixes-13-million-purchase-by-imax-films-executive-and-wife/</link>
			<dc:creator>Deborah Netburn</dc:creator>
				
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.observer.com/2000/11/coceo-of-imax-shown-the-door-at-888-park-avenue-board-nixes-13-million-purchase-by-imax-films-executive-and-wife/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Four years ago, Carolyn Bessette Kennedy had a pretty hard</p>
<p>time getting past the door at 888 Park Avenue. She was headed to a party in the</p>
<p>apartment of her new sister-in-law, Caroline Kennedy, and her husband Ed</p>
<p>Schlossberg, when the paparazzi practically blinded her as she struggled</p>
<p>through the stone-columned entrance, wearing a long, clingy black dress and</p>
<p>carrying a Barneys shopping bag.</p>
<p> Things haven't gotten any easier at the building. On Nov.</p>
<p>13, 888 Park's board voted not to allow Bradley J. Wechsler, 49, co-chairman</p>
<p>and co–chief executive of Imax Corporation, and his wife, Patti Newberger, into</p>
<p>the co-op. Their decision was characterized as a "broadside" to all involved,</p>
<p>said one observer.</p>
<p> Mr. Wechsler and Ms. Newberger thought the co-op board's</p>
<p>approval was a fait accompli; they have friends in the building. The couple</p>
<p>selling the apartment (to move to a smaller apartment) seemed to agree. "The</p>
<p>seller was all scheduled to move; the boxes were there," said one broker.</p>
<p> Mr. Wechsler and Ms. Newberger saw the 5,200-square-foot</p>
<p>apartment practically before it went on the market for $13 million just after</p>
<p>Labor Day. They decided they wanted it immediately-"It's one of the most</p>
<p>glamorous apartments I've ever seen," said the seller's broker, Michele Kleier</p>
<p>of Gumley Haft Kleier-and signed a contract for just under $13 million about 24</p>
<p>hours later.</p>
<p> The 13-room corner apartment has six rooms facing Park</p>
<p>Avenue, a 40-foot entrance, a 14-by-18-foot master suite (with two bathrooms, a</p>
<p>sitting room and three walk-in closets), four additional bedrooms, a library</p>
<p>and a fireplace. The doors are made of polished cherry wood and the floors are</p>
<p>mahogany. It was extensively renovated a few years ago. The sellers bought the</p>
<p>apartment-the largest one in the building-in the early 1990's. (Maintenance is</p>
<p>$4,225.)</p>
<p> Everything proceeded without a hint of the couple being</p>
<p>undesirable to the co-op board, sources said. "It was a complete shocker," said</p>
<p>a broker about the board's decision. "They were impeccable candidates, and I</p>
<p>know they had really powerful friends. It is absolutely mystifying."</p>
<p> No justification for the rejection was made, and neither Mr.</p>
<p>Wechsler nor his broker, Cindy Kurtin of Stribling &amp; Associates, would</p>
<p>comment, but Imax's stock has plummeted 83 percent so far this year. Mr.</p>
<p>Wechsler and his partner, Richard Gelfond-who bought Imax in 1994 when it was</p>
<p>cash-strapped and turned it around-started trying to sell the Toronto-based</p>
<p>company in July, when they hired Wasserstein Perella (which owns about a 30</p>
<p>percent share in Imax) to find a buyer for all or part of the company. The</p>
<p>company's stock soared on the hope that a studio like Disney would acquire it.</p>
<p>No such luck. Meanwhile, five of the over 200 Imax theater operators worldwide</p>
<p>have filed for bankruptcy protection in the U.S., and the partners have bought</p>
<p>800,000 company shares in what they called an act of faith in the company's</p>
<p>future.</p>
<p> The apartment at 888 Park Avenue went back on the market on</p>
<p>Nov. 20. Sources said that since the turn-down, Mr. Wechsler and Ms. Newberger</p>
<p>have looked at other apartments, including ones at 941 Park Avenue and 969</p>
<p>Fifth Avenue. "The apartments they are looking at are less money, but they need</p>
<p>more work," said a broker.</p>
<p> Still, the couple hasn't taken their 11-room apartment at</p>
<p>784 Park Avenue off the market. The three-bedroom, three-bathroom apartment</p>
<p>went on the market for $6.25 million on Oct. 27; maintenance is $2,975.</p>
<p> Said one broker of the surprising situation: "Whoever turned</p>
<p>them down obviously played the game until the end."</p>
<p>  </p>
<p> UPPER WEST SIDE</p>
<p> 251 West 89th Street Two-bed, two-bath, 1,700-square-foot condo Asking: $1.12 million. Selling: $1.1 million. Charges: $832. Taxes: $250. Time on the market: three months.</p>
<p> THE APARTMENT YOU DIDN'T KNOW YOU HAD TO HAVE The sellers of</p>
<p>this two-bedroom apartment in an early-1900's, family-oriented building hadn't</p>
<p>really intended to move. "The apartment was very pretty," said their broker,</p>
<p>Richard Mortimer of Douglas Elliman. "It had great floors and French doors</p>
<p>everywhere; it was really charming, if a little dark." The couple, who have two</p>
<p>children, were satisfied with their place, but were looking casually at other</p>
<p>apartments. "Maybe they would have liked something bigger," said Mr. Mortimer,</p>
<p>"but there was no major thrust of looking." Then, during the summer, Mr.</p>
<p>Mortimer told them about a 3,400-square-foot condo on Riverside Drive in the</p>
<p>90's. "It was their dream apartment: It looked like a brownstone mansion, and</p>
<p>if they didn't move quickly, they would have lost it," he explained. "They did</p>
<p>everything they could not to lose it." They signed a contract for $3 million</p>
<p>and closed the purchase in August. They put this place on the market in July,</p>
<p>and two doctors bought it in September. According to their broker, the wait</p>
<p>"felt ominous."</p>
<p> WEST VILLAGE</p>
<p> 273 West 12th Street Three-story, 2,200-square-foot townhouse. Asking: $2.695 million. Selling: $2.705 million. Time on the market: six weeks.</p>
<p> HOW TO CLEAR WRITER'S BLOCK </p>
<p>This three-story Federal townhouse first came on the market over a year</p>
<p>ago for $2.495 million, but the seller, a freelance writer, didn't like having</p>
<p>to show it. "He couldn't accommodate both the showing and the writing," said</p>
<p>his broker, Sara Gelbard of the Corcoran Group. So he took it off the market</p>
<p>and didn't put it back on until May, when he could write from his summer home.</p>
<p>The writer's intolerance probably served him well, because the second time the</p>
<p>house came on the market, the asking price had gone up by $200,000. Not that</p>
<p>anybody minded. According to Ms. Gelbard, a model had signed a contract and was</p>
<p>waiting on a signature when a couple came in and overbid with an offer of $2.7</p>
<p>million. The house, circa 1830, is located between Greenwich Avenue and West</p>
<p>Fourth Street and has wide plank floors, central air and a garden in the back.</p>
<p> TRIBECA</p>
<p> 47 Vestry Street Two-bed, two-bath, 2,200-square-foot co-op. Asking: $1.1 million. Selling: $1.075 million. Charges: $1,260; 47 percent tax deductible. Time on the market: six months.</p>
<p> HOW TO NOT MEET THE PARENTS </p>
<p>This apartment originally came on the market in April for $1.2 million.</p>
<p>The sellers accepted an offer in May, but then the buyer had a change of heart.</p>
<p>In June, the price dropped to $1.1 million, and a couple with a small child</p>
<p>came along, trying to escape Chelsea and interested in Tribeca's public</p>
<p>schools, and bought it in late October. The apartment is in a 10-unit loft</p>
<p>building on the corner of Vestry and Greenwich streets. According to their</p>
<p>broker, Brett Grabel of William B. May, they will relocate the kitchen, create</p>
<p>a home office and put in a third bedroom. The remodeling of the</p>
<p>2,200-square-foot apartment will take several months. In the meantime, they've</p>
<p>moved in to her parents' place and will spend the holidays on the Upper East</p>
<p>Side. "[The parents] spend the winter in Florida," explained the broker.</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Four years ago, Carolyn Bessette Kennedy had a pretty hard</p>
<p>time getting past the door at 888 Park Avenue. She was headed to a party in the</p>
<p>apartment of her new sister-in-law, Caroline Kennedy, and her husband Ed</p>
<p>Schlossberg, when the paparazzi practically blinded her as she struggled</p>
<p>through the stone-columned entrance, wearing a long, clingy black dress and</p>
<p>carrying a Barneys shopping bag.</p>
<p> Things haven't gotten any easier at the building. On Nov.</p>
<p>13, 888 Park's board voted not to allow Bradley J. Wechsler, 49, co-chairman</p>
<p>and co–chief executive of Imax Corporation, and his wife, Patti Newberger, into</p>
<p>the co-op. Their decision was characterized as a "broadside" to all involved,</p>
<p>said one observer.</p>
<p> Mr. Wechsler and Ms. Newberger thought the co-op board's</p>
<p>approval was a fait accompli; they have friends in the building. The couple</p>
<p>selling the apartment (to move to a smaller apartment) seemed to agree. "The</p>
<p>seller was all scheduled to move; the boxes were there," said one broker.</p>
<p> Mr. Wechsler and Ms. Newberger saw the 5,200-square-foot</p>
<p>apartment practically before it went on the market for $13 million just after</p>
<p>Labor Day. They decided they wanted it immediately-"It's one of the most</p>
<p>glamorous apartments I've ever seen," said the seller's broker, Michele Kleier</p>
<p>of Gumley Haft Kleier-and signed a contract for just under $13 million about 24</p>
<p>hours later.</p>
<p> The 13-room corner apartment has six rooms facing Park</p>
<p>Avenue, a 40-foot entrance, a 14-by-18-foot master suite (with two bathrooms, a</p>
<p>sitting room and three walk-in closets), four additional bedrooms, a library</p>
<p>and a fireplace. The doors are made of polished cherry wood and the floors are</p>
<p>mahogany. It was extensively renovated a few years ago. The sellers bought the</p>
<p>apartment-the largest one in the building-in the early 1990's. (Maintenance is</p>
<p>$4,225.)</p>
<p> Everything proceeded without a hint of the couple being</p>
<p>undesirable to the co-op board, sources said. "It was a complete shocker," said</p>
<p>a broker about the board's decision. "They were impeccable candidates, and I</p>
<p>know they had really powerful friends. It is absolutely mystifying."</p>
<p> No justification for the rejection was made, and neither Mr.</p>
<p>Wechsler nor his broker, Cindy Kurtin of Stribling &amp; Associates, would</p>
<p>comment, but Imax's stock has plummeted 83 percent so far this year. Mr.</p>
<p>Wechsler and his partner, Richard Gelfond-who bought Imax in 1994 when it was</p>
<p>cash-strapped and turned it around-started trying to sell the Toronto-based</p>
<p>company in July, when they hired Wasserstein Perella (which owns about a 30</p>
<p>percent share in Imax) to find a buyer for all or part of the company. The</p>
<p>company's stock soared on the hope that a studio like Disney would acquire it.</p>
<p>No such luck. Meanwhile, five of the over 200 Imax theater operators worldwide</p>
<p>have filed for bankruptcy protection in the U.S., and the partners have bought</p>
<p>800,000 company shares in what they called an act of faith in the company's</p>
<p>future.</p>
<p> The apartment at 888 Park Avenue went back on the market on</p>
<p>Nov. 20. Sources said that since the turn-down, Mr. Wechsler and Ms. Newberger</p>
<p>have looked at other apartments, including ones at 941 Park Avenue and 969</p>
<p>Fifth Avenue. "The apartments they are looking at are less money, but they need</p>
<p>more work," said a broker.</p>
<p> Still, the couple hasn't taken their 11-room apartment at</p>
<p>784 Park Avenue off the market. The three-bedroom, three-bathroom apartment</p>
<p>went on the market for $6.25 million on Oct. 27; maintenance is $2,975.</p>
<p> Said one broker of the surprising situation: "Whoever turned</p>
<p>them down obviously played the game until the end."</p>
<p>  </p>
<p> UPPER WEST SIDE</p>
<p> 251 West 89th Street Two-bed, two-bath, 1,700-square-foot condo Asking: $1.12 million. Selling: $1.1 million. Charges: $832. Taxes: $250. Time on the market: three months.</p>
<p> THE APARTMENT YOU DIDN'T KNOW YOU HAD TO HAVE The sellers of</p>
<p>this two-bedroom apartment in an early-1900's, family-oriented building hadn't</p>
<p>really intended to move. "The apartment was very pretty," said their broker,</p>
<p>Richard Mortimer of Douglas Elliman. "It had great floors and French doors</p>
<p>everywhere; it was really charming, if a little dark." The couple, who have two</p>
<p>children, were satisfied with their place, but were looking casually at other</p>
<p>apartments. "Maybe they would have liked something bigger," said Mr. Mortimer,</p>
<p>"but there was no major thrust of looking." Then, during the summer, Mr.</p>
<p>Mortimer told them about a 3,400-square-foot condo on Riverside Drive in the</p>
<p>90's. "It was their dream apartment: It looked like a brownstone mansion, and</p>
<p>if they didn't move quickly, they would have lost it," he explained. "They did</p>
<p>everything they could not to lose it." They signed a contract for $3 million</p>
<p>and closed the purchase in August. They put this place on the market in July,</p>
<p>and two doctors bought it in September. According to their broker, the wait</p>
<p>"felt ominous."</p>
<p> WEST VILLAGE</p>
<p> 273 West 12th Street Three-story, 2,200-square-foot townhouse. Asking: $2.695 million. Selling: $2.705 million. Time on the market: six weeks.</p>
<p> HOW TO CLEAR WRITER'S BLOCK </p>
<p>This three-story Federal townhouse first came on the market over a year</p>
<p>ago for $2.495 million, but the seller, a freelance writer, didn't like having</p>
<p>to show it. "He couldn't accommodate both the showing and the writing," said</p>
<p>his broker, Sara Gelbard of the Corcoran Group. So he took it off the market</p>
<p>and didn't put it back on until May, when he could write from his summer home.</p>
<p>The writer's intolerance probably served him well, because the second time the</p>
<p>house came on the market, the asking price had gone up by $200,000. Not that</p>
<p>anybody minded. According to Ms. Gelbard, a model had signed a contract and was</p>
<p>waiting on a signature when a couple came in and overbid with an offer of $2.7</p>
<p>million. The house, circa 1830, is located between Greenwich Avenue and West</p>
<p>Fourth Street and has wide plank floors, central air and a garden in the back.</p>
<p> TRIBECA</p>
<p> 47 Vestry Street Two-bed, two-bath, 2,200-square-foot co-op. Asking: $1.1 million. Selling: $1.075 million. Charges: $1,260; 47 percent tax deductible. Time on the market: six months.</p>
<p> HOW TO NOT MEET THE PARENTS </p>
<p>This apartment originally came on the market in April for $1.2 million.</p>
<p>The sellers accepted an offer in May, but then the buyer had a change of heart.</p>
<p>In June, the price dropped to $1.1 million, and a couple with a small child</p>
<p>came along, trying to escape Chelsea and interested in Tribeca's public</p>
<p>schools, and bought it in late October. The apartment is in a 10-unit loft</p>
<p>building on the corner of Vestry and Greenwich streets. According to their</p>
<p>broker, Brett Grabel of William B. May, they will relocate the kitchen, create</p>
<p>a home office and put in a third bedroom. The remodeling of the</p>
<p>2,200-square-foot apartment will take several months. In the meantime, they've</p>
<p>moved in to her parents' place and will spend the holidays on the Upper East</p>
<p>Side. "[The parents] spend the winter in Florida," explained the broker.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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