The deal closed June 28 and was recorded in the City Register on Tuesday, though most other aspects of the transaction are cloaked in secrecy.
The seller used a shell company to conceal their identity as they did on the first go-around. The buyer, too, deployed a limited liability company in purchasing the unit last month.
No. PHA also does not appear to have been publicly marketed. In fact, the unit does not seem to have ever been promoted through the typical marketing channels. Indeed, there do not seem to be any listing photos from 2016, when No. PHA was marketed by the building’s developer, the Witkoff Group.
But based on 150 Charles’ offering plan, No. PHA has five bedrooms, five and a half baths and 4,553 square feet, plus 2,521 square feet of terraces.
Overall, Witkoff collected $876 million for the 91-unit condo, the plan shows. And the company’s principal personally did well there himself, buying No. PHB for $24 million in 2016 and then unloading it for $32 million just three years later.
Rocker Jon Bon Jovi also thrived. He bought his fourth-floor apartment for $12.9 million in 2015, records show, before selling it for $15 million three years later.