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Valery Kogan’s Lavish 15 Central Park West Penthouse Sells for $33.89M Amid Billionaire’s Global Property Liquidation
Edited by: TJVNews.com
In a striking chapter of New York City’s high-end real estate narrative, Russian billionaire Valery Kogan and his wife Olga have officially sold their ultra-luxurious penthouse at the iconic 15 Central Park West for $33.89 million, according to city property records reviewed and reported by The New York Post.
The sale, finalized and filed on Monday, marks the end of a protracted listing saga that began in 2023, when the residence was first introduced to the market at a staggering $65 million. Notably, the final sale also includes the penthouse’s opulent furniture, adding even more cachet to what’s already considered one of Manhattan’s most extravagant private residences.

Gold Standard Realty
As reported by The New York Post, the penthouse is a breathtaking 5,398-square-foot spread on the 40th floor, dripping in lavish detail and designed in what insiders have dubbed an “extreme-Versailles” style. This architectural fantasy features 24-karat gold ornaments, large onyx tables, a giant malachite stone fireplace, and a stained-glass door. The interiors also include rich carved woodwork, custom parquet floors, and a sprawling chef’s kitchen, all set against a backdrop of panoramic views of the Manhattan skyline and Central Park.
The residence includes four bedrooms, three and a half bathrooms, and an elaborate home office that doubles as a screening room, highlighting both luxury and functionality. The limestone-clad building was famously designed by Robert A.M. Stern, and, as The New York Post revealed, the same architectural firm was also responsible for crafting the penthouse’s interior design. A source close to the transaction added that the anonymous buyer—shielded behind a shell company—is considering retaining Stern’s firm to “refresh” the space without altering its original aesthetic.
Despite the property’s gilded grandeur, it once faced the specter of foreclosure, a startling turn for such a palatial property in one of Manhattan’s most elite addresses. The listing was part of the Kogans’ post-Ukraine war real estate fire sale, following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, as detailed in The New York Post report. That geopolitical event appears to have triggered a cascade of asset divestments by prominent Russian oligarchs, including Kogan.

The timing of the penthouse sale is particularly notable as Valery Kogan’s legal and political battles back in Russia intensify. According to the information provided in The New York Post report, Kogan is currently entangled in a dispute with President Vladimir Putin’s government over the ownership of Domodedovo Airport, one of Moscow’s major transportation hubs. Russian prosecutors have recently filed a case against Kogan and business partner Dmitry Kamenshchik, accusing them of failing to comply with efforts to renationalize the airport’s managing company—a property long regarded by the Kremlin as strategic to national security.
It’s not the first time the Russian government has moved to reclaim Domodedovo, which was originally privatized in 1997. Under current Russian law, foreign-controlled entities are prohibited from holding stakes in certain critical infrastructure assets, and Kogan’s holdings have increasingly come under official scrutiny.
The Central Park West sale is just one of many properties the Kogans have offloaded in recent years. As detailed in The New York Post report, the couple recently sold a 7-acre estate in Greenwich, Connecticut, for $10.4 million and are still attempting to sell their Plaza Hotel condo, which boasts a castle-like turret and is currently listed at $23 million—a steep drop from its original $50 million asking price.
Across the hall from the Plaza suite, Unit 1008, a one-bedroom apartment, is listed for under $3 million, with both listings handled by Compass broker Charlie Attias, as The New York Post report noted.
Internationally, the Kogans have also liquidated an Israeli penthouse for $33 million and sold a condo at 515 Park Avenue for $14.5 million, a significant markdown from its initial $25 million listing. In a particularly striking example of price erosion, their second Israeli estate, originally listed for $259 million, is now asking $89 million, reflecting a global pullback in Kogan’s once-sprawling property empire.
While the identity of the new owner of the Central Park West penthouse remains unknown, hidden behind layers of corporate anonymity, sources indicate the buyer has no intention of drastically altering the palatial aesthetic. According to The New York Post report, the buyer has expressed admiration for the original design and may simply modernize the infrastructure while preserving its ornate character.
The listing broker, Adam Rothman of Douglas Elliman, declined to comment to The New York Post on the transaction, leaving the motivations of the new owner—and the precise fate of the penthouse’s “extreme-Versailles” legacy—open to speculation.
The sale of Valery Kogan’s Central Park West penthouse marks not just the end of a luxury real estate listing, but a symbol of the shifting fortunes of global oligarchs navigating turbulent geopolitical and economic tides. The sale is part of a much broader pattern of asset liquidation that tells a deeper story—one that spans from New York’s skyline to the Kremlin’s courtroom.

