$225,000 for a parking space? Seriously?
Update: This almost seems like parody:
Cynthia Habberstad is at the top of that list. She chose not to buy a spot when they were selling for $165,000, but changed her mind only to learn that all the spaces had been taken.
“At first, I was getting overwhelmed and didn't want to spend the money,” Ms. Habberstad said. “I'm kicking myself now, believe me.”
She and her three children, ages 7, 9 and 11, live on Long Island, but the children's modeling schedules bring them into the city at least twice a week, and the apartment they bought in the building will be a pied-à-terre.
“If we're coming in late from dinner or we have a lot of stuff in the car, do we really want to have to walk a few blocks to get home?” Ms. Habberstad said. “It all makes sense now that I don't have it.”