
A rare, 44-foot-wide Chelsea mansion at 345 W. 19th St. has hit the market with a $24.5 million price tag, a six-story, fully reworked single-family home that blends townhouse proportions with full-on trophy-house perks. With its unusually wide frontage and private garden standing out from the block’s narrower rowhouses, it lands as one of downtown Manhattan’s most unconventional single-family offerings.
As reported by the New York Post, the house is being marketed for $24.5 million and includes more than 8,000 square feet of interior space plus nearly 2,400 square feet of outdoor rooms. The Post walks through the property’s photography and floor plans and calls out the 44-foot garden and multiple terraces that turn the place into a vertical compound.
Big Rooms And Skyline Views
Listing records put the interior footprint at roughly 8,300 square feet, with tall ceilings and deep rooms that open directly to the outdoors. Zillow lists about 8,338 square feet for the combined building and notes prior plans for rooftop amenities, underscoring just how much vertical potential is built into the structure.
How It Came Together
The current mansion emerged from the merger of two 22-foot townhouses into a single 44-foot-wide bay, with the original facade preserved while the interior was rebuilt from scratch. A prior commercial listing profile on LoopNet details the combined footprint and structural work and shows how the property was first pitched to architects and developers before it evolved into the finished single-family residence on the market today.
High-End Details
Inside, the house leans all the way into luxury touches: a nearly 1,000-square-foot primary suite, a guest apartment that adds almost another 1,000 square feet of independent living space, radiant heat, a private elevator and roughly 35 windows pulling daylight into the core of the plan. The Post also highlights a penthouse with views toward the Empire State Building and Hudson Yards and, per the listing, a 3,000-gallon heated endless pool that drives home the point that this is a trophy home built for entertaining. "There's probably two dozen or under townhouses wider than 40 feet south of 34th Street," a broker told the Post, underscoring just how scarce a 44-foot frontage is downtown.
The Numbers And The Market
Public listing history shows portions of the address circulating through the market during the 2020 run, with entries in the high single-digit millions that reflect piecemeal sales and plans before everything was pulled together into the current mansion. Zillow's price history and archival listings trace the path from a set of aging townhouses to today’s unified $24.5 million offering.
The property is listed through Douglas Elliman, with full photography and floor plans available to qualified buyers, and the $24.5 million ask places it among Chelsea's priciest single-family options. For buyers who care more about width, light and a private garden than a brand-new tower address, this one lands as an outsized alternative to the typical high-rise condo.









