New York City

Adam Driver Ditches Brooklyn Heights Loft For Bigger Standish Spread

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Published on June 29, 2026
Adam Driver Ditches Brooklyn Heights Loft For Bigger Standish SpreadSource: StreetEasy

Adam Driver has quietly put his combined Brooklyn Heights loft at 20 Henry Street on the market for just under $5 million and has closed on a larger three-unit combination at The Standish on Columbia Heights for roughly $11.5 million. The move takes him from a 2,681-square-foot loft to an estimated 3,500-square-foot residence in one of the neighborhood’s most talked-about condo conversions.

20 Henry Loft Hits the Market

The three-bedroom, 2,681-square-foot loft at 20 Henry Street is listed at $4,999,999, and the StreetEasy listing notes that it was created by combining two residences, with a redesign credited to Elizabeth Roberts Architects. The page also highlights building perks including a doorman, fitness center and cold storage, and names Carl Gambino of Compass as the seller’s agent, according to StreetEasy.

Standish Buy Locks In More Space

The Real Deal reports that Driver, who was identified via a trust, paid $11.5 million for three sixth-floor units at The Standish at 171 Columbia Heights, a combination that comes to roughly 3,500 square feet and that he purchased from Mark and Lindsay Van Zandt. A representative for the broker declined to comment, the outlet added, and commercial tracker Traded shows the deal closed on June 10, 2026, and works out to about $3,285 per square foot.

The Standish’s A-List Appeal

The Standish conversion has long been a magnet for high-profile buyers and full-service amenity hunters. Previous coverage notes that Matt Damon paid a multimillion-dollar sum for the penthouse, and that John Krasinski and Emily Blunt bought into the building in a headline-making sale, according to reporting in W Magazine and local coverage by the Brooklyn Eagle. The Standish’s full-service profile, waterfront proximity and converted prewar details help explain why combined units there command premium per-square-foot prices.

For Brooklyn Heights neighbors and market watchers, Driver’s decision to list one combination while upgrading to another is a reminder that the neighborhood still trades in trophy, privacy-minded layouts. Whether his 20 Henry loft sparks an instant bidding contest or lingers a bit, the swap underlines how A-list buyers keep quietly shuffling within a very tight slice of Brooklyn real estate.