For now, building owners don't have time to wait for the rebound. William Beaver House in Manhattan's Financial District was mostly empty in 2010, two years after the 47-story condominium tower was built. It's almost 90 percent occupied after owner CIM Group converted the units to luxury rentals costing more than $8,000 a month for a three-bedroom. A down payment on a $3 million apartment at William Beaver would range anywhere from $750,000 to over $1 million, per jumbo loan standards. A pre-recession down payment, averaging 20 percent or less, would have cost $600,000.

"Without the conversion, the condos wouldn't have sold or would have sold at half the price," Bob Scaglion of Rose Associates, the company's manager, said. Eventually, the owners want to put the condominiums back on the purchase market, according to Heather McDonough, broker for Prudential Real Estate who works to sell William Beaver units.

"The rentals are in high demand," McDonough said. "In a few years, maybe it will be different."

First « 1 2 3 4 5 » Next