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The three-bedroom unit at 20 Henry Street went under contract July 2 after listing for just under $5 million on June 19, New York Post reported. Driver is trading up to a larger combined residence at The Standish in Columbia Heights.
New York PostAdam Driver’s three-bedroom condo at 20 Henry Street in Brooklyn Heights went into contract on July 2, New York Post reported. The actor had listed the property for just under $5 million on June 19. The final sale price is not yet known.
Driver assembled the 2,681-square-foot loft by purchasing two separate units in the converted 1892 candy factory building, one in 2014 and the second in 2017. Property records show a trust connected to the actor paid a total of $4.24 million for the pair. The finished residence features three bedrooms, two and a half bathrooms and a separate study.
Building amenities include a doorman, gym and cold storage. Carl Gambino of Compass handled the listing. Days before placing the Henry Street unit on the market, Driver closed on three combined units at The Standish in nearby Columbia Heights.
He paid $11.5 million for the roughly 3,500-square-foot sixth-floor residence, a price that exceeds $3,200 per square foot. Mark Van Zandt and his wife Lindsay sold the units. They had acquired them over eight years, paying $4 million for Unit 6B in 2017, $1.2 million for Unit 6A in 2021 and $1 million for Unit 601 in 2025.
The Standish has drawn other high-profile owners, including Matt Damon, who purchased the building penthouse in 2017, and the couple John Krasinski and Emily Blunt, who bought a full floor in 2019.
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yna.co.krRengo, Japan's largest union group, released final survey results showing companies offered an average 5.01 percent raise. The figure is below the 5.25 percent average from the prior year.
The automaker beat analyst estimates with a 25 percent year-over-year increase. Production reached 451,758 units, and the company outlined higher capital spending plans.
A Delaware judge ruled Thursday that JPMorgan Chase must keep paying legal fees for Charlie Javice, founder of fintech startup Frank. Javice was convicted in March 2025 of defrauding the bank and sentenced to seven years in prison.