Holly Sose
About
Buying or selling property in Manhattan means navigating a market where every square foot counts. Holly Sose handles real estate transactions in a city where zoning laws and co-op boards can turn even simple deals into strategic operations. The third floor of 524 Broadway places this office amid SoHo’s cast-iron facades, where retail spaces blur into residential lofts and the hum of commerce never quite fades.
Real estate here isn’t just about listings—it’s about interpreting the unspoken rules of a neighborhood where a storefront’s lineage might matter as much as its square footage. Rentals, sales, investment properties: the work spans the spectrum, but always with the understanding that New York’s market moves faster than most. No two deals follow the same path, especially when historic districts and commercial overlays enter the equation.
Between Houston and Spring, Broadway cuts through a stretch where galleries, tech startups, and legacy businesses coexist in uneasy harmony. The address alone suggests a client base that might include artists pricing out of old studios, landlords dividing pre-war buildings, or buyers hunting for that rare triplex with original tin ceilings. For those mapping out next steps, the directions confirm what locals already know: this corner of SoHo doesn’t do quiet.
A phone call still starts most transactions in this city, even when algorithms claim to predict the market. Reach out at (917) 657-1055—because in New York, timing isn’t just a factor, it’s the only factor that never goes out of style.