The Riverton Houses is a large (originally 1,232 unit) residential development in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City.
The project was proposed by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company in 1944,[1] and largely served an African American population,[2] in contrast to Met Life's Parkchester in the Bronx (1940), Stuyvesant Town–Peter Cooper Village in Manhattan, Park La Brea in Los Angeles, Parkmerced in San Francisco, and Parkfairfax in Alexandria, Virginia, which were restricted to a whites-only tenancy at the time of their construction.
Some of the units on upper floors had views into the Polo Grounds.
In August 2008, Laurence Gluck's Stellar Management LLC notified its mortgage servicer that it anticipated defaulting on the property's $225 million mortgage within a month, since it was unable to convert half of the property's 1,230 rent-stabilized apartments to market rate; Stellar had owned the property from 2005.
[4] CWCapital won control of the complex in an auction held March 11, 2010,[5] and began operating it through Rose Associates Inc. As of mid-2013, Riverton Houses was managed by CompassRock Real Estate.