A first look introduces the concept — 5,302 square feet of Art Deco precision across a grand living room, library, multiple foyers & private terraces, and beyond. A closer study uncovers the details: brass hardware cast from original molds used at the Paris Opera House, etched glass doors reproduced from Parisian estates, marble that required three times the typical cutting to achieve perfect book-matching. The living room's gold-leafed cove ceiling frames a 1920 Salerno French light fixture — not added afterward, but the reason the ceiling exists at that exact height. In the powder room, a glass mermaid panel commands a space designed entirely around it: black marble floors inset with white diamonds, silver ceiling, starburst door hardware. The library's sycamore paneling was selected to complement specific art, its Roman fireplace finished with bronze end plates that echo the dining room's cornice boards. Even utilitarian spaces hold intention. The kitchen's black lacquer cabinets in piano finish and speckled granite surfaces make daily routines feel deliberate. The primary suite's dual bathrooms feature blue mirrored glass and Italian marble, complemented by heated floors, a built-in coffee bar, and automated shades. A second bedroom suite and flexible spaces throughout maintain the same standard: nothing here is an afterthought. Two private terraces — a rarity within the building's twenty-four exclusive residences — extend living space outdoors with the downtown skyline as a backdrop. Throughout, wall segments have been indented to receive specific pieces, and area rugs are inset directly into the flooring. This level of specificity promises an invigorating challenge to decorate, even for the expert eye — but therein lies the reward. As a Mansion resident, you inherit twenty-four-hour security, valet parking, and private access to the hotel's restaurant and room service. Furniture available for purchase.