Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cliff Lee is selling his condo in Rittenhouse Square in Philadelphia, PA, for $ 6.9 million, according to Philly.com.
Lee’s luxury condo offers spectacular views of the City of Brotherly Love. You can gaze over the historic Rittenhouse District and enjoy viewing the cityscape from the condo’s 20th-floor terrace.
With this condo, you won’t have a need to drive anywhere—this unit comes with a chauffeur and a $ 94,000+ Mercedes-Benz S550. But if you do own a car, you’ll get two automated spaces in the underground parking garage. According to Curbed, you’ll get a wireless key fob, which you can use to summon your vehicle from the garage. So you also get to feel like Batman when you want to take a drive.
The condo is large, too—4,166 square feet to be exact—so you won’t feel cramped. Like the other condos in this exclusive building, these digs take up an entire floor. And that same wireless key fob will make sure you, and only you, can make the elevator stop at your floor. So you won’t have to worry about your neighbors “accidentally” dropping by after you’ve just soaked in the master bathroom’s luxe marble tub.
The building, 1706 Rittenhouse Square, opened in 2010 as a luxury apartment building. That same year it set a record with the $ 12 million sale of a 31st-floor apartment—the most expensive private residence in Philadelphia at the time, according to Philly.com. The building features a koi pond, state-of-the-art gym, game room, conference center, garden, and 24-hour concierge service. It’s located in historic Rittenhouse Square, an area with roots tracing to the 1700s.
Lee, a four-time All-Star, is currently sidelined due to a strained elbow tendon. He was placed on the 60-day disabled list in the middle of March, according to Bleacher Report. The strain affects the same elbow that landed Lee on the disabled list twice last year, and the prognosis is grim for the former ace to pitch this season. If he’s able to pitch again next season, it might not be in Philly—where he’s in the final year of a five-year, $ 120 million contract.