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Even fashion moguls can’t escape New York City’s office slump.

Amancio Ortega, the billionaire founder of Zara, is set to sell his Midtown office building at 366 Madison Ave. for about $50 million — a bruising markdown from the $115.5 million his family office Pontegadea paid in 2006, according to Bloomberg.

The nearly 60% loss underscores how far office values have fallen since the pandemic emptied desks across Manhattan.

Just steps from Grand Central, the 17-story tower is being sold to the Sioni Group, with Eastdil Secured brokering the deal. 


  Billionaire Amancio Ortega’s family office, Pontegadea, is unloading its Manhattan office building at 366 Madison Ave. for about $50 million. Google Maps Billionaire Amancio Ortega’s family office, Pontegadea, is unloading its Manhattan office building at 366 Madison Ave. for about $50 million. Google Maps

  The sale is a steep markdown from the $115.5 million he paid back in 2006. Michael Sofronski for NY Post The sale is a steep markdown from the $115.5 million he paid back in 2006. Michael Sofronski for NY Post

  Ortega, the Zara founder, is worth more than $104 billion. NurPhoto via Getty Images Ortega, the Zara founder, is worth more than $104 billion. NurPhoto via Getty Images

Neither the seller nor the buyer have commented on the transaction.

The sale doesn’t mean Ortega is retreating from real estate. 

The Inditex SA founder, whose net worth tops $104 billion, has been busy buying overseas, snapping up Paris’s Hotel Banke earlier this year for roughly $113 million and adding another trophy property on Barcelona’s Diagonal Avenue.

The markdown at 366 Madison is part of a larger story in New York, where many aging office buildings are being reimagined as housing. 


  The nearly 60% loss Ortega has faced highlights just how much New York’s office market has slumped. Getty Images The nearly 60% loss Ortega has faced highlights just how much New York’s office market has slumped. Getty Images

  Ortega isn’t retreating from real estate altogether — he’s been busy overseas, recently picking up Paris’s Hotel Banke for roughly $113 million and another prime building on Barcelona’s Diagonal Avenue. AFP via Getty Images Ortega isn’t retreating from real estate altogether — he’s been busy overseas, recently picking up Paris’s Hotel Banke for roughly $113 million and another prime building on Barcelona’s Diagonal Avenue. AFP via Getty Images

Projects like 25 Water St., billed as the largest office-to-residential conversion in US history, are reshaping the city with thousands of new apartments.

Together with similar efforts at 55 Broad, 5 Times Square and dozens of smaller properties, conversions are expected to deliver more than 17,000 new homes in the coming years — an ambitious push to counter soaring housing demand while cutting into the city’s glut of empty office space.

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