The building is currently a co-op owned by its residents. There are 64 units.[1][4]
Residents
Among the former residents of the building are the British author P. G. Wodehouse,[5]James J. Rorimer, former Director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Nicola Kraus, co-author of the 2002bestsellingchick lit novel The Nanny Diaries. She vehemently denies that Mrs. X, the mother in the novel, set at a similar Park Avenue building with a fictitious address, is based partially on women she worked for at 1000 Park. Most often speculated as the model for the character is Lisa Birnbach, a part-time CBS News correspondent best known for editing The Official Preppy Handbook in 1980, who has some similarities to the character in the book. Birnbach confirmed that Kraus had worked for her, but described her as "more of a play date for my daughter" than an actual nanny.[6]
Another resident of 1000 Park named as a possible model for Mrs. X did not return phone calls from The New York Times requesting comment. Kraus did not think it inappropriate to use her former neighbors as models for her characters, but current residents of building disagreed. One even referred to Kraus as a "snitch" and suggested the co-op board should forbid residents from fictionalizing their neighbors' lives.[6]
^Trager, James (2004). The New York Chronology. New York: HarperCollins. p. 363.
^Kugel, Seth (July 9, 2006). "Taking a Peek at Prewar Classics". The New York Times. Retrieved April 3, 2010. ... two carved figures ruling over the limestone entrance of 1000 Park Avenue are said to represent the Bing brothers themselves