The Greenwich Village townhouse, between Fifth Avenue and Avenue of the Americas, is 24.5 feet wide and five stories high, with roughly 9,800 square feet of interior space. There are six bedrooms, six full baths and three half baths, and six fireplaces, according to Mr. Dankner.

The sellers were Rebekah Caudwell, a British interior designer, and her husband Nicolas Dupart, a real estate developer. The buyers were identified by Mr. Dankner as a New York family that planned to use the house as a primary residence. Meris Blumstein of the Corcoran Group represented the buyer; she declined to comment.

Mr. Dankner said he had showed the home to several people and received five competing offers.

Ms. Caudwell and Mr. Dupart had bought the house in 2012 for $9.5 million. Soon after, they commenced a top-to-bottom gut renovation that transformed the once rundown building with a Pepto-Bismol pink facade into a designer showcase, with a landscaped interior courtyard, a roof deck with outdoor kitchen, and a finished basement outfitted with a movie theater, gym and sauna.

The property originally came with a separate carriage house, but that was connected to the main house via a breezeway and turned into a chef’s kitchen, with 20-foot vaulted ceilings.

The annual property taxes on the house are $102,936, according to Mr. Dankner.

The Gandolfini apartment, No. 2GH at 99 Jane Street, sold for $6.2 million; it was originally listed for $7.5 million last October. The 3,200-square-foot residence, a combination of two units, has four bedrooms and four baths.

Mr. Gandolfini, best known for his portrayal of the mob boss Tony Soprano in the “Sopranos” TV series, had lived there with his first wife, Marcy Gandolfini, and their son before their divorce in 2002. The deed to the property was transferred to Ms. Gandolfini, a film producer, the following year. Mr. Gandolfini died in 2013.

The Vignelli Family Trust sold a duplex apartment at 130 East 67th Street for $6 million, which was $500,000 below the original list price in January. The co-op unit, on the sixth and seventh floors, has 3,900 square feet with three bedrooms and three and a half baths and a living room with nearly 20-foot ceilings and a towering leaded-glass window.