With their trophy properties being eyed by Western governments due to Vladimir Putin‘s unprovoked war on Ukraine, Russian oligarchs are scrambling their yachts and jets and, according to the New York Post‘s real estate watcher Jennifer Gould, quietly shopping their trophy apartments and homes. Among the several friends-of-Putin who’ve protected their cratering rubles by trading them for condos at 15 Central Park West is Valery Mikhailovich Kogan. Here is a brief excerpt from my House of Outrageous Fortune, the story of that fabled limestone tower of power, on Kogan’s story:
With an estimated $1.6 billion fortune, Kogan ranked number 804 on the 2012 Forbes list of the world’s billionaires, and number 61 among its Russian members, thanks to his co-ownership of a company that holds a seventy-five year contract to run Moscow Domodedovo Airport.
Born in Ukraine, Kogan is a former Soviet navy man who’d studied economics and worked as a diplomat. In the 1990s, he and a partner, whose father reportedly had ties to the failing Soviet government, formed a company called East Line and, like Kogan’s fellow 15 oligarch Dmitry Rybolovlev, grew wealthy, in their case by moving merchandise between Russia and China and dealing in real estate, a business that first brought them to the attention of authorities, who accused them of deceitful practices when they built homes on a former chicken farm near Moscow.
Kogan moved to America after Russian authorities disputed the airport lease with East Line in 2005 and threatened to nationalize it. Ever since, it’s been unclear if East Line owns, leases, or merely operates the airport. After a terrorist attack there early in 2011, Kogan and his partner refused to confirm that they owned the airport, apparently out of fear they might be held accountable for the breach in its security. Later that year, East Line said Kogan’s partner owned the airport through a company based in Cyprus. Making matters even murkier, Haaretz, an Israeli newspaper, alleges that Kogan is connected to the secret services in Russia and repeats vague claims from the Russian press that he is a close but “secret” friend and skiing buddy of Russian president Vladimir Putin, while an investigative TV show in Russia claimed its government is persecuting East Line.
What is sure is that Kogan collects luxury real estate. Public records indicate he owns a large villa near a golf course in the wealthy Silicon Valley suburb of Atherton, California, and a smaller home in Fairfax, Virginia. He also owns a $30 million apartment near Tel Aviv; five beachfront villas in Caesarea (which he razed and is replacing with a fifty-four-thousand-square-foot complex), just down the road from Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s vacation place; and an $18.5 million estate in Greenwich, Connecticut, which the Kogans also hoped to raze and replace with a home so massive, even by the loose local standards, that it set off protests (“It’s not a residence, it’s an industrial project,” said one neighbor). Kogan’s plans in Greenwich were subsequently scaled back considerably.
More relevant to 15CPW is Kogan’s ownership of a $10 million duplex apartment on the thirty-fourth and thirty-fifth floors of the Zeckendorfs’ 515 Park, likely the reason he was able to get around the quiet ban on Russians and buy both penthouse 40A next door to Ben-Haim’s, for which Kogan agreed to pay almost $23 million, and a $2 million one-bedroom unit in the base of the tower, early in 2006. According to a member of the building staff, neither Kogan nor his wife is in residence. Instead, the staffer says, the sprawling penthouse is used by one of their two sons, Alex, an aspiring singer- songwriter who, New York’s Michael Idov wrote, has “been trying and failing to launch an awesomely bad rock career with Dad’s millions.”
Photo of Kogan from http://www.compromat.ru/page_41036.htm