In Marvel’s Thunderbolts* We discover that Valentina Allegra de Fontaine has purchased Avengers Tower. The former Tony Stark headquarters and Earth’s Mightest Heroes is now owned by Val and its dark organization, Oxe, giving it the perfect headquarters perfect for the new avengers.
This raises a fun question, how much would that building in the real world building actually cost?
We saw the iconic skyscraper for the first time in 2012 The Avengersand again inside Avengers: Age of Ultron. When Spider-Man: Homecoming She came around, Tony Stark was ready to sell and the tower was emptied by Happy Hogan.
This laid the foundations for the climatic robbery of Vulture, but the Marvel fans have speculated since then, who purchased the place?
The voices over the years have indicated everyone, from Oscorp to Fantastic Four, but Thunderbolts* He made the fact that Valentina purchased it and, as he says in the film, it was “good optics” and to have a position aimed at the public for the Sentry program supported by the government.
So … how much did he pay for the building?
IGN spoke with Michael T. Cohen, Dean of Williams Equities, a veteran of real life in the New York real estate sector with four decades of experience and a self-professional Marvel Comics fan. He offered this figure of the baseball field: $ 1.1 billion.
“The metric with which to measure the value would be a price for square foot. So my hypothesis is, there is no part in which they tell you safely if it is a million square feet, or one and a half million, or how large it is.”
Cohen added that since there are no official squares provided by Stark Industries or Marvel Studios, it is a bit of a game of hypothesis, but not without logic. He continued:
“We are shooting in the dark here, without any mathematics below, but I would say that it could easily assume that the Tower of the Avengers will be sold for a billion dollars or more based on the appearance of it, the size and the location.”
However, it wouldn’t have been a simple transaction. This is, after all, a building that was skipped in the air, attacked by aliens and served by the portal for various interdimensional disasters. This makes it a little a risk for both insurers and tenants.
“Would it be very demanding to buy real estate insurance for Avengers Tower if you were a conventional investor. The Avengers, presumably, do not occupy the entire building … How would you feel you are a tenant in the Avengers tower, let’s say, on the floor under them, or above them, or everywhere in the same Bank of Elevator?
“Do the Avengers have a private entrance or ride with conventional tenants?” He continued. “If you really built Avengers Tower in the middle of the city, there are some very interesting idiosyncratic considerations that should be taken into consideration.”
In Thunderbolts*Val does not keep the name. “The Watchtower” renounces him, who nods at the Sentry clockwork tower with comics, a floating fortress perched above Manhattan.
It remains to be seen if the guard tower ends up being a place of safety or a monument for the disaster, but one thing is certain: the new Val excavations have not been cheap.
By Joey Gour
Source: Geek Tyrant

Lloyd Grunewald is an author at “The Fashion Vibes”. He is a talented writer who focuses on bringing the latest entertainment-related news to his readers. With a deep understanding of the entertainment industry and a passion for writing, Lloyd delivers engaging articles that keep his readers informed and entertained.