The Top 10 Everything of 2009

TIME charts the highs and lows of the past year in 50 wide-ranging lists

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1. Stuyvesant Town

Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village

Shannon Stapleton / Reuters / Corbis

This 11,222-unit New York City apartment complex is a one-stop housing bust. Built in 1945, it was owned and operated by the insurance giant MetLife, which decided a couple of years ago to lighten its real estate holdings. Nice move. MetLife sold the project to Tishman Speyer Properties and BlackRock Realty for $5.4 billion. The new owners intended to spiff up the place — designed originally as rent-stabilized housing for returning veterans and their families — and then raise rents and sell apartments.

The courts stopped the new owners from raising rents; the market stopped them from selling apartments. The place is now worth about $1.8 billion. The mortgage is $3 billion; mezzanine debt is $1.4 billion. Left holding the bag: Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, of course, but also Fortress Investment Group and SL Green Realty Corp.

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