ICON Parking has stopped paying its condo charges on the parking lots it owns through various entities in four Trump Place condominiums.

According to city lien filings, 120 Riverside Blvd., 200 Riverside, 220 Riverside and 240 Riverside, also known as Heritage at Trump Place at the corner of West 72nd Street, are owed a total of $203,921.27 since the beginning of the year.

A board member from one of the buildings, who was not authorized to speak, whispered that Icon is complaining they are paying too much for their common charges because they don’t use the gyms and other amenities for residents.

“If they had an issue with it, they shouldn’t have bought it,” sniffed the board member. “Now they are making a stink about it because their business is bad.”

Icon, led by Daryl Mallah, paid $5.2 million for 200 Riverside, $7.1 million for No. 220 and $4.4 million for the Heritage.

Developer Donald Trump and his Chinese partners sold the garage at No. 120 to Extell for $3.3 million, which then flipped it to Icon for $5.3 million.

Icon later mortgaged about 140 of its garages around town for $133 million.

It could not be determined if they are current on the loan or if they owe other co-ops and condos for rent or common charges. The property taxes appear to be current, at least on the Trump Place buildings.

Condo charges are calculated based on location in a building and the amount of square footage an owner has. Each unit in a building — regardless of whether it’s residential, retail or even a parking garage — owns a percentage of the building, so if one unit’s condo charges go down, the difference must be made up by hiking charges on the other owners.

According to Department of Finance Assistant Commissioner Sam Miller, the board of managers must sign off on such a reapportionment, but many don’t, even if a resident unit owner is unfairly penalized, because it raises everyone else’s costs.

Neither the attorney for the condo nor Icon execs returned calls for comment.

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The slide in Midtown Class A office vacancy rates has taken a breather for the last quarter.

According to a new Jones Lang LaSalle report, the va cancy rate in Midtown hit 15 percent, an increase of 78 percent over last year, but there are signs that things have stabilized.

Rents for the same buildings have dropped 23.1 percent to $73.10 from $95.08. But taking rents have dropped even more — by 40 percent.

“It doesn’t mean the trend will hold, but it has stabilized,” said James Delmonte, Jones Lang LaSalle’s vice president of research.

Downtown, where vacancy rates have nearly doubled to 13.1 percent in Class A office space, an unreleased Jones Lang LaSalle projection may be a further harbinger of doom.

“We looked at the possibility of a certain amount — 9.5 million [square feet] coming back [from companies that are downsizing, or, like Merrill Lynch, have been taken over by others] and the vacancy rate could go up to 20 percent in 2012,” Delmonte said.

But those that want to use that against a certain quadrangle of towers surrounding the Sept. 11th Memorial & Museum shouldn’t leap on the news as PlaNYC still projects massive population and economic growth by 2030.

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The dissed group of buyers for Worldwide Plaza is still trying to complete its “purchase.”

Sources said with all the closing documents ready for signature, the buying team of George Comfort & Sons and RCG Longview are trying to negotiate with Deutsche Bank to come to a meeting of the minds without having to deal with the new July 15 Eastdil Secured bidding date.

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