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Bed Bath & Beyond exec ID’d as Tribeca ‘Jenga Building’ jumper: source

The chief financial officer of troubled Bed Bath & Beyond has been identified as the man who jumped to his death from the iconic new Tribeca skyscraper known as the “Jenga Building,” The Post has learned.

Gustavo Arnal, 52, who was also an executive vice president for the struggling home goods retailer, plunged from the 18th floor of 56 Leonard St. on Friday, police sources said.

The 60-story building is best known for its purposely misaligned apartments stacked atop each other, resembling the popular game Jenga.

Messages left with Bed Bath & Beyond and Arnal’s family Saturday were not immediately returned.

On Aug. 16, Arnal sold 42,513 shares in company stock for a little over $1 million, according to MarketBeat.com.

Gustavo Arnal, the CFO of Bed, Bath & Beyond, had been identified as the jumper in Tribeca.
Arnal joined the company in 2020. The company has been struggling financially lately. Robert Miller

Arnal, a native of Venezuela and married father of two grown daughters, joined Bed Bath & Beyond in 2020. He previously worked as chief financial officer for cosmetics giant Avon based out of London and had a 20-year career working overseas leading Procter & Gamble.

In 2021, he made more than $2.9 million via Bed Bath & Beyond, including $775,000 in salary and the rest in stock awards, according to InsiderTrades.com.

Bed Bath & Beyond has recently been facing turbulence.

Shares in the Union, New Jersey-based business lost nearly a quarter of their value Wednesday, after the company announced a restructuring that includes store closures, layoffs and a possible stock offering.

The company said it has obtained more than $500 million in new financing and was reducing its workforce by 20%. It plans to close about 150 namesake stores but will keep its Buy Buy Baby chain.

56 Leonard St. is a luxury building, home to many celebrities.

In mid-August, shareholder activist Ryan Cohen, the billionaire co-founder of online pet products retailer Chewy Inc., sold his shares in Bed Bath & Beyond after taking on a 10% stake just months before and pledging to make big changes.

Apartments in the “Jenga Building” feature 19-foot ceilings, double-height windows, white oak and stone floors, a gas fireplace, a chef’s kitchen and three terraces totaling 1,252 square feet with panoramic water and city skyline views. 

It is also a celebrity-packed home to the mega-wealthy, including singer Frank Ocean.

Additional reporting by Larry Celona and Steven Vago