| Neighborhoods |
| | - Chelsea
Chelsea apartments are located in a Manhattan
neighborhood directly north of Greenwich Village,
stretching from 14th Street to 30th Street, Seventh Avenue to the Hudson River.
Known as a hot, hot, hot and pulsating offbeat area for alternative
life-stylers, Chelsea has hit its peak. Chelsea underwent some dramatic
gentrification in the 1990s, with upgraded housing and the 30-acre Chelsea
Piers Sports and Entertainment Complex coming into being. Additionally, Far West
Chelsea, at Chelsea proper's most Western boundary, has been
transformed from garages and car washes into galleries and production studios
with a constant swirl of gala openings.
Other popular destinations for New Yorkers include the Chelsea Market on
Ninth Avenue and 15th Street. There are many other restaurants and clubs,
especially around 14th Street and 9th Avenue or what is
called the “Meat Packing District”. In addition, you also find mega discount
stores such as Bed Bath & Beyond, Loehman's and Barney's Warehouse. Chelsea
apartments are a mixed bag of residential townhouses, brownstones, apartment
buildings and warehouses turned into lofts, and you can get a little more space
for your money here. There's still ample new construction, but if a Chelsea
apartment is on your wish list, you might want to shop around now before demand
outweighs availability
- East Village
The area has been home to the Beat generation of the 1950s, hippies in the 1960s,
and punks in the late 1970s and 1980s. Today it's still a young person's
neighborhood, with its experimental music clubs, tattoo parlors, and
cutting-edge fashion. Foodies take note:
this neighborhood reputedly contains the most varied assortment of ethnic
restaurants in New York City. For more
trend-setting street life, head east toward Alphabet City (named for avenues A,
B, C, and D) where it was has been greatly revived even though parts of avenues
C and D are still a little rough around the edges. If Johnny Knoxville and the
boys from Jackass lived in the city this is where they would be (I’ve actually
ran into Johnny a few times in this area). Rents are escalating but some
affordable small places can still be found in this hood.
- Financial District / Battery Park
Financial District apartments are located in a 25-acre residential and commercial complex
bounded by Chambers Street to the north, West Street to the east, Pier A to the
south, and the Hudson River to the west. Initially, right after 9/11 many
organizations with offices here migrated away from this area while some left
the city completely. Since then many of the same firms have already returned as
this location is revived. Residential apartments for rent are steadily becoming
more of demand as well due to many renovated doorman buildings for a “moderate”
price. Moderate in terms of New York pricing, considering a similar apartment
in other areas of Manhattan will be, at the minimum, $500 more per month. It’s
a great area to live in if you’re looking for active, busy days and peaceful
quiet nights.
- Gramercy Park
Gramercy Park apartment sales are suprisingly more prevelant than rentals in this hot,
happening youth-oriented enclave of very chic restaurants, mega-stores and
fashion photographer's studios. Once considered a slightly non-descript area
somewhere between downtown and uptown, the area has recently become one of the
most sought after neighborhoods in Manhattan. Gramercy Park proper is bounded
by 18th and 23rd Streets between Third Avenue and Park Avenue South, and
includes the historic area of Irving Place. However, most New Yorkers refer to
anything in the east teens and east 20s as Gramercy Park. Gramercy Park, at the center of this area, is the sole
surviving "private residential park" in the city, and is surrounded
by landmark townhouses and prewar buildings; it is an urban oasis that takes
you back to what life must have been like in the 1800s. The park runs from 19th
to 21st streets and Park Avenue South to Third Avenue. For less expensive
Gramercy Park apartments, both sales and rentals, look just outside these
boundaries where the city bursts into life again offering every type of
dwelling from luxury high-rise living to warehouses converted into loft spaces.
If you are looking for the perfect blend of historic, brownstone-lined side
streets along with every type of venue from nightclubs to a huge open-air
farmer's market in Union Square, Gramercy Park could be exactly what you've
been searching for.
- Greenwich Village
Anchored by NYU and Washington Square Park, this neighborhood is ultra hip and
young. The original corner of cool, the closest any American neighborhood comes
to a corner of Paris. This part of town has been home to artists and writers,
nonconformists, entertainers, intellectuals, and bohemians since the turn of
the 20th century. Downtown charm is
personified in lots of low-rise townhouses, thumbnail size gardens, secret
courtyards, and cobblestone streets. You’ll spot a lot of celebrities in this
neighborhood with its super-hip boutiques, cafes and restaurants. The nightlife
is great. However, be prepared to pay a hefty price for a very small apartment
in this very desirable neighborhood.
- Midtown East
Manhattan apartments located in the New York City area known as Midtown East run from
East 40th to East 59th Street, from Fifth Avenue to the East River. This area
contains desirable neighborhoods such as Beekman Place, Sutton Place and Tudor
City, all located in close proximity to The United Nations. Manhattan
apartments located in these locales are the favorites of diplomats
as well as executives who prefer to walk to their offices in midtown. Some of
the finest restaurants and department stores are located here. Although some
blocks are a mix of commercial and residential properties, the convenience of
the area has made it among the most desirable places to live in New York.
- Midtown West
Midtown West, also known as the Times Square/Theatre District, or Clinton (formerly
Hell's Kitchen), stretches from West 36th Street to West 59th Street, from
Broadway to the Hudson River. If you like the frenzy of living in the thumping
heart of a working New York City encountering more tourists then New Yorkers,
this is the area for you! An intensive renovation project began in the late
90s, bringing an explosion of real estate development, with many fine
residential properties having been built in the West 50s. If you are looking
for a proverbial "City that never sleeps" experience, then searching
for Manhattan apartments in this area is a must.
- SOHO
An acronym for South of Houston. Soho is bordered on the south by Canal Street,
the north by Houston Street, the east by Broadway, and the west by 6th
Avenue. Largely commercial for most of the
20th century, artists pushed to have the neighborhood's many vacant warehouses,
with their natural light and tons of open space turned into residential lofts
in the 1970s and '80s, perfect for sculpting and painting. At that time the
area was zoned exclusively for artists and their studios, with storefront
galleries at ground level. It was the real deal. Then Soho was "discovered", and
consequently Soho apartments and lofts have become much sought after for those
choosing to live downtown. Soho now boasts a swank atmosphere with working
actors and high-paid models living in the neighborhood, and it claims to be one
of the safest neighborhoods in all of New York City. There's high-end retail
shopping, high-end galleries, high-end eateries, and high-end tourists. The
blessing is that Soho still retains its spectacular European-style, old-world
architecture and cobblestone streets. Rents here are among the City's highest,
and occasionally, finding available properties can be challenging.
- The Lower East Side
Bounded by Houston Street, Canal Street, and the FDR Drive, this neighborhood
has exploded over the past five years. This neighborhood is a true
multicultural blend, with trendy boutiques, good bars, French cafés, and
velvet-roped nightspots sprinkled among dry-goods discounters, Spanish bodegas,
and mom-and-pop shops selling everything from T-shirts to designer fashions to
menorahs. If you like alternative and don’t mind a little walk to
transportation this neighborhood is a good choice. Small walk-up apartments can
still be found at reasonable prices as it is still a little seedy.
- Tribeca
Tribeca apartments are located in a vibrant Manhattan neighborhood bounded by Canal and
Barclay Streets to the north and south, and by the Hudson River and Broadway to
the east and west. Tribeca - actually an acronym for the Triangle Below Canal,
boasts a unique collection of shops, restaurants, art galleries and luxury
high-rise apartments. Spacious designer lofts, Robert Deniro's film studio and
restaurant, and constant celebrity sightings give the area a certain buzz. An
eclectic mix of commercial and residential properties combined with a
convenient location near New York City's Financial District. Tribeca apartments
are much sought after as the neighborhood offers the industrial, bohemian
qualities that once characterized the area's cast-iron architecture. Greek
coffee shops, appliance stores and mom-and-pop shops still line the commercial
streets with little change since the 1930's.
- Upper Eastside
Defined as the area from the edge of Central Park at 59th Street to 105th
Street. The neighborhood air is perfumed with the scent of old money,
conservative values, and glamorous sophistication. It may not be the hippest
neighborhood in town being stereo-typed with having an abundance of early
thirties Wall Street couples with baby carriages and elders but it is the home
to some pretty good Irish pubs and restaurants. From luxury 50-storiy high rises to many streets filled with mid-rise
older buildings, given the sheer volume of housing you can usually get a pretty
nice apartment for a decent price in this neighborhood.
- Upper Westside
Broadway, brownstones, books, and some of the city's best bagels... the Upper West Side
extends north from Columbus Circle at 59th Street up to 110th Street,
and is bordered by Central Park West and Riverside Park. The Upper West Side is
separated from the Upper East Side by Central Park. This is the traditional
stronghold of the city's intellectual, creative, and moneyed community, but
many would agree the atmosphere is not as upper crust as the Upper East Side.
| |
|