Sometimes, it takes a museum—or, rather, the much-hyped renovation of one—to retrain the spotlight on a neighborhood. (Just look at the Bowery post–New Museum.) Since Astoria’sMuseum of the Moving Image unveiled its bombshell $67 million makeover this January, there’s been a noticeable spillover of activity onto the surrounding blocks. A 5 Napkin Burger expanded from Hell’s Kitchen to a location across the street last year, followed by popular Mexican-barbecue hybrid MexiQ, a few blocks north on 30th Avenue; the clubby Astor Room, in the former commissary of the old Kaufman-Astoria Studios; the locally sourced Mex joint Pachanga Patterson, on 31st Avenue; and grilled-cheese-and-gourmet-coffee palace the Queens Kickshaw, on Broadway. Most of the new condominiums—flashy affairs like the Santorini on 30th Street, with its “crystallized glass countertops” and designer baths—are due north or west of the museum, but renters and buyers aren’t coming here just for them. Astoria remains scruffily charming, determinedly international, and relatively affordable. Bond New York’s Kelly Killian says you can still rent a brand-new one-bedroom for as little as $1,800 a month.
This page is a one stop place for all your NYC Luxury real estate questions. It is about demystifying the rental and sales process. It will provide you information about new developments, existing developments, deals and general information about the market.
Monday, December 12, 2011
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Corner Apt ~ W/D In Unit ~ Available Sept 15 | Rental | Upper West Side | New York
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Friday, April 29, 2011
13. Hell’s Roofdeck
(54th to 60th Streets, Tenth to Eleventh Avenues)
Because it’s a no-man’s-land no longer.
By S.Jhoanna Robledo- Published Apr 3, 2011
Despite being sequestered in the heretofore nameless netherland behind the Time Warner Center, the blocks north of Hell’s Kitchen have begun morphing into a luxury corridor of sorts, replete with rentals and condos in buildings gilded with all sorts of amenities. (It seems only right that Urbani Truffles, the Italian supplier of fancified funghi, chose to open their American flagship here.) Donald Trump’s march southward on Riverside Boulevard has been leapfrogged by Extell and its army of gleaming residential towers. Last December, the City Council approved the developer’s plans to build Riverside Center on eight acres hugging the waterfront, with five glassy high-rises stocked with market-rate and affordable housing, a movie theater, a school, a hotel, and nearly three acres of parkland.
Read full article on NYMAG
Read full article on NYMAG
Thursday, April 28, 2011
12. Murray Bay
(a.k.a. the Thirties east of Second Avenue)
Because it just awoke from a 50-year real-estate nap.
By S.Jhoanna Robledo- Published Apr 3, 2011
The last time anything exciting, buildingwise, happened here was in the early sixties, when I. M. Pei built two high-rises in the International Style between 30th and 34th Streets. Almost five decades later, this monotonous stretch finally has landed another noteworthy edifice: 303 East 33rd Street (left). It’s no Pei, but it does hold the distinction of being the area’s first LEED-certified condominium.
ASK A BUYER
Rick Marx, a partner at Ernst & Young, moved from Tampa last year into a two-bedroom apartment in 303 East 33rd Street.
Why’d you pick this neighborhood?
I work uptown, downtown, midtown, so I need someplace that’s central. We started looking in the Flatiron, but they didn’t really have a lot of new construction, so we kept moving east. And then I saw this building and I just fell in love.
I work uptown, downtown, midtown, so I need someplace that’s central. We started looking in the Flatiron, but they didn’t really have a lot of new construction, so we kept moving east. And then I saw this building and I just fell in love.
What was it that sold you?
First of all, I think it’s really interesting from the outside. And it’s set back from the road just enough. You know how in New York, if you’re on a lower floor, you’re looking out onto another building? Here, it feels open.
First of all, I think it’s really interesting from the outside. And it’s set back from the road just enough. You know how in New York, if you’re on a lower floor, you’re looking out onto another building? Here, it feels open.
Was buying in a green building a priority?
No, it really wasn’t. I tell people it’s a green building, and they kind of look at me. I’m very conscious of the environment, but I’m not big into the cause.
No, it really wasn’t. I tell people it’s a green building, and they kind of look at me. I’m very conscious of the environment, but I’m not big into the cause.
So you’re not munching on granola all day.
Not at all. People come in and they think my countertop’s marble, but it’s recycled glass. And the counters in the bathrooms look like stone, but they’re recycled plastic. It’s that kind of green.
Read full article on NYMAG
Not at all. People come in and they think my countertop’s marble, but it’s recycled glass. And the counters in the bathrooms look like stone, but they’re recycled plastic. It’s that kind of green.
Read full article on NYMAG
Friday, April 15, 2011
8-11. Four Micro-Microneighborhoods
Because look at all these new storefronts.
By Lauren Murrow- Published Apr 3, 2011
Orchard Street, Between Canal and Broome Streets
The Lower East Side’s art-fashion-nightlife nexus seeps into Chinatown.
The Lower East Side’s art-fashion-nightlife nexus seeps into Chinatown.
• Gargyle
16A Orchard St.; 917-470-9367
Trendy duds for both genders surrounded by country-club décor.
• The Fat Radish
17 Orchard St.; 212-300-4053
Greenmarket-driven comfort food and cocktails for the conspicuously good-looking.
• Untitled
30 Orchard St.; 212-608-6002
A gallery presenting large-scale installations and attitude to match.
• Scaramouche Gallery
52 Orchard St.; 212-228-2229
A teeny space touting on-the-cusp artists.
• Occulter
83½ Orchard St.; 917-769-2220
The sliver of a jewelry shop peddles oddities like pendants made from carved piano keys.
• Casa Mezcal
86 Orchard St.; 212-777-2600
A den of colored lights, Mezcal, and Oaxacan-style toasted grasshoppers.
• Maraya
87 Orchard St.; 212-334-3499
Dominican, Nicaraguan, and Ecuadoran stogies, and a haven in which to smoke them.
16A Orchard St.; 917-470-9367
Trendy duds for both genders surrounded by country-club décor.
• The Fat Radish
17 Orchard St.; 212-300-4053
Greenmarket-driven comfort food and cocktails for the conspicuously good-looking.
• Untitled
30 Orchard St.; 212-608-6002
A gallery presenting large-scale installations and attitude to match.
• Scaramouche Gallery
52 Orchard St.; 212-228-2229
A teeny space touting on-the-cusp artists.
• Occulter
83½ Orchard St.; 917-769-2220
The sliver of a jewelry shop peddles oddities like pendants made from carved piano keys.
• Casa Mezcal
86 Orchard St.; 212-777-2600
A den of colored lights, Mezcal, and Oaxacan-style toasted grasshoppers.
• Maraya
87 Orchard St.; 212-334-3499
Dominican, Nicaraguan, and Ecuadoran stogies, and a haven in which to smoke them.
North 3rd Street, Between Berry Street and Kent Avenue
Every Williamsburg trope—from yoga to designer denim to fancy pickles—on two blocks.
Every Williamsburg trope—from yoga to designer denim to fancy pickles—on two blocks.
• Cantina Royal
58 N. 3rd St.; 347-763-2938
La Superior’s just-launched higher-brow cousin stuffs tortillas with duck confit and octopus.
• Kula Brooklyn
85 N. 3rd St.; 347-463-9886
A yoga studio preaching both unisex flow and Yoga for Dudes.
• Brooklyn Denim Co.
85 N. 3rd St.; 718-782-2600
A former Adriano Goldschmied exec stocks 30 jeans brands, both cheap and wallet-busting.
• Brooklyn Art Library
103A N. 3rd St.; 718-388-7941
Currently showing off 10,000 sketchbooks by as many amateur and pro artists.
• Brooklyn Oenology Tasting Room
209 Wythe Ave.; 718-599-1259
Mix and match your own four-pour flights ($12 to $16) from nearby wineries.
• Dépanneur
242 Wythe Ave.; 347-227-8424
A Canadian-inspired gourmet shop shelving, naturally, locavore condiments.
58 N. 3rd St.; 347-763-2938
La Superior’s just-launched higher-brow cousin stuffs tortillas with duck confit and octopus.
• Kula Brooklyn
85 N. 3rd St.; 347-463-9886
A yoga studio preaching both unisex flow and Yoga for Dudes.
• Brooklyn Denim Co.
85 N. 3rd St.; 718-782-2600
A former Adriano Goldschmied exec stocks 30 jeans brands, both cheap and wallet-busting.
• Brooklyn Art Library
103A N. 3rd St.; 718-388-7941
Currently showing off 10,000 sketchbooks by as many amateur and pro artists.
• Brooklyn Oenology Tasting Room
209 Wythe Ave.; 718-599-1259
Mix and match your own four-pour flights ($12 to $16) from nearby wineries.
• Dépanneur
242 Wythe Ave.; 347-227-8424
A Canadian-inspired gourmet shop shelving, naturally, locavore condiments.
Elizabeth Street, Between Prince and Houston Streets
The Nolita strip’s tenants turn over en masse.
The Nolita strip’s tenants turn over en masse.
• Thomas Sires
243 Elizabeth St.; 646-692-4472
High-end clothing and globally sourced giftables for the fairer sex.
• The Sock Hop
248 Elizabeth St.; 212-625-3105
Peacocky stockings, socks, and sunglasses.
• Jooneechees
248 Elizabeth St.; 212-343-7313
Gold-flecked Champagne flutes plus martini glasses equals no-brainer wedding gifts.
• Cynthia Vincent
253 Elizabeth St.; 646-707-3830
Between slouchy cocktail frocks and bright, flea-market-sourced baubles, the vibe is decidedly West Coast.
• Fonda Nolita
267 Elizabeth St.; 917-727-0179
A Nolita garage gone Baja, with heaping tacos served from a retrofitted VW bus.
• Billy’s Bakery
268 Elizabeth St.; 212-219-9956
The Magnolia rival’s third, icing-generous cupcake outpost.
• Love Adorned
269 Elizabeth St.; 212-431-5683
A favorite jewelry source, if you’re into wearing pebbles and feathers.
• Rag & Bone/JEAN
73 Houston St.; 212-777-2210
The British duo dedicate this outpost to denim and women’s shoes.
243 Elizabeth St.; 646-692-4472
High-end clothing and globally sourced giftables for the fairer sex.
• The Sock Hop
248 Elizabeth St.; 212-625-3105
Peacocky stockings, socks, and sunglasses.
• Jooneechees
248 Elizabeth St.; 212-343-7313
Gold-flecked Champagne flutes plus martini glasses equals no-brainer wedding gifts.
• Cynthia Vincent
253 Elizabeth St.; 646-707-3830
Between slouchy cocktail frocks and bright, flea-market-sourced baubles, the vibe is decidedly West Coast.
• Fonda Nolita
267 Elizabeth St.; 917-727-0179
A Nolita garage gone Baja, with heaping tacos served from a retrofitted VW bus.
• Billy’s Bakery
268 Elizabeth St.; 212-219-9956
The Magnolia rival’s third, icing-generous cupcake outpost.
• Love Adorned
269 Elizabeth St.; 212-431-5683
A favorite jewelry source, if you’re into wearing pebbles and feathers.
• Rag & Bone/JEAN
73 Houston St.; 212-777-2210
The British duo dedicate this outpost to denim and women’s shoes.
Reade Street, Between Church and Greenwich Streets
Finance and fashion meet cute and ride beach-cruisers on two Tribeca blocks.
Finance and fashion meet cute and ride beach-cruisers on two Tribeca blocks.
• Color Me Mine
92 Reade St.; 212-374-1710
A two-month-old paint-your-own-ceramics studio.
• Ward III
111 Reade St.; 212-240-9194
The low-lit lounge slings $12 bespoke cocktails.
• Tenoverten
112 Reade St., second fl.; 212-406-1010
A manicured multitasker’s dream nail salon, equipped with Wi-Fi and iPads.
• Super Linda
109 W. Broadway; no phone yet
Ex–Beatrice co-owner Matt Abramcyk’s soon-to-debut 100-seat Latin bistro.
• Christina Lehr
139 Reade St.; no phone yet
Belgian-made knits both preppy (stripes!) and hippie (tie-dye!).
• Adeline Adeline
147 Reade St.; 212-227-1150
City bikes and all the accoutrements in loud colors.
92 Reade St.; 212-374-1710
A two-month-old paint-your-own-ceramics studio.
• Ward III
111 Reade St.; 212-240-9194
The low-lit lounge slings $12 bespoke cocktails.
• Tenoverten
112 Reade St., second fl.; 212-406-1010
A manicured multitasker’s dream nail salon, equipped with Wi-Fi and iPads.
• Super Linda
109 W. Broadway; no phone yet
Ex–Beatrice co-owner Matt Abramcyk’s soon-to-debut 100-seat Latin bistro.
• Christina Lehr
139 Reade St.; no phone yet
Belgian-made knits both preppy (stripes!) and hippie (tie-dye!).
• Adeline Adeline
147 Reade St.; 212-227-1150
City bikes and all the accoutrements in loud colors.
Thursday, April 14, 2011
7. Superfund North
(a.k.a., Southeast Greenpoint)
Because a toxic underground blob is no match for a big, underutilized park.
By S.Jhoanna Robledo- Published Apr 3, 2011
There are no fromageries here, no performance spaces with reflecting pools. But just you wait. The streets around pretty, kid-friendly McGolrick Park (just blocks from befouled Newtown Creek) have been gaining fans, many of them upsizing refugees from Williambsurg. Prudential Douglas Elliman’s Diana Hermanowski rented 131 apartments in Greenpoint last year, and 90 percent of them, she says, were in this area.
6. Superfund South
(a.k.a. Gowanus)
Because a toxic canal is no match for a burgeoning nightlife district.
By Jillian Goodman- Published Apr 3, 2011
The Septic Riviera it may be. But the action in Gowanus has only continued to amp up since its waterway was named a Superfund site last year. Joining an existing slew of nightspots are local booze-slingers like Halyards and the music hall going up on Second Avenue. There are daytime traffic generators, too: the coffee-pouring and pie-making operations Crop to Cup and Four & Twenty Blackbirds, plus artist-minded work spaces. And if those aren’t legitimizing enough, a Whole Foods will, someday, rise from a brownfield on Third Avenue and 3rd Street.
439 Third Ave.; 718-499-2917
Sisters Melissa and Emily Elsen’s impeccable pie shop has risen to destination-dessert status in just over a year.
2. Cut Brooklyn
461 Third Ave.; 646-247-9955
Knife-maker Joel Bukiewicz turns out meticulously handcrafted blades, which often sell out during his twice-weekly open-studio hours.
3. Issue Project Room
232 3rd St. (at the Old American Can Factory); 718-330-0313
One of the neighborhood’s revitalization pioneers, the performing-arts venue features programming that is, in a word, eclectic.
4. Halyards
406 Third Ave.; 718-532-8787
Woodworker Edward Colley’s two-month-old labor of love is a pint-size, mahogany-outfitted bar serving ultralocal spirits like Breuckelen gin.
5. Crop to Cup
541A Third Ave.; 917-531-8754
The socially conscious java maven’s new home includes a coffee bar (with forthcoming garden) and holds classes on espresso-making and alternative brewing techniques.
6. Yet-to-be-named venue
177 Second Ave.; no phone yet
An incoming 5,000-square-foot concert and dance space will feature live soul and R&B acts.
7. Littlefield
622 Degraw St.; 718-855-3388
Gowanus’s everything-for-everybody arts venue hosts a diverse roster of musicians (including occasional kiddie rock heroes), holds weekly comedy nights with Kristen Schaal and Kurt Braunohler, and serves cocktails invented by wd-50 mixologist Tona Palomino.
149 7th St.; 718-643-6510
South Brooklyn’s preeminent concert hall has earned an unrivaled rep for indie talent and elaborate parties.
249 Fourth Ave.; 718-230-5740
Though nominally a sports bar, the Bowery Ballroom guys’ clubhouse doubles as an indie-rock venue.
10. The Green Building
452 Union St.; 718-522-3363
The former brass foundry’s event space holds weddings, screenings, and the occasional Jens Lekman concert.
11. Gowanus Print Lab
54 Second Ave.; 718-788-3930
For first dibs on its four- and six-color presses, you need a membership. But no commitment is required for printmaking and digital-media courses.
12. Gowanus Studio Space
166 7th St.; 347-948-5753
With an in-house workshop, gallery, and printmaking studio, the 24-hour shared work space is a one-stop shop for arty freelancers.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
5. Flushingstone
(i.e., Where Flushing meets Whitestone)
Because growthwise, it’s practically Shenzhen.
By S.Jhoanna Robledo- Published Apr 3, 2011
It’s far from Manhattan and far from fashionable, but that matters not a whit to the neighborhood’s frenzied home buyers, who have been snapping up one and two-family homes, and renovating them, at a blistering pace. Last year, the Buildings Department issued 77 building permits in this swath of Queens, more than any other neighborhood in the city. And there’s plenty of space left to develop. According to NYU’s Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, 20.3 percent of buildable square footage is still available. Much of the activity is happening along leafy, low-scale thoroughfares, around 154th Street between 25th and 29th Avenues, far from the commotion of Northern Boulevard and Main Street’s Chinatown but close enough to hit them up for a late-night dumpling fix.
The Suburbs of Manhattan
LIVING IN | THE WEST 70S
‘The Suburbs of Manhattan’
Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
By JAKE MOONEY
Published: April 8, 2011
WHEN Paul Kahn was growing up on the Upper West Side in the 1980s, he recalled recently, it was pleasant and livable but a neighborhood that might seem surprising in hindsight. There were some blocks his parents didn’t let him walk on; many children, himself included, went to private school; and his Little League, which drew from both the Upper West Side and Harlem, still felt uncrowded. He has been away from the area a while — he and his wife, Star, now live in a studio on 14th Street in the East Village. But they are expecting a baby next month and are hoping to move to a two-bedroom apartment on Riverside Drive before then. (A contract, for $600,000 to $700,000, has been signed, and they are awaiting co-op board approval.)
Their anticipated new home in the West 70s evokes the Upper West Side of Mr. Kahn’s youth in many ways, withCentral Park on one side, Riverside Park on the other, and blocks of brownstones and prewar apartments in between. But given its new status as one of the most desirable parts of Manhattan it is different, too: New buildings are taller; storefronts are brighter and often occupied by retail chains. Notably, there are far more children.
That, Ms. Kahn said, is part of the appeal. “I consider the Upper West Side to be the suburbs of Manhattan,” she said. “If you want to stay in Manhattan and you’re considering having a baby, access to the park is such a benefit.”
At the same time, their building, between 71st and 72nd Streets, is near the Beacon Theater, where Ms. Kahn, a set designer, sometimes works. And the corner of 72nd and Broadway has as much bustle as Union Square, she said, adding, “That’s why I live in Manhattan.”
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4. Marcus Garvey Park
Because it’s Harlem’s answer to Madison Square Park.
- By S.Jhoanna Robledo
- Published Apr 3, 2011
Which comes first, the cleaned-up park or the prospering community? In the case of this vibrant slice of ever-transforming Harlem, it’s a little bit of both. Marcus Garvey Park itself is undergoing a near–$8 million renovation, including smoothed-out sidewalks and the transformation of its existing bandshell into a state-of-the-art amphitheater. Amid the neat stretches of always-in-demand brownstones, a 28-story glass condo with an indoor pool (5th on the Park) has sprung up on Fifth Avenue and 120th Street, while nearby, on 123rd Street, there’s the recently constructed Windows on 123, a pair of buildings graced with limestone-balconied apartments and full-floor lofts.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
3. Far West 42nd
(42nd Street between Ninth and Tenth Avenues)
Because despite its gawky name, MiMA is one stunning building.
By S.Jhoanna Robledo- Published Apr 3, 2011
You don’t open on 42nd Street without going big, and MiMA (awkward shorthand for mid-Manhattan) is full of superlatives. It boasts the most floors (63) and square footage (1.2 million) of any mixed-use building in midtown; ridiculous perks like a nearly NBA-size basketball court in the basement; and three Off Broadway theaters—designed by Frank Gehry, no less—anchoring the base. Plus the Hudson River is just two blocks away.
ASK A TENANT
Mark Simpson, a writer who splits his time between New York and Paris, just signed one of the first rental agreements at MiMA. He’ll be moving from Roosevelt Island this month. Here’s what sold him.
You’re about to go from peaceful Roosevelt Island to one of the busiest parts of the city—why?
I hadn’t counted on the soothing quiet of Roosevelt Island not really fitting my lifestyle. Coming to and fro on the tram is more trouble than it is glamorous.
I hadn’t counted on the soothing quiet of Roosevelt Island not really fitting my lifestyle. Coming to and fro on the tram is more trouble than it is glamorous.
Aren’t you worried about living by Times Square?
That doesn’t bother me, because I’m a people person. I have a fun New York rule: Since I can’t help everyone, I only help Francophones. Anyone who speaks French I will help.
That doesn’t bother me, because I’m a people person. I have a fun New York rule: Since I can’t help everyone, I only help Francophones. Anyone who speaks French I will help.
What was your initial impression of MiMA?
I didn’t care as much about the amenities as the architecture. The apartments are well designed and spacious, and they have washer-dryers. I’ll use the gym because it’s convenient.
I didn’t care as much about the amenities as the architecture. The apartments are well designed and spacious, and they have washer-dryers. I’ll use the gym because it’s convenient.
And how’s your apartment?
It’s a corner unit. I look toward Times Square and north into Hell’s Kitchen. I like to look out the window. I couldn’t live in a place where I faced a brick wall.
It’s a corner unit. I look toward Times Square and north into Hell’s Kitchen. I like to look out the window. I couldn’t live in a place where I faced a brick wall.
2. Manhattan Valley
Because it’s suburbia with subways.
- By S.Jhoanna Robledo
- Published Apr 3, 2011
The Upper West Side’s stepchild is so perpetually overlooked that many don’t even know where it is. (For the record, it runs from Broadway to Central Park, and from 96th Street to 110th Street.) But the nabe is slowly sloughing off its anonymity, in part thanks to the five glassy buildings that comprise Columbus Square. The still-expanding behemoth is responsible for 710 rentals, two schools, and over 500,000 square feet of retail space, some occupied by stores that are, for better or worse, suburban-mall in flavor. Its construction was a battle royale, with many locals fearing a loss of authenticity and affordability—and some locals have yet to embrace the transformation (the new Whole Foods can’t have helped). But the metamorphosis continues apace, inching north along Amsterdam Avenue, which, in Buca Brick Oven Pizza and the upcoming American bistro The Neighborhood, will have more buzzy restaurants than these parts have seen in years—if ever.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
1. The Higher Line
20th to 30th Streets, Tenth to Eleventh Avenues
Because the High Line is about to double in size.
By S.Jhoanna Robledo- Published Apr 3, 2011
Amid fanfare and friction, they built the High Line, and yes, people did come. Now developers, restaurateurs, and shopkeepers are hoping to work the same mojo with the elevated park’s imminent second section, stretching from West 20th Street to West 30th Street. “The first phase debunked the criticism that it wouldn’t be safe, that it wouldn’t be used,” says Vishaan Chakrabarti of Columbia University, a former director of city planning. As evident from the following list of recently risen shops, hotels, nightclubs, galleries, condominiums, and rental buildings, there’s no shortage of interest in High Line 2.0.
1. 500 West 23rd Street
no phone yet
Developer Sam Zell has taken the reins from Shaya Boymelgreen at this unfinished glass-and-concrete-clad rental, where all units come with rooftop-garden access.
no phone yet
Developer Sam Zell has taken the reins from Shaya Boymelgreen at this unfinished glass-and-concrete-clad rental, where all units come with rooftop-garden access.
2. Amnesia NYC
609 W. 29th St.; 212-643-6464
A 7,000-square-foot Vegas-like club featuring celebrity D.J.’s, fire performers, and aerialists.
609 W. 29th St.; 212-643-6464
A 7,000-square-foot Vegas-like club featuring celebrity D.J.’s, fire performers, and aerialists.
3. ’wichcraft
601 W. 26th St.; 212-780-0577
Expecting a boom in the park-picnic trade, Tom Colicchio expands his sandwich empire.
601 W. 26th St.; 212-780-0577
Expecting a boom in the park-picnic trade, Tom Colicchio expands his sandwich empire.
4. 200 Eleventh Avenue
212-727-6164
Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban are reportedly residents of Annabelle Selldorf’s building, which includes a “sky garage” that whisks residents’ cars right up to their front door.
212-727-6164
Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban are reportedly residents of Annabelle Selldorf’s building, which includes a “sky garage” that whisks residents’ cars right up to their front door.
5. HL23
515 W. 23rd St.; 212-371-3680
Neil Denari’s ecofriendly structure cantilevers over the High Line and is set to open this summer. Eight apartments are still available, including a $12 million, 3,600-square-foot penthouse.
515 W. 23rd St.; 212-371-3680
Neil Denari’s ecofriendly structure cantilevers over the High Line and is set to open this summer. Eight apartments are still available, including a $12 million, 3,600-square-foot penthouse.
6. Cumi’s Baby Boutique
317 Tenth Ave.; 646-633-5282
Handmade clothing, mostly made with silk and linen, for the toddler set.
317 Tenth Ave.; 646-633-5282
Handmade clothing, mostly made with silk and linen, for the toddler set.
7. Avenues: The World School
259 Tenth Ave.; 212-935-5000
The for-profit school, slated to open for the 2012–13 school year, will be run by onetime Yale University president Benno Schmidt and former Phillips Exeter principal Tyler Tingley.
259 Tenth Ave.; 212-935-5000
The for-profit school, slated to open for the 2012–13 school year, will be run by onetime Yale University president Benno Schmidt and former Phillips Exeter principal Tyler Tingley.
8. Love Gelato
642 W. 28th St.; 212-929-2870
The West Village purveyor of artisanal desserts will soon open a retail counter in Chelsea’s Terminal Warehouse, which also houses galleries and shops.
642 W. 28th St.; 212-929-2870
The West Village purveyor of artisanal desserts will soon open a retail counter in Chelsea’s Terminal Warehouse, which also houses galleries and shops.
9. 518 West 27th Street
212-216-0000
The 56-room Hôtel Americano will be the first New York property run by the stylish Mexico City hotelier Grupo Habita.
212-216-0000
The 56-room Hôtel Americano will be the first New York property run by the stylish Mexico City hotelier Grupo Habita.
10. Son Cubano
544 W. 27th St.; 212-366-1640
The meatpacking district’s Havana-themed small-plates joint relocates here this spring.
544 W. 27th St.; 212-366-1640
The meatpacking district’s Havana-themed small-plates joint relocates here this spring.
11. +aRt
537 W. 27th St.; 212-736-4492 (rentals) and 540 W. 28th St.; 212-486-2540 (condos)
A nearly finished mix of high-end rentals and condominiums, with space for an art gallery on the ground floor.
537 W. 27th St.; 212-736-4492 (rentals) and 540 W. 28th St.; 212-486-2540 (condos)
A nearly finished mix of high-end rentals and condominiums, with space for an art gallery on the ground floor.
12. Avalon West Chelsea
517 W. 28th St.; 212-309-1612
AvalonBay’s much-discussed, $275 million project is almost under way. Plans include one lobby, two towers, and 691 apartments.
517 W. 28th St.; 212-309-1612
AvalonBay’s much-discussed, $275 million project is almost under way. Plans include one lobby, two towers, and 691 apartments.
13. Ohm
312 Eleventh Ave.; 212-564-2288
The 360-unit, 37-story rental tower is now 100 percent leased. Residents get exclusive access to in-building concerts hosted by the Knitting Factory.
312 Eleventh Ave.; 212-564-2288
The 360-unit, 37-story rental tower is now 100 percent leased. Residents get exclusive access to in-building concerts hosted by the Knitting Factory.
The Next Big Neighborhoods?
Today’s Gowanus Is Tomorrow’s Tribeca
Twenty under-the-radar microneighborhoods that may just be the Next Big Thing.
- By S.Jhoanna Robledo
- Published Apr 3, 2011
In a city that is, to quote the late, great Alistair Cooke, “the biggest collection of villages in the world,” what makes a village take off? What turns a non-neighborhood or a fledgling neighborhood or a forgotten, forlorn neighborhood into a Name Brand neighborhood? Sometimes, it takes just one big arrival—an overhauled cultural space (see:Museum of the Moving Image, Astoria), a signature building (MiMA on Far West 42nd Street), or a Zeitgeist-seizing restaurant (Roberta’s in Bushwick)—to shake a neighborhood from a stupor. Sometimes, as with the High Line, the city steps in, providing much-needed capital to enliven an area’s crumbling infrastructure. Other times, as with the damn-the-Superfund darlings Gowanusand Greenpoint, the shift comes from basic free-market forces: outpriced renters seeking more space for less rent; shopkeepers needing bigger footprints; a demand for affordable places to shake it on a Saturday night. And it’s also true that, sometimes, sleepers just suddenly wake up. (Good morning, Flushing!) Below you’ll find twenty pockets around the city pulsing with the first stirrings, anyway, of rebirth. Think of them as villages in the making.
The Next Big Neighborhood:- 1. The Higher Line Because the High Line Is About to Double in Size
- 2. Manhattan Valley Because It’s Suburbia With Subways
- 3. Far West 42nd Because Despite Its Gawky Name, MiMA Is One Stunning Building
- 4. Marcus Garvey Park Because It’s Harlem’s Answer to Madison Square Park
- 5. Flushingstone Because Growthwise, It’s Practically Shenzhen
- 6. Superfund South (a.k.a. Gowanus) Because a Toxic Canal Is No Match for a Burgeoning Nightlife District
- 7. Superfund North (a.k.a., Southeast Greenpoint) Because a Toxic Underground Blob Is No Match for a Big, Underutilized Park
- 8. - 11. Four Micro-Microneighborhoods Because Look at All These New Storefronts
- 12. Murray Bay Because It Just Awoke From a 50-Year Real-Estate Nap
- 13. Hell's Roofdeck Because It’s a No-Man’s-Land No Longer
- 14. South Astoria Because It’s the Bowery in 2007
- 15. Fort Fulton Because Brooklyn Is About to Get Its Own Union Square
- 16. Robertasville (a.k.a. Bushwick) Because You Can Now Reap What the Locavore Pizzaioli Sowed
- 17. Garment West Because It’s Crane Crazy
- 18. Lower East FiDi Because That Frank Gehry Building Is Having a Halo Effect
- 19. Pro-Crown Heights Because It’s Park Slope in 1991
- 20. Hamilton Heights Because Soon, It’ll Be Walking Distance From Columbia
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