
As seen in this listing image, this Gramercy studio has prewar bones with modern-day updates. Photo-Illustration: Curbed; Picture
: Corcoran For under a million dollars, one can discover all sorts of housing configurations: park- and subway-adjacent studios, one-bedrooms hidden in carriage houses or previous shoe factories, and even the periodic real two-bedroom. We’re combing the marketplace for particularly large, well refurbished, or otherwise worth-a-look houses at various six-digit price points.
This week, we’ve got variety (a studio and a four-bedroom)
81 Irving Pl., Apt. 11A
As seen in this listing image, this Gramercy studio
is a Murphy bed circumstance. Picture: Corcoran A stylish little studio in Gramercy. The bones here are beautiful– exposed beams, casement windows– however the design-y touches– statement lighting, linen wallpaper– caught our eye, too. It’s very much a Murphy bed circumstance, but the integrated actually appears to work well in the room. The kitchen area is streamlined, with limestone counter tops and backsplash, however couldn’t be teensier. The bathroom has actually been upgraded and is otherwise timeless prewar. The upkeep charges are $1,735– high, sure– and you get a 24-hour doorman, a live-in extremely, and a laundry room and storage along with strolling distance to the community’s namesake park. Also, this location has actually been through a couple of price cuts over the past year, so possibly you can shave a little more of the top.
45 W. 10th St., Apt. 1F
As seen in this listing image, the information in the Greenwich Town one-bedroom are easy and classic. Image
: Simple Property A roomy second-floor house in Peter Warren co-op (don’t let the “1” on the door fool you). The details are easy and traditional: hardwoods and good moldings. The cooking area is open idea with an island and lots of cabinets, all of which flows well into the well-proportioned living location and its wall of west-facing large-scale windows. The bed room can fit a king and has double closets. If you purchase this location, we ask you not to touch the mosaics in the restroom. It’s $2,323 for upkeep, which gets you a 24-hour doorman, a live-in extremely, shared laundry, and a recently remodelled roofing deck. (Likewise, there’s parking in the structure, obviously.) An excellent area with lots of stores and dining establishments close by. You’re just a four-minute walk from the West fourth Street station and its different transit lines, a seven-minute walk from Washington Square Park.
518 W. 134th St., Apt. 21
As seen in this listing photo, this four-bedroom in Manhattanville seems like a treehouse with the heavy wood treatment. Photo: Corcoran
Yes, a four-bedroom in Manhattan for less than $500,000, which, as you may have currently thought, implies this one’s an HDFC. But we understand some of you are looking. The layout puts the bed rooms side by side in pairs, which we don’t like, but considering that the largest bedroom shares a door with the one beside it, you can turn one of them into an oversize walk-in closet (the floor plan reveals just 2 reasonably small closets otherwise) or an office. The cooking area’s heavy on shelving and features stainless-steel appliances, although it’s a bring-your-own dishwasher scenario. Between the hardwood floorings and a heavy quantity of raw wood throughout– french doors, window shutters, integrated shelving– the area can feel a little treehouse-y, which is perhaps your thing. (We’re divided here.) Income cap is $174,960 for a household of 3 and monthlies are a lovely $875. Unclear what if any amenities are being used here, but you’re a five-minute walk from the 1 train at West 137th Street, right down the roadway from City College, and a seven-minute walk to St. Nicholas Park.
256 Bergen St., Apt. 2F
As seen in this listing photo, the double exposures and fireplace in this Boerum Hill one-bedroom are rather classy. Photo: Corcoran
Another second-floor one-bedroom co-op, this one a renovated corner system in a Boerum Hill townhouse. Charm is plentiful: The living-room has a black-and-navy wood-burning fireplace and leaded double direct exposures neglecting leafy streets. However wood floors throughout are new, as are the renovated kitchen area’s counter tops and cabinets. The bed room houses the in-unit washer-dryer, and the all-white restroom is quite stylish. The monthlies are pretty low– just $610– and get you basement storage. It’s an 11-minute hike to Atlantic-Barclays and a nine-minute walk to Smith Street’s dining establishment row.
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