
< img src =" https://pyxis.nymag.com/v1/imgs/2ed/be9/fb4f24a69448d9ff56de729663a99fb9ad-104-Bedford-Street--PHE-lede.rhorizontal.w700.jpg "width=" 700" height =" 467"/ > The large-scale skylight in this West Town penthouse studio, as seen in this listing photo, would’ve sufficed to offer us on this house
. Photo-Illustration: Suppressed; Image: Compass For under a million dollars, one can find all sorts of real estate configurations: park- and subway-adjacent studios, one-bedrooms concealed in carriage houses or previous shoe factories, and even the occasional true two-bedroom. We’re combing the marketplace for particularly large, well remodelled, or otherwise worth-a-look apartment or condos at various six-digit cost points.
This week: a special edition of super-special studios.
40 Remsen St., Apt. 3
This Brooklyn Heights studio, as seen in this listing photo, is heavy on the prewar charm
and dark wood. Picture: Corcoran A parlor-level studio in an 1880 townhouse on Remsen Street that’s all prewar charm and dark wood. Get in through an initial pocket door to discover initial parquet floorings with walnut inlay, bay windows with stained-glass transoms and leafy views, and a wood-burning fireplace with a mahogany mantel that matches the custom-made built-ins that line the remainder of the wall. A custom Murphy bed was constructed to mix in with the remainder of the woodwork and enables more space to breathe. The refurbished cooking area comes with a Bertazzoni gas variety and an under-the-counter SubZero refrigerator and freezer drawers. The restroom has sage and seafoam ceramic tile and a heated towel warmer. Monthlies here are $1,464, and the spread is very little– simply basement storage. Still, the area is tough to beat: The Promenade is at the end of the block, L’Appartement 4F’s best croissants are simply around the corner, and the Clark Street 2/3 is a six-minute walk.
104 Bedford St., Apt. PHE
The series of arched windows in this West Town penthouse studio, as seen in this listing photo, are perfect for catching the western golden-hour radiance. Picture: Compass Brooklyn Heights was dark, nearly manly townhouse splendour, and this Bedford Street penthouse is a research study in air and light. The skylight over the primary home would be enough by itself, but there’s also a quartet of arched windows to capture the golden-hour western glow. There’s likewise a wood-burning fireplace in this one. The cooking area is little but windowed and the good news is offset from the living-room. (Your sheets won’t smell like last night’s dinner.) The restroom’s had a recent upgrade, too, but it reads more ’90s hotel than anything. A part-time extremely and bike storage will cost you $1,082 in monthlies, and there’s a $275.39 evaluation through completion of February 2027 along with a 3 percent flip tax. This studio is another location stunner: L’Industrie Pizza around the corner, Hudson River Park a seven-minute walk, and the splendor of the West Town in every direction.
237 E. 12th St., Apt. 2A
This East Village studio, as seen in this listing image, is little
but has space to deal with. Image: Compass Painted brick and another wood-burning fireplace on East 12th Street. We have actually got more excellent windows here– all south-facing. It’s a studio, but it’s not excessively small– you can manage a dining nook or, as staged, that and a little working table. The bedroom alcove can fit a queen, and the kitchen has a remarkably strong quantity of storage space. (It’s also different from the main space, has actually been updated, and comes with granite counters and stainless-steel devices.) The bathroom, on the other hand, has a brand-new TOTO toilet. Monthlies upkeep, at a gentle $891, comes with a part-time incredibly and on-site laundry. (There’s also a continuous evaluation of $270.32 up until the structure’s commercial-basement area is rented out.) The place is quite central, too: a couple of minutes to the L at Third Opportunity, and even less than that to Veselka for 24-hour pierogi and blintzes, just as God intended.
325 Central Park West, Apt. 1ST
This Central Park West Studio, as seen in this listing image, has fantastic prewar percentages. Picture: Compass
An address on Central Park West at West 93rd Street with generous prewar percentages. This studio has “tremendous potential,” per the listing, but the simplicity of the area makes this a far less challenging restoration job than basically any other “bring your specialist” sale we’ve seen in recent months. The gist: A pair of large-scale windows with wood shutters keep an eye out onto Central Park. There’s exposed brick and yet another fireplace. The sleeping alcove uses more personal privacy than the typical studio due to floor-to-ceiling built-ins. The greatest undertaking here might be the kitchen area, however the area is small enough that the updates most likely won’t harm too bad. The regular monthly upkeep is $1,814, and here that supports in-building laundry and an extremely. The location is, again, pretty magnificent: a five-minute walk to the 96th Street B/C station and Jacob’s Pickles for its well-regarded fried chicken.
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