Wowee! This three-bedroom, 1.5-bath apartment for (get this) $350k is the heart of historic Harlem -- 132nd and 5th Avenue. Lots of storage space and a washer/dryer. Note, though, that there are income restrictions at this co-op.Link to Century 21
Chronicling historical preservation and real estate development in Manhattan.
Wowee! This three-bedroom, 1.5-bath apartment for (get this) $350k is the heart of historic Harlem -- 132nd and 5th Avenue. Lots of storage space and a washer/dryer. Note, though, that there are income restrictions at this co-op.
Earning designations from NY's Landmarks Preservation Commission this week:-- three Depression-era swimming pools and recreation centers in the Art Moderne style, including Brooklyn's McCarren and Sunset Play Centers and East Harlem's Thomas Jefferson Play Center.
We've been away! Here's a bit of what's been happening:
Village
The New York Sun: Washington Square Park Plans Get Cool Reception
Turtle Bay
Reuters: U.N. Signs Contract With Skanska for HQ Renovation
Upper West Side
The New York Sun: Fordham Plans UWS Expansion
The New York Times: Collapse of Wall Under Apartment House Exposes Neighbors' Anger
Harlem
The New York Sun: City Developers Agree: 'Harlem Has Arrived'
New York Daily News: Heart, soul of Harlem dining saying farewell
A new article in City Hall News highlights former New York City Mayor David Dinkins's support of Columbia's expansion as a pragmatic turnaround from his days as a protestor of the university's development practices.
Here's something you don't see every day: a two-bedroom co-op in Chelsea for under $500k. Apparently, this place has a fireplace, high ceilings, hardwood floors and a washer-dryer. Potential downsides: They do want 20% down, and the maintenance is over $800/month. But the location on W. 16th St. and the Hudson, just north of the West Village, is pretty dreamy.
The New York Sun profiles Nicholas Sprayregen, owner of Tuck-It-Away self-storage and a feisty opponent of the proposed Columbia expansion into Manhattanville. The author plays up how relentless and formidable Sprayregen may prove: sending e-mails at 4:45 a.m., reviewing thousands of government documents, willing to spend half a million dollars in protest thus far. Such energies, the article goes on to say, stem from motives both community-minded and personal:Meanwhile, Columbia apparently just closed on two more properties on 131st Street, continuing a "buying spree" that picked up two weeks ago, according to the New York Observer.
New York Sun: Storage Mogul Is an Obstacle to Columbia's Expansion
New York Observer: Columbia University Buying Up a Storm

Come August, the owners of the highly-popular Clinton Street Baking Company (see picture) in the Lower East Side will open an eco-friendly restaurant and juice bar -- called Community Food and Juice -- on Broadway and 112th, where Nacho Mama's last held sway. This seems significant because downtowners tread carefully when choosing their next trendy locales; notable that they picked Morningside Heights over, say, a piece of Brooklyn.
In the same week that a committee of Community Board 9 voted unanimously on a zoning and development plan in sharp contrast with the Columbia's Manhattanville project, university officials issued a statement pledging not to ask the state to use eminent domain in order to evict residents currently in the 17-acre expansion area. Coincidence?
Community Board #9 will hold a public hearing to review their 197-A plan, which seeks to establish comprehensive development guidelines for the neighborhoods of Morningside Heights, Manhattanville and Hamilton Heights. The details of the plan include preserving historic landmarks and blocks and creating a special mixed-use district for Manhattanville, as well as securing industrial jobs, affordable housing and environmentally-friendly policies. If successful, this plan could create guidelines with which the Columbia University expansion must comply.
This is an incredible location on Charles Street -- you usually don't see this sort of listing for under 600k. So, at 499k, this 500-sq. ft. one-bedroom is quite possibly the best deal in the West Village. Besides the original wood floors with the marquetry borders, there isn't much detail to the interior. One modern update of note: a very large skylight in the living space. Worth walking up five flights. Does anyone have any inside information they can share with the readers of this blog?
This appears to be a beauty, inside and out. When Gilded Age guests entered the parlor floor of this townhouse between Riverside Drive and West End Avenue, they found themselves in a charming Reception Hall. Since this co-op has converted this portion of the building into a studio, you will too: there's the original fireplace, the original paneling, parquet floors, high coffered ceilings. It is studio-size (a peek at the floorplan implies it's 300 sq-ft. for the living space), but the under 200k-tag means the price is right for a starter apartment -- and as an investment, since studios have shown tremendous appreciation in prime areas.


