
Manhattan | 210 Riverside Push 7D/6D
Riverside Travel Duplex
$1.5 million
A 1,400-square-foot, two-bed room, two-bath duplex co-op with unique moldings and doors, enough closets, an open residing/eating/kitchen region and whole rest room on the upper level, and an en suite main bed room, library/household office environment and second bedroom with lofted storage on the decreased degree, on the sixth and seventh floors of a 12-tale doorman building from 1909 intended by Schwartz & Gross, with a are living-in superintendent, bicycle area, shared laundry and storage situations. Colin Montgomery and Stan Ponte, Sotheby’s Global Realty, 646-319-3114 sothebysrealty.com
Costs
Maintenance: $2,791 a thirty day period
Pros
This nicely held and effectively-maintained duplex feels like a townhouse. The kitchen area and upstairs rest room are entirely renovated.
Negatives
The making lacks features, like a gymnasium or roof deck. The lavatory on the decreased level is in the most important suite.
Manhattan | 321 West 14th Avenue, No. 2
Chelsea Two-Bedroom
$2.2 million
A two-bedroom, a single-tub, 1,500-square-foot total-floor condominium with primary pocket doors and moldings, 13-foot-ceilings, by way of-the-wall air-conditioning, official eating and dwelling rooms, a huge kitchen area with an island, a loft mattress in the second bedroom, a pantry with a washer-dryer, crafted-in bookshelves and ornamental fireplaces, on the next ground of a five-story 1898 townhouse with a shared backyard. Gil Neary and Greg Farrell, Lender Neary Authentic Estate, 646-431-7330 bankneary.com
Fees
Routine maintenance: $1,586 a month
Pros
The double-pane home windows have been changed two many years back. The condominium arrives with two basement storage units, along with a cupboard and excess closet in the shared hallway.
Disadvantages
The residence demands some updates. The principal bedroom has awkward angles and the other bed room is little.
Brooklyn | 275 Clinton Ave., No. 34
Clinton Hill Co-op
$1.895 million
A three-bedroom, two-bathtub, 1,500-square-foot apartment with 10-foot ceilings, decorative fireplaces, crafted-in cabinets, a windowed kitchen, a huge residing spot, an en suite major bed room with a dressing space, a windowed 2nd toilet with a claw-foot tub, a vented washer/dryer, and integrated basement storage, on the 3rd floor of a 5-story 1897 doorman making with a bicycle area, health and fitness center, shared outside kitchen, back garden, residents’ lounge and library. Deborah Rieders and Sarah Shuken, Corcoran Group, 917-494-2503 corcoran.com
Expenditures
Common fees: $2,020 a month
Pros
The building’s front property gives a buffer from the sidewalk and street. The device retains quite a few unique architectural information. New updates ended up created to the kitchen and lights.
Downsides
The apartment ought to be cooled with window models and inhabitants can’t regulate the warmth.
Presented the rapid speed of the present sector, some attributes may well no more time be out there at the time of publication.
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