News

Homes for Sale in Manhattan and the Bronx

Manhattan | 605 West 111th Street, No. 61

Morningside Heights Co-op

$1.395 million

A two-bedroom, two-bath, roughly 1,500-square-foot apartment with a windowed kitchen, a living room with built-in bookshelves, a bedroom with mahogany pocket doors and built-in bar cabinet, a smaller room that could be used as a third bedroom, windowed bathrooms, window-unit air-conditioning and ample closets, on the top floor of a six-story 1906 doorman building with a live-in super, storage units, a bike room and shared laundry. Jeffrey Stockwell, Ben Haymes and Dominique Ramirez, Brown Harris Stevens, 917-449-3433; bhsusa.com

Costs

Maintenance: $1,906 a month

Pros

This roomy apartment is close to Columbia University. The board permits subletting after the first year.

Cons

A king-size bed would be tight in the primary bedroom, which could use a renovation. The walls of closets in two of the bedrooms may be unsightly to some.


Manhattan | 480 Park Avenue, No. 11H

Upper East Side Co-op

$975,000

A one-bedroom, one-bath, roughly 1,000-square-foot apartment with a windowed galley kitchen, original herringbone floors in the foyer and living room, a large bedroom, a windowed bathroom, ample closets, a wood-burning fireplace and window unit air-conditioning, on the 11th floor of a 19-story prewar doorman building by Emery Roth that has a concierge, gym, roof deck, shared laundry and deeded storage cages. Arlene Reed and Rebecca Blacker, Coldwell Banker Warburg, 212-439-5180; cbwarburg.com

Costs

Maintenance: $2,750 a month

Pros

The entry foyer is grand and the fireplace works. The board permits washer/dryers. Maintenance includes electricity.

Cons

The kitchen is tiny and the bathroom could use a renovation.


Bronx | 1020 Grand Concourse, No. 23P

Grand Concourse Co-op

$695,000

A one-bedroom, one-and-a-half-bath, roughly 1,000-square-foot apartment that has an open kitchen/living/dining room with a Murphy bed, built-in shelves, a wine bar, a breakfast bar, cove lighting, a half bath and a full bath connected by a shower with frosted glass doors, terrazzo tile flooring, ample storage, central heating and air-conditioning and a balcony, on the top floor of a 23-story doorman building in the Grand Concourse Historic District with a parking garage and shared laundry. Matthew Bank, Bank Neary Real Estate, 917-608-6309; bankneary.com

Costs

Maintenance: $1,262 a month

Pros

You can see the George Washington Bridge from the balcony. The seller was the architect behind the apartment’s recent renovation. It’s offered furnished for a fee. Parking spots in the building’s attached garage cost $375 a month.

Cons

The living area, where a TV is currently kept, is small. The hallway outside the apartment lacks glamour. The floor plan, which connects two bathrooms through a shower, may not suit some buyers.

Given the fast pace of the current market, some properties may no longer be available at the time of publication.

For weekly email updates on residential real estate news, sign up here.

Back to top button