What Is A Good Website For Finding Apts In Manhattan?
Feb 15, 2007 by Matt | Posted in Renting & Real Estate
I've searched hire.com and apts.com and they don't offer much. I already got apt guide books and searched the local papers too. I was just wondering if there was a genuinely good site out there that i'm missing.
Hi, I like u will like this one: http://www.cityrealty.com/
Joyful hunting!
Does Anyone Know What The Best Area Or The Best Apts. To Live In Manhattan Kansas?
Aug 19, 2009 by vannam03 | Posted in Kansas City
My economize on is in the army and we are getting stationed at Ft Riley Kansas and we are trying to make prior arrangments but I have no sentiment what location is best and safe for our kids. We have to rent..any suggestions?
You might try down on Canal St. by the wipe out water treatment plant and real close to the fort. There is a whole row of 4 plexus's and something is always open. A lot of fatuous lots for the kids to play in too. :) Junction City is a very safe town, village wide. No real bad spots. But Canal St is sooo cheap! I live close by and you get tolerant of to the odor with in months, not even that bad in the dead of winter. I hope this helps! ;)
Mar 12, 2008 by yoga_babe84 | Posted in Renting & Real Estate
I am persuasive to the city in 4 days and will be looking for an apartment to move into the beginning of May. What is the best way to find affordable 2-3 bedroom apartments in Manhattan. I will be working in that square and would like to find something nearby. I have looked on Craigslist and am not too extremely happy with it. Is there anyone who has experience in the NYC area with judgement housing?
2-3 bedroom apartments are very seldom met with in Manhattan. A studio usually runs around $1200 a month. 1 Bedroom...$2000 a month...2 to 3 bedroom can run anywhere from $4000-50,000 a month.
Jan 31, 2008 by venusian ℓove ♡ | Posted in New York City
I was wondering are there any waist income, low income aprtments in New York that are some what in safe areas excluding harlem and lower east side? Neighborhoods such as Murray Hill, Higher east side ect. ect.
If you are talking about subsidized habitation, there are middle income housing projects, even in swank neighborhoods like the Upper East Side (there's a indeed nice middle income housing complex in Tribecca, blocks from the World Dealings Center site.)
These are government subsidized buildings, and have long, long, LONG waiting lists. I'm talking like 10 years! I was on a waiting rota for a 1 bedroom in the Tribecca complex (called Independence Plaza) and by the time my name came up, I needed a much bigger consider PLUS I already had an income (combined with my husband) that was too high for the complex, not to mention the fact that I already owned a much bigger co-op! So, by the heyday someone's name comes up, the whole thing may be moot!
Adding to the long waiting lists for this kind of dwelling, is the fact that many of the developers are trying to get out of their obligation to provide middle income housing. Several of the buildings have reached the end of their concurrence with the federal/state/or city government, and are applying to make their buildings "superstore rate housing." This will mean the rents will go WAY up! All of Stuyvesant Town used to be waist income housing, but is now market rate housing, for example.
In general subsidized and even hire out regulated apartments in Manhattan are becoming rarer and rarer, but they do occassionally come up. Sometimes people just stroke of luck into them!
Feb 04, 2009 by Gloria K | Posted in Renting & Real Estate
Simple life Manhattan: a 90-square-foot microstudio
By choosing a studio that measures even-handed 12 feet by 7 feet, Felice Cohen can afford to live in Manhattan's More elevated West Side where apartments ...
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