In Which Manhattan Upper East Side Streets Would One Come Across Penthouses/apartments With Balconies?
Jun 19, 2008 by I Want Carl Sagan Back. | Posted in New York City
I've pore over that there are loads of apartments with balconies overlooking Central Park, but when I checked Fifth's aerials I realized that there are almost null.
Could you expropriate?
Many thanks.
i live on fifth and on the UES and on a pethouse and i have a full terrace.
Apartment Cost In Upper East Side Of Manhattan NYC?
Dec 02, 2009 by Chihiro00 | Posted in New York City
I'm successful to be moving to NYC probably at the end of next year and I'm just trying to get a feel for how much an apartment is going to cost me. I be versed even the tiniest apartments in the city are expensive. But I was wondering is it possible to find a decent apartment in the Upper East side of Manhattan for under or around 1,600 a month? I'm not looking for anything large or fancy of course for this price. Just a decent small apartment for one person.
You can get a agreeable idea of prices by searching craigslist.
You could get a nice studio probably for $1,600 in the UES, but I would rather get a studio in Brooklyn like ft. greene which is private to Manhattan. UES is ugly and boring.
May 09, 2008 by I Want Carl Sagan Back. | Posted in New York City
I distinguish that the luxurious apartment buildings in the Upper East Side area of Manhattan have doormen. If the residents have a visitor or if a delivery arrives, is it the doorman that lets the inhabitant know, or does the visitor press a doorbell located outside the building to convey straight away?
Many thanks :)
If the erection is ritzy enough to have a doorman, the doorman will contact the resident to let them know about the visitor, and to obtain leave to let the visitor into the building (unless the doorman has been told in advance to let the visitor in, which you might do for a friend who regularly visits).
If it's a performance, the doorman will typically hold onto it for the resident.
In the old days there were dedicated intercom systems in such buildings, but I find credible that the dedicated systems have largely been replaced by connections into the regular phone system. There may be some variation between buildings...
Where Can I Live In Manhattan For Rent Upto $1000 (safe Neighborhood), And My Office Is In Upper East Side?
Nov 19, 2006 by student_professional | Posted in Renting & Real Estate
Is it admissible for me to find an apartment (one room in 2 bedroom) in a safe Manhattan area for around $1000? If yes, which areas should I look for, firstly since my work is in Upper East Side Area. I would like to live in that area, but am unsure if it is a good place to reside in, and if I can afford it. Any guidance would be appreciated.
You be an apartment in Manhattan that isn't a studio, and you want your rent less than $1000/month?
Best Place To Live In The Upper East Side (Manhattan)?
Nov 18, 2008 by sarah | Posted in New York City
I don't regard about the price, I just want to know the best place to live. I really prerequisite to know the exact streets! Example: 7th and Lexington. (I don't know if that is good or not!) And then explain why it is. I am 14 years old and I am common to be moving there soon and I'm helping my mom find the best apartment/penthouse possible. I need one that is in a convienient lieu for shopping and that a lot of people hang out in (it would help if you live in NYC and you are in high school or lived there when you were) and it has cogent views. Thank you so much everyone! Please answer!
well, since you asked, the thorough top street to live on on the Upper East Side is Fifth Avenue, north of about 60th Street all the way up to about 98th Street. above 98th Street is the Mount Sinai Polyclinic complex. all of Central Park is right across Fifth Avenue, and anyone living high enough will have the finished best views of the city.
a close second is Park Avenue, between 57th and 96th Streets. the estimate is that Park Avenue is a grand 6-lane boulevard with a wide center grassy median which the residents go through all kinds of money on to plant with tulip bulbs and the like to keep it looking nice all year great.
having said all that, there are many many "posh" buildings on the side streets and also on Madison Avenue, so anywhere within the whole UES is almost as good as anyplace else. Madison Avenue is also home to many many boutiques, art galleries and high-end rations stores.
the best little neighborhood within the Upper East Side, IMO, is Carnegie Hill, which is north of 86th Street to about 98th Drive, west of Lexington Avenue to Fifth. it's quieter up here than the rest of the UES, and it also is home to some of the top private girls grammar and extraordinary schools in the entire country (like Spence and Sacred Heart, for example...)
i'm also not total to Carnegie Hill because my family lives here now, at 96th Street and Fifth Avenue.