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Big bucks, tiny apartments (For the right price, you can own your own closet, er, studio co-op)
New York Daily news ^ | 8/3/03 | Tracy Connor

Posted on 08/09/2003 8:34:06 PM PDT by lowbridge

Big bucks, tiny apartments
By TRACY CONNOR
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
Saturday, August 2nd, 2003

The real-estate ad warned, "Think Treehouse or Cruise Ship Cabin," but the size of the apartment - 160 square feet - still looked like a misprint.

It wasn't.

Barely twice the size of a Death Row prison cell, the itty-bitty studio on Perry St. in the West Village just might be the smallest co-op for sale in Manhattan.

It has a twin bed built into the wall, with a cubbyhole at the foot for a small television, a speck of a kitchenette and room left over for a chair.

It also has a buyer.

Even with a price tag of $135,000, it didn't take long for the Corcoran Group to find someone who would skimp big time on space for a prime spot.

"There were people who looked at it and said, 'Next!'" said broker Luke Evans. "But the building is the epitome of location, location location."

All across Manhattan, home hunters otherwise priced out of the market are snapping up apartments that would fit inside the master-suite closet at Trump World Tower.

- An E. 30th St. studio with a 16-by-10-foot living area and a small separate kitchen recently went for $165,000.

- A 250-square-foot apartment on Lexington Ave., a half-block from Gramercy Park, is going for $167,500.

- A 240-square-foot second-floor walkup on W. 10th St. is generating interest at $179,900.

Alex Gray, 23, paid $130,000 for a 220-square-foot Chelsea studio. He thinks he got a great deal but admitted it's a tight squeeze.

"My television is in the fireplace!" he said.

Corcoran Chief Executive Pam Liebman said these mini studios are good investments because they're cheaper than renting and likely will go up in value.

"Yes, you sleep in the same room you work in and entertain in, and you tend not to have many guests unless they're very skinny or very close to you," she added. "But it's owning a piece of Manhattan."

Sick of commuting

That's exactly how Lisa Iapicco, a 41-year-old human resources worker, saw it.

After 15 years of commuting from New Jersey, she moved to the city, renting a one-bedroom on the upper East Side for $1,800 a month, then subletting a West Side studio.

When she started looking to buy, Bellmarc broker Robert Snaider showed her a fifth-floor unit in a doorman elevator building on E. 77th St.

It had an 11-by-17 main room, including a Pullman kitchenette, and the bathroom was a decent 5 by 7 feet.

Iapicco got it for $136,500. Between the $774 mortgage and maintenance of $383, her monthly outlay is less than $1,200.

She's building a Murphy bed unit to double as a desk and closet, and installing an 18-inch dishwasher and half-stove. And she chucked out her size-6 clothes that no longer fit.

"I can deal with this until I can afford my dream apartment in New York City," she said.

Pricey condos

In the other boroughs, $150,000 will buy a nice-size one-bedroom, but in Manhattan, the average price for a studio is more than $250,000.

Anything substantially cheaper starts to look like a bargain, especially with low interest rates and the real-estate market on the rebound.

Apartment sales plummeted after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attack. But in the most recent quarter of 2003, prices shot up 11% and the bargain-conscious want to buy before they go any higher, experts said.

Broker Vince Gabrielly said that after slashing the price of the W. 10th St. walkup by $5,000, he's close to selling the Lilliputian property.

The building is a little shabby, and it's within spitting distance of the West Side Highway. There's just about enough room for a full-size bed, a desk and a comfy chair — but it has a big closet, a bathtub and 10-foot ceilings.

"There is nothing in the Village proper that's decent that's under $200,000," Gabrielly said. "So this is good for a student, a first-time buyer or a pied-a-terre."

It's not for everyone, though.

Sandor Polster, a Maine journalism professor looking for a crash pad in Manhattan, rejected a bunch of hideaways before finding a 350-square-foot place on the West Side.

He remembers one he saw on W. 92nd St. that was around 260 square feet and was going for $95,000. When he got inside, he realized why.

"It had a bathroom that I joked was smaller than an airplane bathroom, with a folding door and a shower stall that you couldn't turn around in," he said.

But Liebman called these mini studios "hidden treasures."

In Tudor City Place, there are plenty of pocket-size apartments, and their owners get the same amenities — the Art Deco lobby, doorman and East River views - as the guy who shelled out $1 million for his three-bedroom.

"On Perry St., you can buy an apartment in the Richard Meier building for $18 million or you can buy a 160-square-foot studio for $135,000," Liebman said. "And that's New York for you."

140 W. 69th St.

Square feet: 250

Price: $139,000

Maintenance: $505 a month

The kitchen is a refrigerator, stove and sink sandwiched into the hallway, the "full bath" has only a shower, and it takes just four steps to cross the main room.

Its other selling points?

It's in the back of the building; the ninth-floor "view" is a sliver of the cityscape, and a loft bed dominates the space.

"It needs renovation," Corcoran broker Daniella Schlisser admitted. "And it does not show well."

But this smidgen of a studio in a doorman building near Lincoln Center sold anyway.

When Schlisser put it out at $169,000, she got no takers, but when the price went down to $139,000, "there was a lot of interest."

The buyer is a woman who wants it for her daughter, who will be a freshman at a nearby college starting in September.

"The mother is a cabinet designer, so she was able to see past what's there and envision what it could look like," Schlisser said.

113½ W. 15th St.

Square feet: 220

Price: $130,000

Maintenance: $433 a month

When Alex Gray tells people about the Chelsea studio he bought in May, they think he's lying.

It's not the dimensions of the apartment they don't believe - it's the price tag. At $130,000, the quaint co-op was the cheapest thing below 34th St. when it went on the market, and that was enough to get Gray to think small.

The ad agency worker, a transplant from Los Angeles, traded in a big one-bedroom rental for his new place. It required some adjustment — like eliminating clutter.

"It was sort of a Zen-like cleansing experience," he said. "Things were a little claustrophobic at first. It's just a matter of keeping things away.

He bought a futon that serves as sofa and bed, and when he needs to stretch out, there's always the shared garden in the back.

Jim Strain, the Citi Habitats broker, said that despite its size, selling the place was a cinch.

"It went in the first showing," he said. "I didn't even have an open house. My cell phone was ringing continuously."

_________________________

Alex Gray in his Chelsea studio apartment.

Realtor Vince Gabrielly stands in a 250 square foot apartment that is selling for $180,000.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; US: New York
KEYWORDS: apartments; housing; newyork; ny
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To: NYC GOP Chick
Lady, you are nuts.

I own two-hundred-plus acres in NY, and pay less per month (about $100/mo, actually).

But it is two hundred miles north of that rathole.

81 posted on 08/13/2003 4:35:04 PM PDT by patton (I wish we could all look at the evil of abortion with the pure, honest heart of a child.)
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To: patton
Thanks for your kind words. However, despite your charming manner, I prefer the city to the sticks.

You don't by any chance live here, do you?

82 posted on 08/13/2003 4:37:11 PM PDT by NYC GOP Chick (Clinton Legacy = 16-acre hole in the ground in lower Manhattan)
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To: NYC GOP Chick; Allegra
BWA-HA!
83 posted on 08/13/2003 4:39:30 PM PDT by Timesink
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To: NYC GOP Chick
LOL. Some do. I never did. Born in DC, grew up on 125th & Riverside, my parents still don't know the trouble I got into.

And my kids will never see Manhattan.

84 posted on 08/13/2003 4:40:44 PM PDT by patton (I wish we could all look at the evil of abortion with the pure, honest heart of a child.)
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To: patton
Whatever...
85 posted on 08/13/2003 4:44:06 PM PDT by NYC GOP Chick (Clinton Legacy = 16-acre hole in the ground in lower Manhattan)
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To: umgud
Where I live, you can still buy a 1,500 sf single family home w/attached garage for less than $125,000 $55,000.

But you'd have to want to live here (Midland, Tx). I do. I hate to leave---gotta move Sat. to San Angelo---got a 2/1/1 (about 1200 sq. ft.) for $600/mo. rent. Older house, corner lot, nice big yard. I think I'm getting ripped though, but Mr. S2R "fell in love", so that's that.

86 posted on 08/13/2003 5:21:06 PM PDT by stands2reason ( Catholic Freepers: Have you ever read "A Canticle for Leibowitz"?)
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To: pyx
This thread is a TRIP! I could not imagine living in such cramped quarters that one could not swing a cat, and pay that much per month! Unbelievable.

We have 1300' on our main floor, the upstairs is being finished (add 1300' more) and the basement is 2/3. I'll admit our hardwood floors need a little maintenance, and the 6 lots take a while to mow, but we manage. The two garden plots and fruit trees are nice shade for our 9 "hole" golf course around the house (one green, 9 tee positions, plastic balls only, no foul language allowed). The detached garage is handy also. It also doesn't hurt that the neighbors are conservatives. It's 15 minutes to the city and that's driving the speed limit.

Oh, we paid $37K and our taxes are $60/mo including taxes on our vehicles.

AS far as the other stuff:
eggs $.38/dz
gas 1.48
diesel fuel I don't know
100LL avgas $2.30
bread varies wildly $.33- >$2.50
milk $1.78
87 posted on 08/13/2003 6:31:08 PM PDT by Big Giant Head (roughing it, huh?)
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To: NYC GOP Chick
Yeah, but aren't most of those place hellholes in dicey neighborhoods?

Yep alot of them are, but the ones my friends and relatives lived in, werent all that bad (at least at the times I've vistied there), and in ot that bad neighborhoods. Not great just average, lower class negihborhood, but not that crime ridden either.

88 posted on 08/14/2003 11:37:17 AM PDT by lowbridge (You are the audience. I am the author. I outrank you! -Franz Liebkind, The Producers)
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To: lowbridge
Well, it probably makes more sense than the recent California trend of building 2,200 square foot houses on 3,500 square foot lots. You can reach out your second floor bedroom window and shake hands with your neighbor who is doing the same thing.
89 posted on 08/14/2003 11:45:57 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves
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To: Clemenza
Houston aint a real city. Just an ugly, sprawling conglomeration of suburbs with no zoning laws.

On my many visits to NYC, I have found that attitudes like yours are the exception rather than the rule.

Thank goodness.

90 posted on 08/14/2003 11:53:05 AM PDT by Allegra ( No tagline to see here....move along....move along...)
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To: lowbridge
Yet another reason not to live in the Marxist sewer known as New York.
91 posted on 08/14/2003 11:54:09 AM PDT by from occupied ga (Your government is your most dangerous enemy, and Bush is no conservative)
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To: pyx
First Freeper National Housing Cost Survey. Please put only the following information. State ----- City or Town ----- Square Ft. ----- Approx. Price

Virginia, Town of Bumpass, 1800 sq.ft. on 3 acres, $110,000. And it's paradise!
92 posted on 08/14/2003 12:01:23 PM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan (where is Count Petofi when we need him most?)
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To: lowbridge
All that and rats, bums, and high taxes too!
93 posted on 08/14/2003 12:08:03 PM PDT by Rome2000 (Convicted felons for Kerry, McCarthy was right!)
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To: lowbridge
times I've vistied there), and in ot that bad neighborhoods. Not

Grrr.......visited...."and in not that bad..."

94 posted on 08/14/2003 12:35:12 PM PDT by lowbridge (You are the audience. I am the author. I outrank you! -Franz Liebkind, The Producers)
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To: GodBlessRonaldReagan
Town of Bumpass, 1800 sq.ft. on 3 acres, $110,000. And it's paradise!

Just what is the historical origin of the towns name?

95 posted on 08/14/2003 12:36:47 PM PDT by lowbridge (You are the audience. I am the author. I outrank you! -Franz Liebkind, The Producers)
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To: Mr. Jeeves
Well, it probably makes more sense than the recent California trend of building 2,200 square foot houses on 3,500 square foot lots. You can reach out your second floor bedroom window and shake hands with your neighbor who is doing the same thing.

Yeah, I've noticed that in pictures of the mutli-million dollar homes (taken from above in helicopters) of the stars in California! Such enormous homes, on such small lots! Those expensive houses take up almost every inch of the lot (except for the occasional swimming pool which takes up the rest whatever ground was left over) . The walls practically going right up to the property line. Even I have more space between myself and my neighbors, and a spacious backyard at that, and I'm dirt poor!

96 posted on 08/14/2003 12:44:34 PM PDT by lowbridge (You are the audience. I am the author. I outrank you! -Franz Liebkind, The Producers)
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To: from occupied ga
Yet another reason not to live in the Marxist sewer known as New York.

Well, the pizzas and the chinese food is good over here. :-)

97 posted on 08/14/2003 12:47:02 PM PDT by lowbridge (You are the audience. I am the author. I outrank you! -Franz Liebkind, The Producers)
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To: ErnBatavia
Looked at your profile page, very nice.
98 posted on 08/14/2003 12:56:22 PM PDT by holdmuhbeer
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To: pyx
Minnesota - first ring suburb of Minneapolis, 2400 finished sq ft.

Bought it in 2000 for $160k and it's would go now for $240k
99 posted on 08/14/2003 1:15:12 PM PDT by Johnny Gage (Why do we sing "Take me out to the Ballgame" ... When we're already there?)
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To: lowbridge
Named after its first postmaster. No, really!
100 posted on 08/14/2003 1:15:42 PM PDT by GodBlessRonaldReagan (where is Count Petofi when we need him most?)
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