Apartment Rentals in New York City – what you need to know.
The Shake Shack is coming to the Upper East Side in a nifty little plaza on East. 86th Street.
NYC\’s Top 10 Most Expensive Rentals
Plenty on new luxury rentals about about to open for rental in Manhattan\’s Hudson Yards are, downtown Brooklyn, and Williamsburg.
Rent stabilized leases can be deregulated only under specific conditions.
This chart shows how rents have fallen over the past two years, but are beginning to firm up now.
This year (2011) RDNY.com enters its 16th year of business. If there is one thing we have learned (and we\’ve learned many things) it\’s that New Yorkers are fascinated with the world of real estate and apartments. There are many other fine sources of information about the real estate scene. Celebrity sites chronicle the buying and selling of multimillion dollar…
By John Gittelsohn Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — Manhattan apartment rents dropped 9.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009 from a year earlier as Wall Street jobs vanished in the recession. The median rent fell for all apartment sizes except two- bedrooms, which were little changed, according to a report today by broker Prudential Douglas Elliman Real Estate and appraiser…
The ever popular Brookyn Flea Market has moved indoors for the winter. Just head over to One Hanson Place, just across from BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music). The space is the iconic old Williamsburg Dime Savings Bank building, AKA One Hanson Place. Even if you don\’t need to buy anything, you should see the space. It\’s even worth the trip…
Thousands of Lower Manhattan apartments could become rent-stabilized based on a recent court decision. On Dec. 23, Housing Court Judge Bruce Scheckowitz ruled that a market-rate apartment in 37 Wall St. should be rent-stabilized because the building’s owner is receiving a 421-g tax break. In an echo of the Stuyvesant Town case from earlier last year, the owner of 37…
Let\’s skip most of the news report. We\’re only really interested in the NYC marketplace. Here\’s what the Reuter\’s article had to say about NYC: Higher priced rental properties in Manhattan drove the vacancy decline, while apartment buildings in more middle-class boroughs such as the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens haven\’t been able to dodge the bullet. On average, close to…