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This Week’s Worth-It New York City Apartment Listings

1 Bond St. Photo-Illustration: Curbed; Photos: Brown Harris Stevens

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Listen, it’s not as though getting an apartment in New York has ever been easy. But one could probably argue that it has never been harder than it is right now. The most god-awful studios are regularly renting for thousands and thousands of dollars with lines of interested tenants out the door. Here, we’ll find the actually worth-looking-ats, the actually worth-the-costs, and the surprisingly affordable-for-those-parquet-floors from all around the internet. 

In celebration of no more broker’s fees, we (I) flitted all around Manhattan like it was our (my) job (yes, I know, it kind of is). And, wow did I find some nearly perfect apartments! The good ones were small, and mostly on the Upper East Side or in Midtown (see this small but mighty beauty, and this gem). Downtown was less fun, but I did manage to dig up some lofts!

FiDi Apartments

$4,750, 1-bedroom: I guess this is the going price down here? This one has a space-station aesthetic that I’m not sure about, but at least there’s an oven! And a disappearing fridge! Good roof, too.

$5,650, 1-bedroom: Yes, please! This one is for me. For all the obvious loft-like reasons.

36 Peck Slip Photo: Royal Realty Corp

$3,500, 1-bedroom: Felt like a good deal because of the lofted “upstairs”?

Midtown East Apartments

$2,400, studio: Call me crazy but I’m very charmed by this little guy. Great light, high ceilings, a working fireplace, and a hallway that leads to … nowhere?

403 E. 58th St. Photo: Coldwell Banker Warburg

$2650, studio: Another little gem of a studio. Highlights include: the built-in cabinetry, the bright white of it all, and the original paned windows.

$3,500, 1-bedroom: Hurray for casement windows. This one has my heart for that reason alone. Besides the dauntingly small kitchen — like, not even sure an adult person could fit a whole hand in there — I like this place a lot. Please try and blur out the current furnishings, because without them this place has a lot of potential.

$3,300, 1-bedroom: More casement windows! One-bedroom on the 20th floor of Prospect Tower, one of my favorite buildings in Tudor City. Kitchen very bad! Bedroom very good. Stunning views of the East River.

$3000, 1-bedroom: This one’s weird. I can’t tell what’s real and what’s AI, but I like the look of the fake windows and the tile motif in the kitchen. And the arched passageways!

$8200, 2-bedroom: A nice apartment all things considered, with lots of space, nice windows and parquet floors. I do not love the 360-degree views of other buildings with not a leaf in sight — makes me feel like a rat in a cage. It’s an Emery Roth design, built by the Rudin family, according to the listing. Comes with a “PH” on your mailbox.

$3,100, studio: I love this studio! Mostly because of the windows. Nothing else is happening here. It’s in the polarizing Kips Bay Towers, the IM Pei buildings in, well, Kips Bay. You either hate it or love it — where do you stand?

$12,500, 3-bedroom: This one is just here for us to gawk — the gaudiness of imitation black marble will never cease to stun me. It goes from bad to worse when the black tile turns to wall-to-wall carpeting in a corporate gray hue.

$7,295, 3-bedroom: Very solid apartment with great bones, a huge kitchen, three bedrooms (an unimaginably high number of bedrooms to me), and a fabulous lobby, to boot.

Upper East Side Apartments

$3,750, 1-bedroom: Sort of cheap, sort of charming one-bedroom in a pre-war building with hardwood floors. It’s only a block away from the East River! (If that’s appealing to you.)

$3,300, 1-bedroom: So, many, windows!!

$4,500, 1-bedroom: Brownstone floor-through apartment with nice light, a decorative fireplace, and glass block! Always excited to see some glass block, though I know not everyone feels the same.

$4,381, 1-bedroom: This one is really fabulous: high ceilings, wood beams, an enormous fireplace. The terrace, too! I think my friend might be renting it, but I’d still inquire in case the deal goes bad.

Greenwich Village Apartments

$13,950, 2-bedroom: I have listed this Havisham home before — seems like it’s gathered more dust since the last time I posted it. But the charm is still there, through and through, particularly in the kitchen with the gigantic hearth, the backyard with the climbing vines, and the living room that’s heavy on chintz.

57 W. 9th St. Photo: High Domain LLC

$5,900, 1-bedroom: Quick, go fast: a one-bedroom in the iconic 24 Fifth Avenue building, New York’s home to Hollywood, with residents like Tim Burton, Brian De Palma, and Jessica Lange. Is it pricey for what it is? Yes. But maybe worth it for elevator run-ins.

$14,000, 2-bedroom: Okay, this is actually in Noho, but I refuse to have a “Noho” section, so here we are. This maybe isn’t what anyone needs right now, but it’s a big loft that’s fun to look at — I love when lofts have a little elevated stage at the front, and this one really leans into that. Questionable design choices include: the John Wayne “sculptures” on the wall, the kimono above the bed, and the Marriot-y curtains in the bedroom.

Sublets of Interest

’Tis the season to sublet your apartment and abscond to L.A. First up, we have writer and creative director Emily Chang, subletting her East Village studio apartment for the months of December and January (DM her for pricing). Over in Bed-Stuy, filmmaker Alex Eaton is looking for a new holiday tenant to stay in her studio apartment and water her plants. Art director Mary Lindstrom is looking to sublet her studio apartment for the month of November on the Upper East Side for $2,650 a month. Back downtown and over the bridge, actor and dancer Natalie Tischler is looking for someone to take over her lease in Fort Greene starting in January. It’s three bedrooms, two baths, and $1,700 a month. Seems too good to be true!

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This Week’s Worth-It New York City Apartment Listings