I live in San Francisco, and even my jaded eyes were rolling. I long ago lost sticker price shock, but the apartments shown were without any character. Here in San Francisco i rent a studio in Nob Hill with high ceilings, wood floors, separate entry, massive walk-in closet, crown moldings and massive windows looking at the GG bridge, all for the low low price of $2,500/m.
@@hayley_bailiff The rating system is an absolute winner. The best of everything to you. As a former New Yorker who still loves the place, I am horrified that I couldn’t afford to live there anymore. 🥲
Want VS need is an interesting concept...take your comment for instance. Did you "need" to make it or did you "want" to make it? Much like my dishwasher....I didn't need one I wanted one, and if makes me happy like the MANY other things I "want" in my home - then theres nothing wrong with that. Cheers!
When she says “laundry” I think she means access to pay laundry where you still have to pay quite a bit per load. Would be nice to have your own set in the apartment. Old school ac units, shoebox kitchens and randomly getting punched in the face living in NYC. You can keep it.
I have been to NY and we enjoyed the sight seeing but way to many people 😫 it’s like a big box of cement ! But we could never live there and the weather SUCKS 😊we live in California 🌴 and the weather is great . The rent in NY is absolutely insane….
Great job. Good narration. Good description. I did live in forest hills for 9 years and owned my own co op. M and r on corner. Sold it in 2021. So happy 😊 to leave nyc. Moved to the sunshine ☀ state. Bought a 2br 2ba condo fully furnished. Includes cable with my hoa. I don't drive. Downtown very close. Live in Dunedin. Love it. Condo less than 300 000. And I look out on to ponds and 🎄 trees instead of bricks and buildings and streets. Good 🤞 luck up there. 😊😊
I no longer live in New York but I enjoy watching these wonderful videos of apartments for rent. What I cannot wrap around my head are the rent prices. How did a two bedroom apartment get to be over $5,000? I know prices have risen regarding everything now, but these rents are downright prohibitive! I guess two or three people have to live together in order to pay these rents!
I’d rate the studio with that huge kitchen space the highest. You could put a legit four seat dining room table in that space, leaving a lot of space in the living space to segment a bedroom and living room. They did a great job with that floorplan. And of course the washer/dryer, though i’m not a fan of front load washers.
Small space, obscene rent, and in window a/c....bahahaha! I live in near Phoenix Arizona and saw 1 bedroom apartments were going for $1900 a month and 4 bedroom houses for rent at $2700. I almost fell over at those prices.
LOVE the videos as usual since I love NYC. Could the star system run along the left of the screen as opposed to the bottom? This way you could see the whole video with eh star system at the same time! Either way I love love your videos and all he work you do in showing the apartments around the city! Keep it up! You have another subscriber!
I couldn’t care less about a dishwasher that’s what your hands are for in a small space. Not having a washer and dryer is a hard pass. I know it’s not that common for NY.
Agree I bought my place. However this is where they get you especially today. Most people don't have the downpayment large enough to sustain an NYC condo. You need a good piece of money for the first last and security (in some cases over $10,000) just to get into an apartment so if you were building a down payment there it goes. They also take advantage of people who only plan on being there a few years. We are now a nation of renters due to cash buyers, and high interest rates. Additionally many NYC jobs pay $150-200k so a couple with good jobs could actually live in one of those, and save for a down payment.
67th and Amster-DAMN that's nice!!! and the kitchen is more accessible + best lighting. If only it had a deck to go sit out on, that would've been top notch 🤩
When you insist on an elevator, you miss out on a lot of great apartments. There are some charming, high ceiling tenement and brownstone apartments, built before the days of air conditioning, that stay nice and cool in the summer and have radiators for the winter. I lived in a walk-up for 30 years and frankly, prefer it. You get extra time and can plan you how long it takes you to come and go because there's no standing around waiting for an elevator. And it's a really great way to get bits of exercise built into your life. Stairs help keep you healthy.
I definitely agree! I've only ever lived in walk ups. For creating content it is easier for now to stick with units that I can access easily due to on site leasing offices, instead of bothering a listing agent or owner for a video. Hopefully as my online presence in the city grows I will get more opportunites to showcase high quality walk ups. I am trying to add a couple in my next video!
I stumbled upon your video randomly, and I was surprised that your first stop was the very building in which I formerly lived. Your 2.5 star rating is fair. My studio wasn't the best place I've ever lived. However, I did face the street (86th St), so there was some kind of view. At night, I could see a sliver of Central Park and the high-rises that border Billionaires' Row. My studio was all of 300 sq ft. The building had begun its life in the 1920s as a hotel. The apartments were converted hotel rooms. My kitchen occupied the space that formerly held the murphy bed. There was only one 3 ft closet, which would be adequate for hotel guests but insufficient for living there full-time. My rent, back in 2015, was $2540/month. There were some long-term tenants in the building from the previous management whose apartments were grandfathered rent control, and they paid about half of what I paid in rent. It's worth mentioning that the same property management also owns the Parc77, which was your second stop.
UA-cam thought you'd like a trip down memory lane! And yes, Equity makes doing broker previews very easy so I've toured most of their buildings around the city!
@@hayley_bailiff The best amenity for the apartment building on 86th St was having Central Park at the corner. That kind of made it a decent place to live. From my apartment, it was just a 10-minute walk across the park to go to The Met, which I would visit every week.
Great apartment tours! My favorite is the studio with the floor to ceiling windows. Do you specialize in a certain neighborhood or borough? Just curious...
Great choice! And I've been primarily working in Manhattan and Brooklyn since those are the boroughs I'm most familiar with, which is why my videos have been focused on those boroughs. As opportunities arise though I am always open to learning new neighborhoods!
The riverside apt, gets the best sunsets, as it’s west facing and the apt on Amsterdam is East facing. It’s also right next to the riverside park extension and pier I. Bus transportation on the UWS is plentiful. The riverside apt, is services by the M72 bus, which takes a lot of people to the 72nd subway or crosstown.
It baffles me how much they were asking for that first studio. Plenty of studios I toured a few weeks ago in that same area were double the size, had more amenities, each had dishwashers, and most faced the street or central park for under $2,700. I can't imagine why they would be asking so much for so little when comparable units had way more for less.
This particular management company has software that updates their price daily to keep them competitive. If there are comparable cheaper units on the market then the price gets adjusted accordingly. The problem is that whomever adds the first building's listings marks certain amenities as if they apply to the unit when in actuality they only apply to the building. I.e. they have private outdoor space marked as an amenity when the unit itself doesn't have that, but the building does. That feature is only supposed to be checked off when the unit itself has a private outdoor space. Software can only do so much, and unfortunately human error is really not helping this particular management company fill their vacancies. Not the first time this has happened and won't be the last!
@@DawnKulich She had 2 roomates.This was for 3 years then she moved to West Village and had 3 roomates.The rent was $1,000 more a month.She left after a year and half to move back home.My other daughter was in Williamsburg for a few years then had a place on Pacific in Brooklyn for awhile.
Im not sure if its the same everywhere, but in my part of az, most apartments require that you make 3x the rent a month. Are there actual people making 10,000 a month?
In NYC you're required to make 40x the monthly rent annually. So if you want a 2500 dollar apartment you have to make at least 100k a year. If you don't make enough you can use a guarantor, which is essentially a cosigner, but yes plenty of people make enough where they don't need the cosigner!
2:20 I don't like the bathroom that you're supposed to share with your guests tucked away inside of the bedroom. I'd knock a star for layout for that! >:(
Kitchens and baths are not required by law to have windows in NYC and most hi-rise apartment buildings don't have them. On the other hand, livable rooms such as bedrooms and living rooms must have windows and the size of the window is related to the area of the room. Bigger room= bigger window.. If you want windows in the kitchen and bath expect to pay extra for them --- IF you can find one.
Very subjective re light, windows. I’d give your 5 a 3 because of crummy View.; your 4 gets a 5 from me because view is of open space and low rise buildings. The one looking over highway I’d also rate higher. The one onto airshafts gets a one from me.Terrible light hideous views. Light and view most important thing for me, my #1 priority. But that’s me.
I say that in my intro I'm not rating them by price because everyone has a different budget! To some 3,000 for an UWS studio is insanely high, for others that's a bargain. I'm not here to judge anyone's budget, just trying to help showcase what that budget can get you!
Seven decade NYer from Union Square, here. Previously - born and raised, Forest Hills, Queens. Since 2019 tho', in the French Quarter New Orleans. Our current NOLA apt: National landmark building on Jackson Square...1132 sq ft. 2 BR. Top floor loft. Two entrances. Washer dryer, Electric kitchen. Incredible view of the Park..Short walk to the Mississippi River. $1700 mo, soup to nuts. No elevator but a wonderful pre Civil War building, hello??? Great neighbors, jazz music under our front windows, a super lovely vibe. Do I miss NY? Hell, no.. You $5,000 a month Gotham cracker box strivers on the UWS? Plz enjoy....with my blessing....
Dishwashers are extremely overrated, IMO, and completely unnecessary, but if an apartment *doesn't* have one, the sink needs to be at least large enough to accommodate washing dishes, and a couple of these apartments had no dishwashers and teeny-tiny sinks. I guess apparently, dish washing in those places needs to be done in the bathtubs! Nice that all of these units had gas stoves, BTW. Electric, IMO would be a deal-breaker. Agree about the natural light. I'd much rather have a tiny apartment with a couple of great sunny windows, than a pllace that was spacious but dark.
I live in San Francisco, and even my jaded eyes were rolling. I long ago lost sticker price shock, but the apartments shown were without any character. Here in San Francisco i rent a studio in Nob Hill with high ceilings, wood floors, separate entry, massive walk-in closet, crown moldings and massive windows looking at the GG bridge, all for the low low price of $2,500/m.
You say San Francisco?? Oh, you mean Californias "Toilet Bowl"!! I would be "ASHAMED" to Admit That
@@gailcurl8663 on our worst day, San Francisco is still the most beautiful city in America.
Wow Gail, tell us how you really feel. Lol!
Great apartment video. I think you do this better than any I have seen. Like the star system. You have a new subscriber.
Happy to have you! A good friend of mine recommended creating a rating system, and I really like how it turned out!
@@hayley_bailiff The rating system is an absolute winner. The best of everything to you. As a former New Yorker who still loves the place, I am horrified that I couldn’t afford to live there anymore. 🥲
Me too. Just subscribed and really love the star ratings.
Makes me lol when a single person thinks they need a dishwasher
Too Damn "Lazy" to wash a Dish, Fork and Cup. SAD!!
after the rent.....how does one afford dishes...........never mind food to cook..................
Want VS need is an interesting concept...take your comment for instance. Did you "need" to make it or did you "want" to make it? Much like my dishwasher....I didn't need one I wanted one, and if makes me happy like the MANY other things I "want" in my home - then theres nothing wrong with that. Cheers!
I'm single. I LOVE MY DISHWASHER. I hate, hate doing dishes. Its a plus.
@DebbiePotter-xh7kv Makes me LOL when a Karen like you thinks your opinion matters. Too funny.
Like London you get expensive rubbish.
When she says “laundry” I think she means access to pay laundry where you still have to pay quite a bit per load. Would be nice to have your own set in the apartment. Old school ac units, shoebox kitchens and randomly getting punched in the face living in NYC. You can keep it.
I have been to NY and we enjoyed the sight seeing but way to many people 😫 it’s like a big box of cement ! But we could never live there and the weather SUCKS 😊we live in California 🌴 and the weather is great . The rent in NY is absolutely insane….
Great job. Good narration. Good description. I did live in forest hills for 9 years and owned my own co op. M and r on corner. Sold it in 2021. So happy 😊 to leave nyc. Moved to the sunshine ☀ state. Bought a 2br 2ba condo fully furnished. Includes cable with my hoa. I don't drive. Downtown very close. Live in Dunedin. Love it. Condo less than 300 000. And I look out on to ponds and 🎄 trees instead of bricks and buildings and streets. Good 🤞 luck up there. 😊😊
That first apartment ain’t no way in hell.
I no longer live in New York but I enjoy watching these wonderful videos of apartments for rent. What I cannot wrap around my head are the rent prices. How did a two bedroom apartment get to be over $5,000? I know prices have risen regarding everything now, but these rents are downright prohibitive! I guess two or three people have to live together in order to pay these rents!
actually, many studios are over 5k, especially in Chelsea, soho, west village..
Seriously though, how can you live with multiple people in a studio?
I was looking at apartments and I found a 3 bed 2 bath for 1.5k with a city view all though it’s not in NY
Most college level jobs there pay 150 -200k yearly
I’d rate the studio with that huge kitchen space the highest. You could put a legit four seat dining room table in that space, leaving a lot of space in the living space to segment a bedroom and living room. They did a great job with that floorplan. And of course the washer/dryer, though i’m not a fan of front load washers.
Small space, obscene rent, and in window a/c....bahahaha! I live in near Phoenix Arizona and saw 1 bedroom apartments were going for $1900 a month and
4 bedroom houses for rent at $2700. I almost fell over at those prices.
Crazy insane prices!!!!!!!! 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
LOVE the videos as usual since I love NYC. Could the star system run along the left of the screen as opposed to the bottom? This way you could see the whole video with eh star system at the same time! Either way I love love your videos and all he work you do in showing the apartments around the city! Keep it up! You have another subscriber!
😂 my mortgage is less than half the rent of that studio, for a 1500sq foot house in central Texas
I don’t know how people live like that in such small spaces packed together like sardines. Being close to a NY subway from hell is a selling point?
I wish there wasn't this yellow strip at the bottom third of the screen.
Yes!! It's Annoying as HELL!!
I couldn’t care less about a dishwasher that’s what your hands are for in a small space. Not having a washer and dryer is a hard pass. I know it’s not that common for NY.
Great content and thank you.
The apartment is just over price to high for my budget, it’s best to buy your own home and get much more than just a small over price apartment.
Agree I bought my place. However this is where they get you especially today. Most people don't have the downpayment large enough to sustain an NYC condo. You need a good piece of money for the first last and security (in some cases over $10,000) just to get into an apartment so if you were building a down payment there it goes. They also take advantage of people who only plan on being there a few years. We are now a nation of renters due to cash buyers, and high interest rates. Additionally many NYC jobs pay $150-200k so a couple with good jobs could actually live in one of those, and save for a down payment.
No!! It's Best to Get the Hell of that Rat and Migrant Infested Tin Can City!!
67th and Amster-DAMN that's nice!!! and the kitchen is more accessible + best lighting. If only it had a deck to go sit out on, that would've been top notch 🤩
When you insist on an elevator, you miss out on a lot of great apartments. There are some charming, high ceiling tenement and brownstone apartments, built before the days of air conditioning, that stay nice and cool in the summer and have radiators for the winter. I lived in a walk-up for 30 years and frankly, prefer it. You get extra time and can plan you how long it takes you to come and go because there's no standing around waiting for an elevator. And it's a really great way to get bits of exercise built into your life. Stairs help keep you healthy.
I definitely agree! I've only ever lived in walk ups. For creating content it is easier for now to stick with units that I can access easily due to on site leasing offices, instead of bothering a listing agent or owner for a video. Hopefully as my online presence in the city grows I will get more opportunites to showcase high quality walk ups. I am trying to add a couple in my next video!
I stumbled upon your video randomly, and I was surprised that your first stop was the very building in which I formerly lived. Your 2.5 star rating is fair. My studio wasn't the best place I've ever lived. However, I did face the street (86th St), so there was some kind of view. At night, I could see a sliver of Central Park and the high-rises that border Billionaires' Row. My studio was all of 300 sq ft. The building had begun its life in the 1920s as a hotel. The apartments were converted hotel rooms. My kitchen occupied the space that formerly held the murphy bed. There was only one 3 ft closet, which would be adequate for hotel guests but insufficient for living there full-time. My rent, back in 2015, was $2540/month. There were some long-term tenants in the building from the previous management whose apartments were grandfathered rent control, and they paid about half of what I paid in rent. It's worth mentioning that the same property management also owns the Parc77, which was your second stop.
UA-cam thought you'd like a trip down memory lane! And yes, Equity makes doing broker previews very easy so I've toured most of their buildings around the city!
@@hayley_bailiff The best amenity for the apartment building on 86th St was having Central Park at the corner. That kind of made it a decent place to live. From my apartment, it was just a 10-minute walk across the park to go to The Met, which I would visit every week.
Holy cow !!!
Great apartment tours! My favorite is the studio with the floor to ceiling windows. Do you specialize in a certain neighborhood or borough? Just curious...
Great choice! And I've been primarily working in Manhattan and Brooklyn since those are the boroughs I'm most familiar with, which is why my videos have been focused on those boroughs. As opportunities arise though I am always open to learning new neighborhoods!
The riverside apt, gets the best sunsets, as it’s west facing and the apt on Amsterdam is East facing. It’s also right next to the riverside park extension and pier I. Bus transportation on the UWS is plentiful. The riverside apt, is services by the M72 bus, which takes a lot of people to the 72nd subway or crosstown.
it seems to me for all that rent they could supply a dishwasher.
It baffles me how much they were asking for that first studio. Plenty of studios I toured a few weeks ago in that same area were double the size, had more amenities, each had dishwashers, and most faced the street or central park for under $2,700. I can't imagine why they would be asking so much for so little when comparable units had way more for less.
This particular management company has software that updates their price daily to keep them competitive. If there are comparable cheaper units on the market then the price gets adjusted accordingly. The problem is that whomever adds the first building's listings marks certain amenities as if they apply to the unit when in actuality they only apply to the building. I.e. they have private outdoor space marked as an amenity when the unit itself doesn't have that, but the building does. That feature is only supposed to be checked off when the unit itself has a private outdoor space.
Software can only do so much, and unfortunately human error is really not helping this particular management company fill their vacancies. Not the first time this has happened and won't be the last!
Can you do some for Jersey City or Hoboken? I move there in July and can’t search until then. I would love some insight on layouts and prices
I'm currently only licensed in NY, so I'm not very familiar with NJ. I'll keep it in mind though in case any opportunities arise!
My daughters lived in the city for years,esp my older daughter.My younger one rented almost next door to the famous Leavian cookie store.
How did she afford it?
@@DawnKulich She had 2 roomates.This was for 3 years then she moved to West Village and had 3 roomates.The rent was $1,000 more a month.She left after a year and half to move back home.My other daughter was in Williamsburg for a few years then had a place on Pacific in Brooklyn for awhile.
AND??
Just how many people you plan to have in a studio where you would need a dish washer?
Even for one person a dishwasher is great to have.
What about a video of an affordable apartment? If you're on you're own 4,000 + is not exactly affordable!
There aren’t any.
The first two apartments have too many bulkheads. It seems there is no longer any attempt to build nicely-shaped rooms.
Im not sure if its the same everywhere, but in my part of az, most apartments require that you make 3x the rent a month.
Are there actual people making 10,000 a month?
In NYC you're required to make 40x the monthly rent annually. So if you want a 2500 dollar apartment you have to make at least 100k a year. If you don't make enough you can use a guarantor, which is essentially a cosigner, but yes plenty of people make enough where they don't need the cosigner!
Yes
2:20
I don't like the bathroom that you're supposed to share with your guests tucked away inside of the bedroom. I'd knock a star for layout for that! >:(
Jeez my bedroom is bigger than the first studio. There is no way!!!
How do people afford these prices..no way..my choices would notbe spending my money like that..crazy...
Not worth what they are charging…..👎👎👎
If the apartment's bathroom has no window, then it's automatically out of my list of good apartment.
Kitchens and baths are not required by law to have windows in NYC and most hi-rise apartment buildings don't have them. On the other hand, livable rooms such as bedrooms and living rooms must have windows and the size of the window is related to the area of the room. Bigger room= bigger window.. If you want windows in the kitchen and bath expect to pay extra for them --- IF you can find one.
oh boy. to be "rich" and living your dream.....
That's Your "Dream"?? You Need to Really Expand That Mind of Yours!!
Very subjective re light, windows. I’d give your 5 a 3 because of crummy
View.; your 4 gets a 5 from me because view is of open space and low rise buildings. The one looking over highway I’d also rate higher. The one onto airshafts gets a one from me.Terrible light hideous views. Light and view most important thing for me, my #1 priority. But that’s me.
Prices are ridiculous
You've left out a score for the most important issue: price!
I say that in my intro I'm not rating them by price because everyone has a different budget! To some 3,000 for an UWS studio is insanely high, for others that's a bargain. I'm not here to judge anyone's budget, just trying to help showcase what that budget can get you!
im sorry that studio on columbus is absolutely atrocious for the price
These rents are ridiculous
Seven decade NYer from Union Square, here. Previously - born and raised, Forest Hills, Queens. Since 2019 tho', in the French Quarter New Orleans. Our current NOLA apt: National landmark building on Jackson Square...1132 sq ft. 2 BR. Top floor loft. Two entrances. Washer dryer, Electric kitchen. Incredible view of the Park..Short walk to the Mississippi River. $1700 mo, soup to nuts. No elevator but a wonderful pre Civil War building, hello??? Great neighbors, jazz music under our front windows, a super lovely vibe. Do I miss NY? Hell, no.. You $5,000 a month Gotham cracker box strivers on the UWS? Plz enjoy....with my blessing....
Dishwashers are extremely overrated, IMO, and completely unnecessary, but if an apartment *doesn't* have one, the sink needs to be at least large enough to accommodate washing dishes, and a couple of these apartments had no dishwashers and teeny-tiny sinks. I guess apparently, dish washing in those places needs to be done in the bathtubs! Nice that all of these units had gas stoves, BTW. Electric, IMO would be a deal-breaker. Agree about the natural light. I'd much rather have a tiny apartment with a couple of great sunny windows, than a pllace that was spacious but dark.
Completely disagree with you. Completely! Dishwashers are a life-saver.
There's not even room to breathe
Would not live in NY city ever..... upstate yes