Lived in New York City (Queens) for over 40 years..a unique and great borough to live!!! New York City, the best and one of a kind place on EARTH!!! Charley Gonzales
Thank you for including Hampton Court in this group of selected places. I'd like to add that we have beautiful gardens and spacious apartments. The grounds and buildings are very well kept. We have historic places status too. And we are right near Kew Gardens. There is always something cultural and artistic going on here. I've been here since 2003 and I still love it.
There were several Queens neighborhoods that were criminally overlooked. Addisleigh Park which is a historic black enclave filled with Tudor homes and a rich history of legendary black musicians and athletes such a Jackie Robinson, Ella Fitzgerald, Joe Louis and Miles Davis whom all used to live there. There's also Laurelton, Cambria Heights, and Douglaston all which have Old English themed homes and manicured properties that rival The Hamptons. They deserve to be mentioned as well.
@@bernardbrown5336 No everyone who's poor is a mess; some have self-respect and take meticulous care of their surroundings and would make lovely neighbors.
Lil’ Johnny Jones: There is no need to be a racist divisive prick like the notable New Jerker, I mean Yorker, Donald Trump, and interject comments about religion that are stereotyping one religion and their supposedly parsimony. No comment about Jews were made and their is nothing to assume that the author is Jewish. GROW UP ASSHOLE PRICK. I can say that because, sight unseen, you are one. May Covid 19 get you ASAP.
Point of interest for any of you that happens to be a fan of the 60's rock band *_The Doors,_* just pull out your old beat up copy of their 2nd album *_Strange Days._* You will immediately recognize the _Sniffen Court_ alleyway in Manhattan ( shown in this video at 05:43 ) as being the location on that famous album cover photo. You can tell by the reliefs featuring horses on the wall at the back of the alley. The area has been beautifully maintained and now looks restored and refinished compared to the older 1968 photo on the album cover.
My husband grew up there, and his side of the family still lives there! It is indeed a nice, quaint community. We were there visiting the family around Thanksgiving last year and we all met up at Artie's restaurant for dinner. Good times. 🙂❤
My family grew up there and Pelham bay. City island is so much fun in the summer. Even though my wife and I live on Long Island we will go there for dinner a lot in the summer. I loved it there as a kid! Brings back so many fun memories.
I really would like to see a moving panoramic video of these neighborhoods, so that I could better appreciate how they fit into the surrounding New York City urban landscape.
Wow!! Great places. You were saying that a lot of New Yorkers don’t know about these communities. I’ll bet that the residents want to keep it that way.
These places were all lived by minorities in the 60 70 and 80 and early 90 until they raised prices and made sure minorities could not afford it and it just caused them to leave and leave it to the greedy want to take over everything establishment.. if you know who I am talking about
I love all the UN-KLAV YOU gave me lol...wonderful video presentation..I supposed you could expand the list to at least 25 and I would have watched all the way through...good job dear...
Forest Hills Garden is absolutely beautiful and it has that family neighborhood vibes, but so highly priced that it's impossible to buy a house there unless you have at least $100,000 million dollars. You could buy an apartment but I find them to be cramped and narrow. Love that place. 💟
Let me add Strivers Row in Harlem. It’s listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Some of the row houses were designed by Stanford White of the firm McKim, Mead & White.
Beautiful surprises considering how much of the city is built skywards! It would be wonderful if cities like Chicago would brighten up the poorer neighborhoods where normal citizens live with window boxes of flowers and construct light shafts to redirect the sunlight hitting rooftops to reach the streets below, to improve moods and overall happiness. Just a dream for improving things for the rest of us. Thanks again for the tour of these gems!
I live minutes away from Ditmas Park. It's my favorite walk! But, in New York style, it's amazing and almost depressing how quickly it changes to my ghetto neighborhood.
Bayridge Brooklyn is a gorgeous neighborhood on the Brooklyn end of the Verazzano Bridge. There are so many beautiful homes and blocks that I was surprised many times turning a corner even though I lived there 20 years. Some hidden mansions on the edge of hilly Shore Road look like castles. The most famous house is "The GingerBread house". I believe in the turn of the 20th centuries many Aristocrats lived in that neighborhood.
Was waiting for beautiful forest hills and middle village. Older NYers know about these places because we learned a lot of NY History back in the 70s in NYC Public Schools we also went on tons of school trips.
I knew about most of these places. When I lived in Flatbush I would go for walks in Ditmas Park. Once you cross Ocean Ave it's like a door shuts behind you.
Along Riverside Drive in the Hamilton Heights section of Manhattan is pretty kool. You have a view of the river, the GW bridge, Riverside Park and it’s a completely different world only being one block from Broadway.
This video was great. I've actually visited many of the neighborhoods featured. However, your next video should be about affordable housing in NYC...or lack thereof.
This is great, but maybe you should do a quick primer for all the non-new yorkers about the boroughs and Manhattan. I had no idea some of these places existed. Really great video, thanks!
I grew up in an area called Parkway Village in Queens and thought I might see it on this list. It was a planned community for UN employees. They had the UN School there that we attended until 6th grade when you transferred to the Manhattan campus. Overall this was a very interesting video, definitely didn't know about many of these neighborhoods.
i loved coming across this comment -- my mother grew up there and i have many fond childhood memories of staying with my grandparents there on weekends as i grew up. unfortunately its fallen into disrepair over the years due to horrible managment -- it was a truly special place back in the day. what year did you live there?
@@ghostworld11123 nice! I've heard about it falling into disrepair, which breaks my heart. I lived there from 1974 - 1985. I have imagined a return there to live and raise my own children but unfortunately won't happen.
Nice video you mentioned 2 of the 3 "Garden City" style planned communities in New York: Sunnyside Gardens and Forest Hills Garden. The third is Jackson Heights
My father was born (in 1915) and raised with the rest of his family in a large detached, 3 story home in Woodside. I remember going there with him as a child, maybe 8 years old to settle his mothers estate. It was a three story home with the upper floor rented out and the main floor had at least ten foot high ceilings. The basement had a coal bin for the furnace, with a coal chute on the side of the house off the driveway. Even at that time, about 1965, Woodside was a modest suburban area of large single homes. I seem to remember my father saying that the house was being sold to developers, likely to be bulldozed for an apartment building. Too bad as I can remember it being pretty nice even though it was built for the lower class like so many of these beautiful homes which once were for the lower class and therefore survived. Similar to all the attached townhouses in Georgetown in D.C.
I grew up literally 2 blocks from Sylvan Terrace in Washington Heights. Every Sunday like clockwork,a tour bus would pull up with people wanting to see the Jumel Mansion
This was in my mentions for some reason but as a native New Yorker, you did not take into account the neighborhoods because I'll tell you right now you would not call Washington Heights "enchanting".
Right? Was was that? It was so rundown when I lived there, since been "gentrified", meaning now too expensive to live there. smh. The story of all the neighborhoods.
Washington Heights is not nice at all but if you go to the left exit on the A, Hudson Heights by the Cloisters is extremely beautiful, quiet, and safe!
Fascinating! Overall great presentation! Knew about a few of these but not all of them. Lived on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in the early 1970s and didn't even know about Henderson Place! Familiar with the Village's architecture and had a godfather who used to live on West 13th St. in the Village. You missed an alley way of old row houses around NYU though and the fabulous architecture of Gramercy Park with it's black wrought ironed filigree balconies and banisters reminiscent of old New Orleans and Savannah, Georgia. And the gorgeous park there. Love all the great architecture of NYC, and every time I've ever been there since living there, I keep my aesthetic eye pealed for all the great architectural details on many of the buildings! Blown away by number 6, though...who would have known!? Thanks for sharing, fun video!
Really love this chan, used to live in NYc for a longtime, and you opened my eyes!!! Soooo cool, wanna go back! Was proud to know a couple of them but really embarrassed about Tudor City, that place is huge! Probably walked by it a hundred times, geez ~ lived by Dykman House in Inwood for a bit, that was a surreal place! Many blessings ans stay safe ~~
I've always thought Broad Channel was unique, with houses on stilts and boat docks. There's also a block or so of houses that overlook a pond in Crocheron Park in Bayside, Queens.
I agree. I am almost embarrass to say I had never been to Broad Channel although I grew up.in Queens. My first trip through this unique neighborhood was while driving the A-Shuttle bus after Hurricane Sandy.
I lived in and loved Inwood. Right by the park and the river. Someplace in Manhattan where eagles are occasionally seen. The best part is that the real-estate and rental market is way below usual Manhattan prices and it has a real sense of community, with farmer's market, hikes in the park and a little nature preserve at the very tip. Upstate Manhattan here we go!
Plenty of middle class neighborhoods still exist. Richmond Hills in Queens for example. Beautiful Victorian mansions , low rent and only 40 min train ride from Manhattan.
I"ve probably been to some of these areas and never knew about them and I'm born and raised in NY. Damn shame.....You should also cover City Island in the Bronx which I think was established back in the 17th Century ...
Great video. I lived in Sunnyside gardens until I was five when my parents had to move to make way for veterans. Also knew someone who lived in Sniffen court, very surreal walking through gates to visit. I also visited Forest Hills , Woodside Gardens, and Tutor City. These places were all rent controlled and now only the wealthy can live there a shame.
Forest Hills is not 'hidden' it's been well known for many years actually. It's been the home of many well known Folks-The Ramones went to Forest Hills High School, and Spider Man Grew up here after all, not to mention the tennis stadium that has concerts all summer.
As someone born and raised in NYC, went to K-12 and college, both undergraduate and graduate school in NYC AND worked from high school days in the original World Trade Center to then go on to midtown and work in Harlem AND create and own a brick and mortar business and then own 2 houses, unlike the apartments, being shown in Long Island, coming from my childhood house... I NOW LIVE OUT OF THE CITY THAT RAISED ME. I know all of this sounds fantastical, but what does it matter when the pricing for what you get is completely insane. Even when I had the opportunity to live in a beautiful new building across from THE PROJECTS, on 99th Street, I couldn't do it, like all the gentrifying folks who don't give af. So, I moved out of state. My heart is broken, but my quality of life (socioeconomically, health, etc) is much better, so I only have my nostalgia. Great to visit, but not to live, at least not anymore, no matter how much you make. Even the outer boroughs are getting ridiculous with their house and apartment pricing. Peace.
I love the all NYC videos! Very interesting stuff. Just as a footnote to the authors, the 1800s is the 19th century... the 18th century is the 1700s...
My son went to NYC to be a student- he lived in Harlem first, we just moved him to Brooklyn. He pays his own tuition so he can not be picky!!!! My husband is NOT a fan - he hates the city!! I just told him if you look hard enough you see MAGNIFICENT treasures.And when you come upon one it is worth it!!!!! I have never heard of any of these, but since my son lives in Brooklyn now I would love to stroll the beauties you showed today!! THANK YOU
The video is nice, although I was expecting to see & hear about "ENTIRE Neighborhoods" as opposed to "private complexes." Additionally, what about Parkchester (in the Bronx) & Manhattan Beach, Kensington, Greenpoint & Sheepshead Bay (in Brooklyn) or Peter Cooper Village/Stuy.Town (in Manhattan) let us not forget Astoria, Queens : this may seem fascinating to those not native to the City, but for those of us who KNOW the City it leaves MORE than a few stones "unturned" ...
D Stallworth yeah they could have added Howard Beach and Tudor Village in Queens. None of these places were expressive. Manhattan Beach has crazy big houses
I'm from one of the neighborhoods you mention, and I was glad she *didn't* mention it. Worst thing that happened to modern Brooklyn was getting featured in shows & movies as "the millennials' Manhattan".
Douglas Manor in Douglaston is a ten-minute walk up the hill from the railroad station. The houses, most built in the 1920s, belong to an association that includes a shared function building, and a dock with moorings available.
I grew up in Woodside. The Phipps Garden Apartments were on 39th Avenue, from 50th, to 52nd Street. I lived on 51st Street, just up the road from 39th Avenue. We used to take walks through the grounds of the apartments, which were amazing. The apartments were almost like a castle, with garden courtyards in the middle. They were in art deco style.
None of them are affordable to regular people. Nyc is barely affordable now. A small to medium one bedroom apartment is between 1,200$-2,000$ depending where you look. Minimum wage is now 15$ an hour but most companies won’t hire you full time so you work two part time jobs and the rob you with taxes and stuff. It takes two or more people/incomes to pay for the average 1-2 bedrooms now. Most of us live off credit cards and pizza/dollar food just to be able to save up money for college and trips to another state during the holidays.
@Glenna Martin hey look at you, you must be smart....Woulda never thought the best communities are wealthy ones I always assumed the most enchanting areas are low income ghetto areas like south bronx and east harlem.....wtf do i know!
At one point they were affordable to middle and upper middle class working people. When the values went up the middle and upper middle class sold and became wealthy!
Lived in New York City (Queens) for over 40 years..a unique and great borough to live!!! New York City, the best and one of a kind place on EARTH!!! Charley Gonzales
Thank you for including Hampton Court in this group of selected places. I'd like to add that we have beautiful gardens and spacious apartments. The grounds and buildings are very well kept. We have historic places status too. And we are right near Kew Gardens. There is always something cultural and artistic going on here. I've been here since 2003 and I still love it.
There were several Queens neighborhoods that were criminally overlooked. Addisleigh Park which is a historic black enclave filled with Tudor homes and a rich history of legendary black musicians and athletes such a Jackie Robinson, Ella Fitzgerald, Joe Louis and Miles Davis whom all used to live there. There's also Laurelton, Cambria Heights, and Douglaston all which have Old English themed homes and manicured properties that rival The Hamptons. They deserve to be mentioned as well.
Wonderful, enjoyed it very much. Nice snub to Gramercy Park 😉
Reminds me of San Francisco, the middle class & poor have been priced out. Disgusting & sad how expensive New York it has gotten!
Staten Island is still reasonably priced.
Oh, boo hoo! Property values in crease and jerks like you complain. If the "poor" live there these places would be a mess!
Aria Ferreira it's business the Jewish way
@@bernardbrown5336
No everyone who's poor is a mess; some have self-respect and take meticulous care of their surroundings and would make lovely neighbors.
Lil’ Johnny Jones: There is no need to be a racist divisive prick like the notable New Jerker, I mean Yorker, Donald Trump, and interject comments about religion that are stereotyping one religion and their supposedly parsimony. No comment about Jews were made and their is nothing to assume that the author is Jewish. GROW UP ASSHOLE PRICK. I can say that because, sight unseen, you are one. May Covid 19 get you ASAP.
Point of interest for any of you that happens to be a fan of the 60's rock band *_The Doors,_* just pull out your old beat up copy of their 2nd album *_Strange Days._* You will immediately recognize the _Sniffen Court_ alleyway in Manhattan ( shown in this video at 05:43 ) as being the location on that famous album cover photo. You can tell by the reliefs featuring horses on the wall at the back of the alley. The area has been beautifully maintained and now looks restored and refinished compared to the older 1968 photo on the album cover.
City Island in the Bronx although not upscale..looks like a New England fishing village...great seafood restaurants also!
Therese Martin My sister lives there, I love it there!!!💕
My husband grew up there, and his side of the family still lives there! It is indeed a nice, quaint community. We were there visiting the family around Thanksgiving last year and we all met up at Artie's restaurant for dinner. Good times. 🙂❤
❤️ City Island
Therese Martin
I was expecting City Island to be one of them.
That few seconds of music repeating over and over again was driving me mad.
My family grew up there and Pelham bay. City island is so much fun in the summer. Even though my wife and I live on Long Island we will go there for dinner a lot in the summer. I loved it there as a kid! Brings back so many fun memories.
brooklyn heights....by the promenade. Some of the best views in NYC.
And the high rents to go with it.
I love the promenade. Just hate driving through Brooklyn
Grace Court, Willow Street, Columbia Heights, the brownstone row houses of the whole area.
sooo romantic there
Your channel is so thoughtful. Thanks for highlighting our city in this way.
I really would like to see a moving panoramic video of these neighborhoods, so that I could better appreciate how they fit into the surrounding New York City urban landscape.
Yes. The still photos were nice, but I wan't to see video as well.
Wow!! Great places. You were saying that a lot of New Yorkers don’t know about these communities. I’ll bet that the residents want to keep it that way.
These places were all lived by minorities in the 60 70 and 80 and early 90 until they raised prices and made sure minorities could not afford it and it just caused them to leave and leave it to the greedy want to take over everything establishment.. if you know who I am talking about
alwaysmylove Exactly! I was thinking the same thing.
I'm aware of all of them, most real New Yorkers know. You left out some good ones, but thanks.
Not for long! the vandals will be around with their cans of spray paint and their minority IQs!
Definitely aware of all of these...
Would have liked to have seen the insides of these places instead of just the outside!🙁
just go to zillow or trulia. there is plenty apartments for sale
High ceilings, large rooms, large closets, some have sunken living room, solid walls, hardwood floors. Typical of a pre-war building.
@@jodeytailor7462 Truthful, not crazy.
Focus on being a social climber or sell your soul for 'success' and wealth. That should get you in.
Unfortunately many of the insides have been gutted and are now 'open concept' with all detail work removed and everything painted light gray.
Lol when I saw the title I was like “forest hills better be in this list”
TheCommentBandit forest hills is where it’s at
Exactly!
forest hills gardens to be exact
Yup, definitely the gardens
I felt the same way that Forest Hills Garden should be in video. Since I live in Forest Hills from time I was a 14 years old.
I love all the UN-KLAV YOU gave me lol...wonderful video presentation..I supposed you could expand the list to at least 25 and I would have watched all the way through...good job dear...
Forest Hills Garden is absolutely beautiful and it has that family neighborhood vibes, but so highly priced that it's impossible to buy a house there unless you have at least $100,000 million dollars. You could buy an apartment but I find them to be cramped and narrow. Love that place. 💟
Flushing, Whitestone and College Point in Queens are beautiful
Flushing, Jackson heights, and elmhurst have been destroyed. Kinda. Whitestone is awesome.
Forest Hills Gardens.. heaven near a subway, its own security, great shops..lovely homes, big trees.
Kitten Girl i live in the gardens and i love ittttt
and some of the worst drivers ever.
Lived there 11 years and loved it, but
600 sq ft gets old
Beautiful homes, nice video, and the narrator sounds so energetic and friendly (lovely voice, too). Good job.
Let me add Strivers Row in Harlem. It’s listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Some of the row houses were designed by Stanford White of the firm McKim, Mead & White.
Beautiful surprises considering how much of the city is built skywards! It would be wonderful if cities like Chicago would brighten up the poorer neighborhoods where normal citizens live with window boxes of flowers and construct light shafts to redirect the sunlight hitting rooftops to reach the streets below, to improve moods and overall happiness. Just a dream for improving things for the rest of us. Thanks again for the tour of these gems!
I live minutes away from Ditmas Park. It's my favorite walk! But, in New York style, it's amazing and almost depressing how quickly it changes to my ghetto neighborhood.
Nice! I practically grew up around forest hills gardens and love waking in Forrest park! I love looking at the old homes
I love your channel. Very well narrated and enjoyable.
I also think Laurelton New York... there’s a small village looking area that spans a couple of blocks
Bayridge Brooklyn is a gorgeous neighborhood on the Brooklyn end of the Verazzano Bridge. There are so many beautiful homes and blocks that I was surprised many times turning a corner even though I lived there 20 years. Some hidden mansions on the edge of hilly Shore Road look like castles. The most famous house is "The GingerBread house". I believe in the turn of the 20th centuries many Aristocrats lived in that neighborhood.
Was waiting for beautiful forest hills and middle village. Older NYers know about these places because we learned a lot of NY History back in the 70s in NYC Public Schools we also went on tons of school trips.
Tudor City was the first place I went in NYC, there was people tanning in the gardens. I fell in love 😍
Wow! Beautiful! Thank you for sharing. This gives you a whole other perspective on New York City from what you see on TV or hear about.
I grew up in forest hills, it always had that special European old world fantasy charm.
You're lucky!
This a well produced video. The music is outstanding and the narrator has welcoming energy.
I went to catholic school in forest Hills, very beautiful neighborhood indeed.
I remember you 🤔😃
I knew about most of these places. When I lived in Flatbush I would go for walks in Ditmas Park. Once you cross Ocean Ave it's like a door shuts behind you.
Along Riverside Drive in the Hamilton Heights section of Manhattan is pretty kool. You have a view of the river, the GW bridge, Riverside Park and it’s a completely different world only being one block from Broadway.
freudian slip?
"One black....."😂😹😂😅
Beautiful. Say they are all hidden gems.
This video was great. I've actually visited many of the neighborhoods featured. However, your next video should be about affordable housing in NYC...or lack thereof.
This is great, but maybe you should do a quick primer for all the non-new yorkers about the boroughs and Manhattan. I had no idea some of these places existed. Really great video, thanks!
I grew up in an area called Parkway Village in Queens and thought I might see it on this list. It was a planned community for UN employees. They had the UN School there that we attended until 6th grade when you transferred to the Manhattan campus.
Overall this was a very interesting video, definitely didn't know about many of these neighborhoods.
i loved coming across this comment -- my mother grew up there and i have many fond childhood memories of staying with my grandparents there on weekends as i grew up. unfortunately its fallen into disrepair over the years due to horrible managment -- it was a truly special place back in the day. what year did you live there?
@@ghostworld11123 nice! I've heard about it falling into disrepair, which breaks my heart. I lived there from 1974 - 1985. I have imagined a return there to live and raise my own children but unfortunately won't happen.
@@lichi1244eva did you know the kaminskis?
@@ghostworld11123 no, I didn't, at least I don't recall, I was so young!
Attended UNIS Parkway in the 70s. While it should have been on the list, the fact Parkway has not been maintained is probably why it has not.
I’m a real estate agent in NYC and I love it! You just never know how this city is going to surprise you.
Back in the ‘80s, I had a co-worker who bought a Tudor City apartment for 35k.
Eduardo Ramirez Jr that was an amazing investment!
Therese Martin Tell me about it.
YR Not sure. I know he picked up in an auction and it needed work.
Eduardo Ramirez Jr Wow.
Eduardo Ramirez Jr Still good price.
Brought back a lot of memories. Thanks
Got me emotional seeing this, as a kid visiting from buffalo every year, Tudor City meant so much to me. Oh 😔
Nice video you mentioned 2 of the 3 "Garden City" style planned communities in New York: Sunnyside Gardens and Forest Hills Garden. The third is Jackson Heights
My father was born (in 1915) and raised with the rest of his family in a large detached, 3 story home in Woodside. I remember going there with him as a child, maybe 8 years old to settle his mothers estate. It was a three story home with the upper floor rented out and the main floor had at least ten foot high ceilings. The basement had a coal bin for the furnace, with a coal chute on the side of the house off the driveway. Even at that time, about 1965, Woodside was a modest suburban area of large single homes. I seem to remember my father saying that the house was being sold to developers, likely to be bulldozed for an apartment building. Too bad as I can remember it being pretty nice even though it was built for the lower class like so many of these beautiful homes which once were for the lower class and therefore survived. Similar to all the attached townhouses in Georgetown in D.C.
I’m not even from NYC but i love your video, places I would love to check out when I go to New York ❤️🖤
I grew up literally 2 blocks from Sylvan Terrace in Washington Heights. Every Sunday like clockwork,a tour bus would pull up with people wanting to see the Jumel Mansion
NYC has it all these beautiful neighbourhoods who cud have imagined NY is surronded wth such beauty ❤️❤️🌹🌹
This was in my mentions for some reason but as a native New Yorker, you did not take into account the neighborhoods because I'll tell you right now you would not call Washington Heights "enchanting".
Right? Was was that? It was so rundown when I lived there, since been "gentrified", meaning now too expensive to live there. smh. The story of all the neighborhoods.
Yeah I lived up there for 3 years, and got out as soon as I possibly could
Washington Heights is not nice at all but if you go to the left exit on the A, Hudson Heights by the Cloisters is extremely beautiful, quiet, and safe!
It was a specific street not all of the heights.
As a relatively new resident of Washington Heights I would say it’s definitely not that bad although it still has a little edge for sure.
I've been to forest hills gardens many times, it's beautiful!
You should do a video on NYC's Island or costal communities like Broad channel and the rocaways and city island and Roosevelt Island
Love your videos 😊 from South Africa.
Fascinating! Overall great presentation! Knew about a few of these but not all of them. Lived on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in the early 1970s and didn't even know about Henderson Place! Familiar with the Village's architecture and had a godfather who used to live on West 13th St. in the Village. You missed an alley way of old row houses around NYU though and the fabulous architecture of Gramercy Park with it's black wrought ironed filigree balconies and banisters reminiscent of old New Orleans and Savannah, Georgia. And the gorgeous park there. Love all the great architecture of NYC, and every time I've ever been there since living there, I keep my aesthetic eye pealed for all the great architectural details on many of the buildings! Blown away by number 6, though...who would have known!? Thanks for sharing, fun video!
Really love this chan, used to live in NYc for a longtime, and you opened my eyes!!! Soooo cool, wanna go back! Was proud to know a couple of them but really embarrassed about Tudor City, that place is huge! Probably walked by it a hundred times, geez ~ lived by Dykman House in Inwood for a bit, that was a surreal place! Many blessings ans stay safe ~~
WHAT HAPPENED TO ADDISLEIGH PARK? (UPPER MIDDLE CLASS AFRICAN AMERICAN ENCLAVE)
I've always thought Broad Channel was unique, with houses on stilts and boat docks. There's also a block or so of houses that overlook a pond in Crocheron Park in Bayside, Queens.
I agree. I am almost embarrass to say I had never been to Broad Channel although I grew up.in Queens. My first trip through this unique neighborhood was while driving the A-Shuttle bus after Hurricane Sandy.
I agree that Broad Channel is a remarkable, somewhat isolated, area.
As well as West Hamilton Beach.
The photography is beautiful.. wish we cld see inside an apt.
Thank you! Lovely presentation!
The Villa Charlotte Bronte, in The Bronx looks amazing!
You should also include some of the many garden co-ops in Jackson Heights, Queens. Some with private elevators and gardens.
I lived in and loved Inwood. Right by the park and the river. Someplace in Manhattan where eagles are occasionally seen. The best part is that the real-estate and rental market is way below usual Manhattan prices and it has a real sense of community, with farmer's market, hikes in the park and a little nature preserve at the very tip. Upstate Manhattan here we go!
All the places were very nice . But, again places that were made for the middle class have been taken away .
middle class mostly gone away
Real estate does go up in value over 140 years!! Get real.
Hail capitalism
Plenty of middle class neighborhoods still exist. Richmond Hills in Queens for example. Beautiful Victorian mansions , low rent and only 40 min train ride from Manhattan.
Taken away by liberal Democrats
You missed Convent Avenue and Hamilton Terrance in Manhattan. Beautiful brownstones and town houses but thank you I enjoyed the video
👁
My son graduates in 3 years and I'm moving up north for my empty nester phase!
I"ve probably been to some of these areas and never knew about them and I'm born and raised in NY. Damn shame.....You should also cover City Island in the Bronx which I think was established back in the 17th Century ...
number 11, Ditmas Park Flatbush got my attention.
Great video. I lived in Sunnyside gardens until I was five when my parents had to move to make way for veterans. Also knew someone who lived in Sniffen court, very surreal walking through gates to visit. I also visited Forest Hills , Woodside Gardens, and Tutor City. These places were all rent controlled and now only the wealthy can live there a shame.
Thank you for sharing!!! I love NY❤️
They missed Malba Queens, Riverdale in the Bronx, and Pelham Parkway in the Bronx
Shhhh hush
I love Pelham. North Bronx going over the bridge to the hidden gem to Pelham.
Riverdale? The only place in Riverdale that is somewhat nice is Wave Hill. The rest of Riverdale is a shit hole!
I'm from the Bronx. Those areas mentioned are hidden gems. But also super pricey.
My family lives in Forest Hills Garden, it’s beautiful 💜
Yeah I know!
What about Jamaica hills and dyker heights? There are quite number of mansions there.
shore rd
Pelham parkway-The Bronx.
Riverdale- The Bronx.
Jamaica Estates- Queens.
Arthur Avenue- The Bronx.
City Island, The Bronx.
Whitestone- Queens.
The last house was gorgeous
Thankyou for your information.It helps me a lot.Thanks
Forest Hills is not 'hidden' it's been well known for many years actually. It's been the home of many well known Folks-The Ramones went to Forest Hills High School, and Spider Man Grew up here after all, not to mention the tennis stadium that has concerts all summer.
As someone born and raised in NYC, went to K-12 and college, both undergraduate and graduate school in NYC AND worked from high school days in the original World Trade Center to then go on to midtown and work in Harlem AND create and own a brick and mortar business and then own 2 houses, unlike the apartments, being shown in Long Island, coming from my childhood house... I NOW LIVE OUT OF THE CITY THAT RAISED ME. I know all of this sounds fantastical, but what does it matter when the pricing for what you get is completely insane. Even when I had the opportunity to live in a beautiful new building across from THE PROJECTS, on 99th Street, I couldn't do it, like all the gentrifying folks who don't give af. So, I moved out of state. My heart is broken, but my quality of life (socioeconomically, health, etc) is much better, so I only have my nostalgia. Great to visit, but not to live, at least not anymore, no matter how much you make. Even the outer boroughs are getting ridiculous with their house and apartment pricing. Peace.
Fabulous!!!♥️♥️♥️
Thank you for the Exquisite look of some of New York enchanting homes
One of my favorites is Douglaston, NY in Queens county.
Thanks; always enjoy your videos.
I love the all NYC videos! Very interesting stuff. Just as a footnote to the authors, the 1800s is the 19th century... the 18th century is the 1700s...
My son went to NYC to be a student- he lived in Harlem first, we just moved him to Brooklyn. He pays his own tuition so he can not be picky!!!! My husband is NOT a fan - he hates the city!!
I just told him if you look hard enough you see MAGNIFICENT treasures.And when you come upon one it is worth it!!!!! I have never heard of any of these, but since my son lives in Brooklyn now I would love to stroll the beauties you showed today!! THANK YOU
addisleigh park in Queens- lots of Jazz history. Highland Blvd in Brooklyn.
I'm still trying to land a deal on a nice Tudor in addisleigh park.
Very nice vid. Since I live in Sunnyside Gardens I like that one best... for now
The video is nice, although I was expecting to see & hear about "ENTIRE Neighborhoods" as opposed to "private complexes." Additionally, what about Parkchester (in the Bronx) & Manhattan Beach, Kensington, Greenpoint & Sheepshead Bay (in Brooklyn) or Peter Cooper Village/Stuy.Town (in Manhattan) let us not forget Astoria, Queens : this may seem fascinating to those not native to the City, but for those of us who KNOW the City it leaves MORE than a few stones "unturned" ...
D Stallworth yeah they could have added Howard Beach and Tudor Village in Queens. None of these places were expressive. Manhattan Beach has crazy big houses
D Stallworth Ah yes Astoria has some nice houses along 21st near Ditmars.
Very true
@@xshesyourqorqeousxx3 you can express yourself though😂😂😹
I'm from one of the neighborhoods you mention, and I was glad she *didn't* mention it. Worst thing that happened to modern Brooklyn was getting featured in shows & movies as "the millennials' Manhattan".
Brooklyn Heights, Kew Gardens, many parts of Staten Island, Fort Schuyler area, Park Slope
Magical this is my kind of show. thank you. Looking beyond the norm. Warren Place Mews, and Villa Charlotte Bronte. feel love.
I loved this video! Thank you for all of the hard work that you put into making it!
Live in NYC all my life & never knew this!
What about. Coron
Douglas Manor in Douglaston is a ten-minute walk up the hill from the railroad station. The houses, most built in the 1920s, belong to an association that includes a shared function building, and a dock with moorings available.
ok Ill take one in Ditmas and one in Forest hills. Can I pay later.
I knew some but not most! Crazy!! Thanks!
I can't get enough of how you pronounce enclave.
Thanks Awesome stuff. Keep up the great work.
Forest Hill though!!
Seeing the Long Railroad Station brought back memories of going to school past that bridge
I grew up in Woodside. The Phipps Garden Apartments were on 39th Avenue, from 50th, to 52nd Street. I lived on 51st Street, just up the road from 39th Avenue. We used to take walks through the grounds of the apartments, which were amazing. The apartments were almost like a castle, with garden courtyards in the middle. They were in art deco style.
How many of these are affordable to “regular” people?? Are pitching just to millionaires?!
None of them are affordable to regular people. Nyc is barely affordable now. A small to medium one bedroom apartment is between 1,200$-2,000$ depending where you look. Minimum wage is now 15$ an hour but most companies won’t hire you full time so you work two part time jobs and the rob you with taxes and stuff. It takes two or more people/incomes to pay for the average 1-2 bedrooms now. Most of us live off credit cards and pizza/dollar food just to be able to save up money for college and trips to another state during the holidays.
Tudor city is pretty affordable
@Glenna Martin hey look at you, you must be smart....Woulda never thought the best communities are wealthy ones I always assumed the most enchanting areas are low income ghetto areas like south bronx and east harlem.....wtf do i know!
Glenna Martin -NONE.
At one point they were affordable to middle and upper middle class working people. When the values went up the middle and upper middle class sold and became wealthy!
Love these videos! Great job
Never wanted it to end You have the loveliest speaking voice. Wow this was an eye opener Superb thanks X
This is the magic of NYC, you can travel to different eras, worlds and countries in one day
You missed Riverdale neighbor Fieldstone Road in the Bronx and Wave Hill.
Len Santiago hidden gems...She did those in another video...
Great video. Enjoyed it very much.