Carnegie Hill and Morningside Heights
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Poodle not included in this elegant Carnegie Hill one-bedroom.
Photo: Coldwell Banker Warburg
For under a million dollars, one can find all sorts of housing configurations: park- and subway-adjacent studios, one-bedrooms hidden in carriage houses or former shoe factories, and even the occasional true two-bedroom. We’re combing the market for particularly spacious, nicely renovated, or otherwise worth-a-look apartments at various six-digit price points.
We found you a Park Avenue co-op with a poodle and some lovely stained glass in Brooklyn Heights.
527 West 110th Street, #10
The windows, as shown in this listing, are the focal point of the room.
Photo: Manhattan Network Inc.
This two-bedroom, two-bathroom condo in a prewar elevator building has reasonable monthlies (a $726 common charge) and a great location, yet the windows are the true sell. Sure, it will need some updating, but the original details are all there.
989 Amsterdam Avenue #5B
A corner kitchen in this renovated duplex.
Photo: Wyllie Real Estate
This co-op has been on the market for a while and just dropped another $25,000. (Maybe it’s the spiral stairs?) It’s a duplex with an odd if interesting layout, though it looks like the lower level will be short on light. Still, there are decent details — exposed-brick walls, built-in drawers — and apparently a “~50sf storage cage in the basement,” so do with that what you will.
1060 Park Avenue #5A
As seen in listing photos, this Carnegie Hill one-bed has lots of built-ins for all of your stuff.
Photo: Coldwell Banker Warburg
This co-op is good enough for the poodle featured in the listing photo so it’s good enough for you. With built-in bookshelves and storage, a nicely tiled bathroom, and French doors into the bedroom, it’s cute for one and cozy for two. Monthly maintenance is on the higher end — $1,755 — but there is a doorman and bike storage. And if you couldn’t already tell, “pets are welcome.”
151 Joralemon Street #17
A stunning window, as seen in this listing photo, in the home’s main living space.
Photo: Brown Harris Stevens Residential Sales LLC
This one-bedroom co-op has a lot of things working for it — stained-glass windows and a fireplace (decorative), for starters. The kitchen is small but renovated with custom cabinets and a dishwasher (the green tile is love it or hate it). On a quiet, landmarked block of Joralemon.
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