1787 Sq.Ft 3 bedroom apartment in an exclusive building
| Monthly Rent: | Usage: | Neighborhood: |
|---|---|---|
| $10,000 | 3 Bedrooms | Upper West Side |
Property Description
Apartment description
The bedrooms have a private marble-clab bathroom each. The apartment features a living room, a dining room and a walking closet. The pictures are a model apartment, they may not represent the available apartment.
The amenities within the apartment include
- Sprawling closets
- Whisper-soft carpets and richly-patinated hardwood floors
- Thoughtful appointments like marble-clad master bath and powder rooms
- High-tech sound-proofed windows and individual climate controls
- Expansive windows featuring forever views drench rooms in light and air
- State-of-the-art telecommunications and entertainment technology
- Internet connections to high-definition TV.
Description of the area
This high end 3 bedroom apartment, located on Riverside Boulevard, is close to many entertainment areas, such as Central Park and Lincoln Center.
The amenities within the building include
- 24-hour doorman
- Fitness center
- Club lounge furnished with sofas
- A private laundry.
The Upper West Side is a neighborhood of the borough of Manhattan in New York City that lies between Central Park and the Hudson River above West 59th Street. Like the Upper East Side, the Upper West Side is primarily a residential and shopping area, with many of its residents working in more commercial areas in Midtown and Lower Manhattan. In contrast to the Upper East Side's reputation as home to more conservative commercial and business types, the Upper West Side now has the reputation of being home to New York City's liberal cultural and artistic workers. The neighborhood is nonetheless relatively upscale with the median household income in many areas exceeding Manhattan average to a considerable extent. The Upper West Side has been a setting for many movies and television shows because of its pre-War architecture, colorful community and rich cultural life. Ever since Edward R. Murrow went "Person-to-Person" live, the length of Central Park West in the 1950s, West Siders scarcely pause to gape at on-site trailers, and jump their skateboards over coaxial cables and it seems that one or another of the various Law & Order shows is taking up all the available parking spaces in the neighborhood. Woody Allen's film Hannah and Her Sisters captures that quintessential Upper West Side flavor of rambling high-ceilinged apartments bursting at the seams with books and other cultural artifacts.
