Marketing has started for a five-unit, 6-story residential condominium building at 30 West 126th Street in Harlem.
Warren Meister Architects has designed the project which is being developed by Bruce Kravetz.
The brownstone building, which was erected in 1909 and is pet friendly, has a stoop entrance, a garden duplex, a penthouse with roof terrace, and three full-floor units with balconies and two full baths.
The garden apartment has 1,469 square feet plus 587 square feet of outdoor space and is priced at about $999,000.
The penthouse has 1,092 square feet plus 1,032 square feet of outdoor space and is priced at about $859,000.
The full-floor units range in size from 1,029 to 1,092 square feet and in price from about $725,000 to $780,000.
The penthouse unit has a gas fireplace and the other units have decorative fireplaces and exposed brick walls.
Apartments have Brazilian cherry wood floors, granite kitchen countertops, Bosch appliances, washers and dryers, double-glazed tilt windows.
The building has central air-conditioning and private storage.
The area has good public transportation.
Warren Meister Architects has designed the project which is being developed by Bruce Kravetz.
The brownstone building, which was erected in 1909 and is pet friendly, has a stoop entrance, a garden duplex, a penthouse with roof terrace, and three full-floor units with balconies and two full baths.
The garden apartment has 1,469 square feet plus 587 square feet of outdoor space and is priced at about $999,000.
The penthouse has 1,092 square feet plus 1,032 square feet of outdoor space and is priced at about $859,000.
The full-floor units range in size from 1,029 to 1,092 square feet and in price from about $725,000 to $780,000.
The penthouse unit has a gas fireplace and the other units have decorative fireplaces and exposed brick walls.
Apartments have Brazilian cherry wood floors, granite kitchen countertops, Bosch appliances, washers and dryers, double-glazed tilt windows.
The building has central air-conditioning and private storage.
The area has good public transportation.
Architecture Critic
Carter Horsley
Since 1997, Carter B. Horsley has been the editorial director of CityRealty. He began his journalistic career at The New York Times in 1961 where he spent 26 years as a reporter specializing in real estate & architectural news. In 1987, he became the architecture critic and real estate editor of The New York Post.