Marketing has started for The Lore, a new, 36-unit residential condominium building at 261 West 112th Street in Harlem.
The 6-story building is east of Frederick Douglass Boulevard and close to Morningside Park, St. John the Divine Cathedral, Columbia University and public transportation.
Steven Gaetano is the architect for the project, which has curved balconies.
The pet-friendly building has a part-time doorman, a live-in superintendent, a roof deck, a residents' garden, a fitness center, a full-kitchen community room and every apartment has a storage bin.
Kitchens have Viking Professional ranges, dishwashers and cooktops, Subzero refrigerators and wine coolers.
Bathrooms have whirlpool bathtubs, Carrera marble floors and backsplashes and soapstone counters.
Apartments are one- and two-bedroom units and have GE washers and dryers. Initial pricing for 638-square-foot, one-bedroom units ranges from about $550,000 to $560,000 and initial pricing for 999-square-foot, two-bedroom units ranges from about $740,000 to $975,000.
The 6-story building is east of Frederick Douglass Boulevard and close to Morningside Park, St. John the Divine Cathedral, Columbia University and public transportation.
Steven Gaetano is the architect for the project, which has curved balconies.
The pet-friendly building has a part-time doorman, a live-in superintendent, a roof deck, a residents' garden, a fitness center, a full-kitchen community room and every apartment has a storage bin.
Kitchens have Viking Professional ranges, dishwashers and cooktops, Subzero refrigerators and wine coolers.
Bathrooms have whirlpool bathtubs, Carrera marble floors and backsplashes and soapstone counters.
Apartments are one- and two-bedroom units and have GE washers and dryers. Initial pricing for 638-square-foot, one-bedroom units ranges from about $550,000 to $560,000 and initial pricing for 999-square-foot, two-bedroom units ranges from about $740,000 to $975,000.
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.