PRIME SOHO - 2BR LOFT OASIS! Please email Joe (as opposed to text) for quickest response & further details about this loft. Location, location, location. Rare opportunity to live in a loft on what is arguably Soho's most picturesque cast-iron block, and in perhaps one of its most peaceful and quiet loft homes available.
Located on the 2nd floor of an immaculately-kept loft building on Greene Street (btw Houston and Prince), this wonderful 2BR/2BA loft apartment features keyed elevator entrance onto the floor (note: not directly into the unit), enormous original steel-framed windows, 2 renovated bathrooms (subway tiling and Grohe fixtures), a full-sized vented W/D, a separate kitchen with Bosch D/W, soaring 13' ceiling heights, and classically cool loft aesthetics. This home is extremely quiet and private, has very decent midday light (faces the rear of the building, South-East), and offers separate winged split bedrooms on either side of the dramatic living area. Tasteful and intelligent custom architectural features throughout the home. Second "bedroom" has gorgeous oversized custom sliding doors for privacy - and makes a perfect home office or guest room (or, leave it wide open to maintain an even larger great-room effect).
All this, available in a beautiful and well-managed loft building on gorgeous cobblestoned Greene Street - with very little street or pedestrian traffic, easy parking or Uber pick-up, and with none of the usual Soho weekend vendors. A++ location. Centrally located Soho oasis - safe, clean, and very well-maintained largely owner-occupied loft building. No smokers or dogs please, sorry. Please email Joe to arrange a private viewing of this wonderful home.
South of Houston Street, which is where the neighborhood gets its name, SoHo is the hip neighborhood that people love to frequent for shopping and culinary adventures. Located just west of Little Italy and Nolita, this is the neighborhood to be if you want to feel like a New York icon.
During the era of Dutch colonialism, SoHo was the site of the first free Black settlement in Manhattan. The land would remain largely rural until the draining of the Collect Pond due to pollution. Soon after, Broadway and Canal street were paved and people began to come in droves.
During the early and mid 1800's SoHo began constructing cast iron buildings in order to reduce the risk of fires, which had become common in the city. The buildings allowed for large windows and apartments. The wealthy elites of Manhattan called this place home until the invention of Modern Steel, which allowed for the development of skyscrapers. The rich, seeking modern luxuries, moved to…
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