Approximately 950 Sq Ft of true living Space, this Junior-4 is available for rent for the first time. As you walk in, you see the step down foyer into the main living space giving the apartment an instant wow-factor upon entering. As you make a left upon entering, you will see the renovated kitchen on the right and then 3 great sized closets including 2 of them being HUGE WALK-IN CLOSETS. Just past the Kitchen, you also have a room that can have multiple options of uses including a dining room, 2nd bedroom or a home office since many people today work remote!
At the end of the hallway, there is a renovated bathroom. Prior to the bathroom, when you make a right, you enter the Massively Sized Primary Bedroom which also has ample closet space. The apartment all around faces West allowing light to come through almost every hour of the day.
Marlow Towers is a wonderful Co-op in Turtle Bay. There is a shared laundry room in the basement with new machines, cold storage, a live-in super and an incredible Roof Deck that over looks the East River & Long Island City's Pepsi Cola Sign.
Turtle Bay is a wonderful neighborhood allowing one to have easy access to Supermarkets such as Whole Foods & Morton Williams as well as shops, restaurants and Public transportation including the M-15 bus on 49th Street & 2nd Ave, E and M trains on 53rd St and 3rd Ave and the 6-train on 51st Street & Lexington Ave.
Stretching from 40th street to 59th and hugged by the East River and Fifth Avenue, Midtown East is a bustling business district by day but quiet refuge by night. With some of Manhattan's most famous architecture, Midtown East is an elegant mixture of old and new, celebrating the luxury of the city while preserving its history.
Midtown East, like the rest of Manhattan, was historically farmland during the early days. Affluent families were drawn to the region because of its peaceful surroundings and convenient access to the East River, which made the area ideal for agriculture.
During the 1800's and early 1900's, Midtown East became a hotspot for industry, welcoming factories, breweries, and slaughterhouses. With industry came workers, mostly Irish and German immigrants who contributed to the area with projects such as the construction of Saint Patrick's Cathedral in 1879.
By the time Grand Central Terminal was built in 1913, the neighborhood…
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