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It was the first apartment development in the United States to receive federal funding. [3] The average cost of "Lung Block" to Knickerbocker Village was high: $3,116 million, or $14 per square foot. The development's tax assessment was reduced by two-thirds to bring the monthly room rental down to the $12.50 stipulated by the RFC.
The building contains only 12 apartments: a ground floor maisonette, 10 full-floor apartments, and a multi-floor penthouse. [5] Each full-floor apartment has 5,000 square feet (460 m 2) of space, four bedrooms and four servants' rooms. [6] The elevator opens into a private entrance foyer on each floor.
This is a list of buildings held by the New York City Housing Authority, a public corporation that provides affordable housing in New York City, U.S. This list is divided geographically by the five boroughs of New York City: Manhattan, the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, and Staten Island.
0–9. 2 Horatio Street; 8 Spruce Street; 15 Union Square West; 23 Beekman Place; 27 West 67th Street; 45 Christopher Street; 53W53; 59 West 12th Street; 100 Eleventh Avenue
The $475-a-month apartment cost Koch far less than the $1,200 a month it was worth at market rate at the time he lived there. (Rent-control laws place a ceiling on how much landlords can charge ...
These apartments are lavish in scale, each containing roughly 6,500 square feet (600 m 2). The lower two floors consist of two duplex maisonettes, one 7000 SF, the other 4,500 square feet (420 m 2). There is also a superintendent's apartment on the first floor, roughly 750 SF. All apartments feature marble floors, and fireplaces in all major rooms.
The Penn South cooperative as seen from the Empire State Building. Penn South, officially known as Mutual Redevelopment Houses and formerly Penn Station South, is a limited-equity [1] housing cooperative development located between Eighth and Ninth Avenues and West 23rd and 29th Streets, in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.
The building is located on a 81,173-square-foot (7,541 m 2) land lot that occupies a full city block between First Avenue and Tunnel Entrance Street and between East 37th and 38th Streets, adjacent to the Manhattan entrance to the Queens–Midtown Tunnel.