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Apartment buildings and multiple-family housing make up a more significant share of the housing stock in the New York City area than in most other U.S. cities as over 75% of apartment buildings in NYC are co-ops. Reasons suggested to explain why cooperatives are relatively more common than condominiums in the New York City area are: [38]
A condop, a portmanteau of the words condominium and cooperative (or "co-op"), is a co-op inside a condo. [3] Stepping back, condominium owners actually hold title to a piece of real estate. Co-op owners are actually shareholder-tenants with shares in and a long-term lease from the co-op corporation. In all co-ops, a corporation owns the building.
A building co-operative is a co-operative housing corporation where individuals or families work together to directly construct their own homes in a cooperative fashion. Members of this type of co-operative purchase building materials in bulk and co-operate with other members of the co-op during the construction phase of the co-operative.
A co-op is more like a rental agreement, where you are the tenant and the building owner is the landlord. Your shares do not translate to real property like owning a house or condo does. Instead ...
Housing cooperative (or Co-op): a form of ownership in which a non-profit corporation owns the entire apartment building or development and residents own shares in the corporation that correspond to their apartment and a percentage of common areas. In Australia this corresponds with a "company title" apartment.
Buying an apartment usually means buying a share of ownership in a cooperative association that owns the property and … Continue reading → The post Condo vs. Apartment: Which Should You Buy ...
740 Park Avenue is a luxury cooperative apartment building on the west side of Park Avenue between East 71st and 72nd Streets in the Lenox Hill section of the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City, New York.
Cohousing is an intentional, [1] self-governing, [2] cooperative community where residents live in private homes often clustered around shared space. [3] The term originated in Denmark in the late 1960s. [4] [5] Families live in attached or single-family homes with traditional amenities, usually including a private kitchenette. As part of the ...