- $3495
- One Month
Broker´s Fee - 1 bedroom
- 1 bath
- Web# 4031
- More info

A pet-friendly, sunny, and spacious high-ceilinged one bedroom apartment on the border of Noho and Nolita, and right in the middle of some of the best eateries, shopping, and nightlife. Your bright well-designed open-air home features ample closet space, a dining area, and a separate kitchen perfect for entertaining your guests or eating your breakfast. A 12-story, luxury rental property set in the heart of Manhattan's most energetic and vital neighborhood. More info  - $3825
- One Month
Broker´s Fee - 1 bedroom
- 1 bath
- Web# 2708
- More info

A bright well-designed one bedroom apartment right on the cusp of the lively Lower East Side and Nolita. Your home with features a huge storage closet and a fully-equipped open kitchen perfect for entertaining your guests or eating your breakfast. Where the Village meets SoHo, you will find some of Manhattan's most exciting new rentals. More info  - $9250
- One Month
Broker´s Fee - 1 bedroom
- 1 bath
- Web# 5601
- New construction
- Luxury apartments
- More info

An exclusive sun-lit one bedroom one and a half bathroom private ten foot soaring ceilinged residence. Your sanctuary features a foyer, a walk-in closet, and an open Chef's kitchen perfect for entertaining a party or eating your breakfast. At the intersection of everything you ever dreamt of and above and beyond anything you've ever expected to find in a rental, this property is a true gem. Your home base for exploring Soho's boutiques, bistros and bars. More info 
SOHO
Whether an Indian summer awaits or the chill of fall is here to stay, the historic neighborhood south of Houston, north of Canal and west of Crosby is as lively as ever, with visitors, workers, and residents out in force at all hours.
Once known as the South Village, the area was transformed from farmland to an upper-class neighborhood in the early 19th century. It has gone through subsequent incarnations as a shopping district and later as the “Cast-Iron District,” when warehouse and loft spaces of similar construction became common throughout the area. Beginning in the 1960s, it began to attract more and more artists, who were drawn to the area’s cheap rents and ample work spaces. That's when, taking a cue from the artistic London neighborhood of the same name, the area looked to its northern boundary and truncated its location “South of Houston” to become Soho.
Broadway and West Broadway, the neighborhood’s two main shopping strips, buzz with people from all walks of life and every social bracket. Fashion galleries, and many devotees of the publishing, music and graphic-design industries' have offices in the area, along with a number of stock brokers and famous personalities that also have homes here. Typically, buyers in this area are highly social, newly minted and not shy about it. Those who make Soho their permanent residence are usually drawn by its irresistible style and unstoppable energy.
The area continued to evolve, and is now known for its trendy restaurants and stylish boutiques as much as anything else. While Madison and Fifth Avenues are widely known as the shopping Mecca in Manhattan, New Yorkers who crave a dash of excitement with their spending max out their credit cards in Soho, the energetic and incredibly stylish area south of Houston Street. Anything a consumer’s heart desires can be found in this fashionable neighborhood.
Soho has a very unique architecture. Many beautiful buildings abound in different styles such as Victorian Gothic, Neo-Greco, and Italianate. The area's many incarnations stimulates much discussion among New Yorker's who were around to watch it go from city slum to art hub to shopping mall. Still, one thing is for sure: Ever since its transformation in the 1960’s, Soho’s breathtaking housing - lofts that once defined a bohemian lifestyle and continues to define chic luxury, is more desirable now than it ever was. |