Rental of the Day: 110 Livingston Street Studio
Guess some of the buyers at 110 Livingston Street were pure speculators investors. Sotheby’s now has a 675-square-foot studio for rent for $2,750 per month. The never-been-lived in space looks like it has pretty high ceilings and clean, high-end finishes and fixtures. It would be interesting to know what the buyer paid for this place…

Guess some of the buyers at 110 Livingston Street were pure speculators investors. Sotheby’s now has a 675-square-foot studio for rent for $2,750 per month. The never-been-lived in space looks like it has pretty high ceilings and clean, high-end finishes and fixtures. It would be interesting to know what the buyer paid for this place to get a sense of what kind of return this rent would generate. Anyone know what the common charges are on a unit like this?
110 Livingston Street [Sotheby’s Int’l] GMAP
Follow up to Rascal’s 2:10 post. Is the “no-upper-cabinet-barely-any-base-cabinet-kitchen” typical for the condo product that is being delivered to the market these days?
The sponsor is still going to control the board for a decent amount of time, and there is no way he would limit sublets because it makes it harder for him to sell.
Oooh…”only” 2 years? Certainly not enough time to cause any damage, disturb any neighbors, or clog any toilets with tampons. And, of course, the building gets the princely sum of one month’s rent!
Different strokes for different folks, dude. I prefer not to have anyone tell me what I can and can’t do with my shit.
I am showing this to my tenants who are nickel and diming me in Ft. Greene for the same space and pay 1450.
Give me a break. These people are smoking crack.
A typical Two Trees kitchen special: Bad galley layout, open shelving to display clutter, and almost no cabinets. I was in one of these for two years and it sucked big time.
many don’t, dude. and the ones that do usually have rules and fees (2 years max and one months rent needs to be kicked back to bldg to discourage sublet)>
Why would you want to buy into a co-op that tells you what you can and can’t do with YOUR property? Just to avoid an occasional renter?
Meh, market rent is what what the market will bear. And in this case, it’s enough to cover the mortgage nut.
Dude, MANY co-ops allow sublets.
people need to realize that market rent does not equal “the amount i need to cover my mortgage”