nyt-hunt-photo-090609.jpgThe New York Times this weekend chronicled the housing woes of Mariah and Dominique Freda, two sisters who started out by playing the rental game in Park Slope. They were leasing a two-bedroom for $2,050, but the poor conditions and the inflexibility of the landlord motivated them to look into buying a place of their own. The buying game turned out to have obstacles of its own, but the sisters eventually settled on a 1,400-square-foot, two-bedroom, three-bathroom condo in Park Slope with a spiral staircase leading to a basement recreation room. The apartment had started out with a price tag of $639,000 but had recently been reduced to $599,000 and had a deal fall through; with some help from Dad, they were able to make an all-cash offer that beat out a higher, competing bid. The common charge and taxes were slightly less than $400 a month. “I didn’t realize how annoying a landlord is until I didn’t have one anymore,” Dominique told the Times. From the article, it seems that the Freda sisters could not have purchased the condo without their father’s assistance, who provided the up-front cash and is acting as the girls’ mortgage lender—a luxury that not all renters have—but their story is also one of renters who persevere to take matters into their own hands.
Theirs to Fix and Fix Up [NY Times]
Photo by Angel Franco for The New York Times


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  1. wow, the puppet master strings the crowd along once again – throws “persevere” into mix then sits back to watch the page click counter going up, up, up,…. and away!!!!!!!!!!!!

    come on guys, the word selection was no accident, oversight,… it was INTENTIONAL and it was classic baiting

  2. Poor Benson, you bare your foolishness with your last two posts:

    “There is no right or wrong answer … I have a 25 year-old daughter … I am pleased with her maturity.”

    “Despite what Mr. Jerk – er Mr. Joist – states above, no one is begrudging them that good fortune. The question is when will they decide to make something of themselves …“

    TAKE-AWAY: I’m sooo proud of my scrappy-do daughter. She has pluck, she is resourceful, I am the better parent. Also, a Masters from Columbia and teaching at a public school is not “making something yourself.” Trying to act is a spoiled rich kid’s dream. Lastly, I am a sanctimonious as*hole.

  3. “Having to get by without help from your family doesn’t make a person morally superior to someone who is lucky enough to receive help. Being the beneficiary of your family’s good fortune does not necessarily mean that you are infantile, spoiled, lazy, etc.”

    I respectfully disagree. In my value system, people who pay their own way are morally superior to the leeches who live off of others. And I respect those who are self-supportive more than the dependent on others types because they have achieved on their talent and tenacity; the latter group achieves because of the privileges and perks handed to them.

  4. benson- I would also ask you to speak for YOURSELF. I wasn’t referring to you and here you are again, making a general statement personal. Paranoid much?

    And I am still willing to bet not even you would refuse to help her if she asked.

  5. So they were “paying” $2,000 a month for rent. Now they are paying $2,900 a month ($600k x 5% divided by 12 plus $400/month maintenance) to “rent”.

    Yeah, they’re the smart ones.

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