Changing South Slope Gets Some Ink From AMNY
This morning the South Slope gets a big writeup in AM New York with a focus on how the area is different from mainland Slope (“There are way less strollers and dogs,” says one resident. “There’s more of the remaining community present and it feels more authentic. There are more twentysomethings here, too.”) but also…

This morning the South Slope gets a big writeup in AM New York with a focus on how the area is different from mainland Slope (“There are way less strollers and dogs,” says one resident. “There’s more of the remaining community present and it feels more authentic. There are more twentysomethings here, too.”) but also how it’s also beginning to look a lot more like the North Slope. Brokers and residents say the South Slope’s influx of boutiques, cafes and residents priced out of Slope prime are all contributing to the area becoming more like the blocks north of 9th Street. We half buy this argument but think South Slope’s completely different aesthetic, buildings-wise, is always going to set it apart from its neighbor to the North, and it also seems evident that exciting retail has been a lot slower to come to the area than it has to the North Slope—especially 5th Ave.—in recent years. There isn’t a whole lot of treatment of the area’s new condo building boom, though a sales manager for the Vue (a Brownstoner advertiser) says the condo’s been well-received because “The newer residents of the area have demands that need to be met.” A South Sloper named Jarrett Shamlian, who has lived in the neighborhood for four years, has the article’s most interesting commentary about how the area is changing. “Four years ago it was more affordable—my rent’s raised $100 every year,” he says. “The Latin community has been pushed out. For example, there was a small Latin cafe where I could get Tres Leches at 3:00 am that closed. The 99-cent stores are going under, with banks filling the empty spaces. People are being pressured into putting up new facades, perhaps in a community effort to ‘clean up’ the area’s image.”
New York Real Estate: South Slope [AM New York]
Photo by imbyblogspot.
10:26 here Polemicist. No need for a condo. Already own a three story brick in center slope. Bought five years ago. Now I’m off to Jackie’s 5th to toast my good fortune!
10:26, is the government providing you with food stamps?
Latin is an old, no longer in use language. There are no “Latins” living anywhere. Hispanic is the proper term used to describe folks with Latin Amererican roots who reside in the US.
Does anyone have any information on the Dimora condos on 16th between 7th and 8th Ave. They have been finished for some time and no one has ever moved in and now they have a new real estate ad banner.
10:26
$200K won’t get you much today. You’d be foolish to get anything more than a $600-$700K loan. What will that get you in the slope? A 2-bedroom condo.
Sounds like you’re living the good life.
Love the south slope. We’re leaving the North Slope to buy a house in the South, South slope- right across the highway off of 5th Ave. Couldn’t be happier. You can buy a house under million there, and if you work downtown, the commute in not anywhere near an hour. We love all the wooden houses and the crazy jumbled styles of building. Awesome if all the haters want to stay away.
10:31 Baltimore is the place for you.
Latin people were not pushed out. The vast majority did, and continue, to live in rent stabilized apartments and thus have the unlimited right of renewal and rents that increase at 3% a year on average (over a lifetime). The ones who left either chose to do so or were homeowners who sold their homes at a handsome profit.
My income is 30k…where should I live?