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$815,000
This home has been sold
We have 28 similar homes for sale.
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Subway Lines
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Essentials
- Price$815,000
- TypeCo-op
- Bedrooms2
- Bathrooms2
- Rooms4.5
- Approx. Sq. Ft.1,150
- Exposure N, S & E
Key Features
- Doorman
- Elevator
- Pet friendly
- Full city view
- Partial river view
- Beamed ceiling
- Dishwasher
- Excellent light
- Hardwood floors
- Modern kitchen
- New windows
- Prewar detail
- Renovated bathroom
- Wood-burning fireplace
Location, style and value in this bright Prewar 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath home with working wood-burning fireplace, thick new casement windows, beamed ceiling, narrow strip hardwood floors and a custom expanded kitchen facing east with Viking Professional range, Bosch dishwasher and GE Profile Arctica refrigerator, GE Monogram wine storage,and Insinkerator disposal. Three exposures (North, East and South) and much larger windows than you might expect in a prewar building. Building features doorman (8 am - midnight, 7 days), live-in superintendent, passenger elevator and new service elevator, bike storage, common courtyard, and optional private storage. Close to subway and Central Park.
Additional features of this property include: Temperature-controlled Wine Storage, Woodburning Fireplace, Viking Professional Range, and Three open exposures.
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Agent
Ask me a question
Licensed Associate RE Broker p (212) 941-2553 m (917) 921-0893
djm@corcoran.com Email Me See my 3 other sale listings
Press Mentions
Carnegie Hill
Uptown on the East Side, from 86th Street to 96th Street and from Lexington Avenue to Central Park.
The Carnegie Hill section of Manhattan, full of magnificient townhouses that are rarely for sale because their owners tend to hang on to them, has wonderful access to Central Park. Larger buildings house prewar apartments of six or seven rooms, known as “Classic Sixes” and “Classic Sevens,” but the light in the area is generous as even these magnificient co-ops are usually not too tall. The resulting old-world feel, which bathes even modern condos in Carnegie Hill, shows you why steel tycoon Andrew Carnegie picked this quiet, countrified section of Manhattan as the place to build his ultimate family home. (You can still visit it today on your way to buy or rent an apartment — it’s now a branch of the Smithsonian known as the Cooper-Hewitt museum.)
166 East 96th Street
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Lexington Ave - 96th St
7 mins
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Lexington Ave - 86th St
7 mins
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Lexington Ave - 86th St
7 mins
A convenient co-op, close to major transportation, the building features a laundry room, live-in superintendent, garden, and a part-time doorman who works from 8 a.m. to midnight, seven days a week. Pied-a-terres and pets are allowed.
Additional features of this building include: Common courtyard for parties or barbeque, Bike Room, Live-in Super, Storage Room, Doorman from 8am-midnight 7 days per week.
- Prewar
- Built in 1927
- 16 floors
- 65 units
- Elevator
- Pet friendly
- Doorman
- Common courtyard
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