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$549,000
This home has been sold
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Essentials
- Price$549,000
- TypeCo-op
- Bedroom1
- Bathroom1
- Rooms4
- Approx. Sq. Ft.900
- Exposure West
Key Features
- Doorman
- Elevator
- Partial city view
- Beamed ceiling
- Dining room
- Dishwasher
- Excellent light
- Hardwood floors
- Library
- Modern kitchen
- New windows
- Prewar detail
- Renovated bathroom
Huge one bedroom in mint condition.Chefs kitchen.Mint condition.!12 ft ceilings.
Additional features of this property include: Top of the line magnificent Chef's Kitchen, Wine Cooler-Northland Refrigerator, Lots of storage, and Office area in bedroom.
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Agents
Ask us a question
Licensed Associate RE Broker p (212) 875-2969 f (212) 326-3020
lis@corcoran.com Email Me See my 1 other sale listing
Licensed RE Salesperson p (212) 401-1903 m (917) 539-6456
bru@corcoran.com Email Me
Murray Hill
Midtown, on the East Side, from 23rd Street to 42nd Street.
Murray Hill is a townhouse paradise — of 100 townhouses listed in the area in the 1892 Social Register, 60 are still standing. Yet those single-family Murray Hill homes, many of three and four stories and some renovated with elevators and gyms to match their double Dacor ovens, rub elbows with high-rise condo towers.In Murray Hill, the formerly business corridors of Madison and Fifth avenues are being converted into gorgeous new loft-like apartments.
244 Madison Avenue
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Madison Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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Madison Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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Madison Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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Madison Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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Madison Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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5th Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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5th Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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5th Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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5th Ave - 42nd St
7 mins
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6th Ave - 35th St
7 mins
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6th Ave - 35th St
7 mins
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6th Ave - 35th St
7 mins
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Broadway - 40th St
7 mins
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Broadway - 40th St
7 mins
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Broadway - 40th St
7 mins
180-unit pre-war co-operative gem. 244 Madison Ave was designed in 1916 by Arthur Loomis Harmon, who was born in Chicago and was the architect for the Empire State Building. In the mid-1920s, the Norcross Greeting Card Company, formed by Arthur Norcross, was located at 244 Madison Ave. The poet Ogden Nash also had an office here and even penned a poem mentioning the building, "Spring Comes to Murray Hill." The building stands seventeen stories tall and was converted to a co-operative in 1984. This is a masterpiece of architectural construction and materials. No attention to detail has been missed.
Additional features of this building include: Wireless internet in common areas, Planted Roof Deck with City Views, Sorry, no dogs.
- Prewar
- Built in 1930
- 17 floors
- 180 units
- Elevator
- Doorman
- Central laundry room
- Common roof deck
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