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714 Broadway
714 Broadway, NoHo, Manhattan, NY 10003

Pre-war Co-op

16 units
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  • 16 residences
  • 11 stories
  • BUILT 1895

The Details About 714 Broadway

BUILT IN 1895 AS A WAREHOUSE AND CONVERTED TO RESIDENTIAL FULL FLOOR LOFTS IN 1985. ELEVEN STORIES HIGH WITH A PRIVATE ROOF TERRACE FOR THE PENHOUSE APARTMENT. EXCELLENT AUDIO/VISUAL SECURITY; TWO ELEVATORS, SEPARATE FREIGHT AND PASSENGER ELEVATOR.

key features
  • Central air
  • Elevators

714 Broadway Units

UnitsPriceBedsBathsHalf BathsInterior Sq.FtTypeContactFloorplan

Get to know NoHo

The north of Houston counterpart to SoHo, NoHo’s rise as a distinct NYC neighborhood is a relatively recent phenomenon. Spatially, NoHo is but a small wedge nestled between Greenwich Village and the East Village — and was previously considered part of the former. A lack of size, however, is hardly a deficiency in NoHo. Actually, it makes things all the more enticing. Over NoHo’s development, glorious mansions gave way to manufacturing buildings, which came to be occupied by artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat and Robert Mapplethorpe as live-in studio lofts. Still standing and coveted alongside imposing glass condominiums, those homes join early 19th-century row houses (the Merchant’s House Museum), turn-of-the-century office buildings (the Louis Sullivan-designed Bayard–Condict Building), and others in presenting a cohesive lineage of growth and change. Four buildings encompassing the c.1830s Corinthian-columned Colonnade Row have housed everyone from the Astors and Vanderbilts to the Blue Man Group.

NoHo Neighborhood Guide