Sutton Place, New York City NY
Sutton Place
2 bed / 2 bath
$1,150,000
Maintenance: $3,196 per month.
This lovely two-bedroom, two-bathroom coop apartment with formal dining room and river views is located on Sutton Place, one of the premiere residential streets in Manhattan.
The home has ample light facing east and north, and the expansive living room has three windows overlooking the East River and the beautiful historic Sutton Place town houses.
The apartment features a master bedroom suite, abundant closet space, a large windowed kitchen and attractive hardwood floors throughout. Bring your decorator as this is an opportunity to design a wonderful home precisely to your liking.
This elegant Sutton Place post-war building has a a small private garden, a 24/7 doorman, and an elevator operator 7am-midnight. There is private storage provided with the sale of the apartment. In addition, there is a gym in the building available with a nominal fee. Cable and electricity are included in the monthly maintenance. Pied-a-terres allowed.
Neighborhoods
Part of Manhattan, technically, Roosevelt Island has long felt lost, under the shadow of the Erector-Set Queensboro Bridge in New York’s East River. It was once Blackwell’s Island, then Welfare Island, has been home to insane asylums and prisons, then hospital out-patients and UN workers. A tram then subway only reached the island in the mid ’70s.
The Queensboro Bridge, also known as the 59th Street Bridge – because its Manhattan end is located between 59th and 60th Streets – and officially titled the Ed Koch Queensboro Bridge, is a cantilever bridge over the East River in New York City that was completed in 1909. It connects the neighborhood of Long Island City in the borough of Queens with Manhattan, passing over Roosevelt Island. It carries New York State Route 25 and is the westernmost of the four East River spans that carry a route number: NY 25 terminates at the west (Manhattan) side of the bridge, which once carried NY 24 and NY 25A as well. The bridge is flanked on its northern side by the freestanding Roosevelt Island Tramway. The bridge was, for a long time, simply called the Queensboro Bridge, but in March 2011, the bridge was officially renamed in honor of former New York City mayor Ed Koch.