- Home
- slideshows
- miscellaneous
- 50 photos of New York City micro-apartments show how tiny living can be glamorous - or disappointing
50 photos of New York City micro-apartments show how tiny living can be glamorous - or disappointing
If space isn't an issue, micro-apartments can lend a more glamorous lifestyle at a lower price.
This loft on the Upper West Side features multi-level platforms with a small bathroom hidden beneath the stairs.
The loft is located at the top of a six-story brownstone, with access to a rooftop garden.
The stairwell features built-in drawers and shelves, which provide extra storage.
Despite its 25 feet of vertical space, the loft is incredibly tiny — only 425 square feet.
This $1.29 million Midtown apartment is starved for storage, but it includes a number of crafty design elements, like a hidden pantry.
A pull-out cutting board has a hole for disposing of scraps in the trash can below.
The bedroom has two shoe racks, which slide from the bed frame.
Other amenities are also integrated into the unit's design. The kitchen counter has grooves for plates and cups to dry, so water flows right into the sink.
Carmel Place, located in Kips Bay, was the first New York building to exclusively offer micro apartments.
The 55 apartment units range from 265 to 360 square feet. When they opened, the monthly rent went anywhere from $2,650 to $3,150.
The apartments feature retractable beds that turn into sofas.
Though the units are tiny, residents have access to housekeeping, grocery delivery, dry-cleaning pickup, and a gym within the building.
The building is made of modular units that were prefabricated in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The pieces were then brought to Manhattan and assembled in Kips Bay.
Former Mayor Michael Bloomberg and HPD Commissioner Mathew Wambua announced the design proposal in 2013, and the building was completed in 2016.
The service Ollie, which curates furniture in some micro-apartments, decked out 17 of the studios in Carmel Place.
Ollie included furniture, WiFi, a TV, cable, and subscriptions to the butler service Hello Alfred and the events club Magnises.
An apartment with Ollie's amenities generally costs about $2,800.
Some units feature white desks that slide out into larger tables, as well as coffee tables that can be raised.
This exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York was inspired by a contest for designing micro-apartments that can serve as affordable housing.
About 77,000 New Yorkers are homeless, and the city does not have enough quality homeless shelters.
This 350-square-foot Soho apartment — owned by architect and entrepreneur Graham Hill — lists for $750,000.
The apartment is so small, it could fit inside the average US home about seven-and-a-half times.
The unit's folding desk is designed to support a person's full weight.
Hill describes the concept behind the design as "less but better."
All of the furniture is designed to serve multiple purposes. Sliding "couch cubes" offer portable seating and can double as a queen-sized bed.
Source: *faircompanies
Hill's first micro apartment, a 420-square-foot Soho property, has an asking price of $2,369 per square foot.
Source: 6sqft
The property has won awards and been featured in its own TED talk.
But its residents would have to be comfortable with their bathroom serving as a phone room or meditation area.
Hill paid $287,000 for the apartment and spent an additional $78,000 on the renovations.
Source: 6sqft
The unit is built to accommodate one of Hill's own inventions — an expandable bike that can go from 21 to 6 inches wide.
Source: Life Edited
Here's what $600 a month will get you for a 300-square-foot apartment in Chinatown.
This Chelsea apartment has no room for an office, so the bed doubles as a workspace.
Three years ago, Grayson Altenberg moved from a shared space in Brooklyn to a 100-square-foot apartment on the Upper West Side.
The apartment cost him $1,100 a month for a main room and a bathroom.
The space has no windows, stove, or kitchen sink.
But it's located right by Central Park, which Altenberg described as his "living room."
Even Altenberg's space can't compete with one of the tiniest apartments in America, a 78-square-foot space in Hell's Kitchen.
Its convertible couch was built by the owner, a New York City contract architect.
Personal organizer Felice Cohen has written an e-book about living in 90 square feet — roughly the size of a Honda accord.
While Cohen was living on the Upper West Side in 2010, the average rent for an apartment was $3,600 per month. She paid just $700.
Source: *faircompanies
"The studio changed my life," Cohen told the New York Post. "It made me realize that I didn't want to waste money on stuff — I had no place to put it."
Source: New York Post
Popular Right Now
Popular Keywords
Advertisement