Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.
A newly renovated apartment in Manhattan's SoHo neighborhood is on the market for $750,000 - for a space of 350 square feet, which makes the cost $2,143 per square foot.
The compact New York apartment, which could fit inside the average US home about seven-and-a-half times, was created by Graham Hill, founder of lifestyle and design company LifeEdited and advocate for minimalism and living with less.
"...The houses I design contain less stuff and make it easier for owners to live within their means and to limit their environmental footprint," Hill wrote in The New York Times in 2013.
The 350-square-foot SoHo home is the second Hill has renovated in the same building, according to Forbes. The other unit, a slightly more spacious 450 square feet, sold in 2014 for $790,000.
For Hill, Americans simply don't need so much space.
Advertisement
"Americans are using three times as much living space today as they did in the 1950s. Even with all this space, we're supporting a 22-billion-dollar personal storage industry. I see a home like this as a compelling alternative to the status quo," Hill told Dwell magazine in 2012, referring to the first apartment he renovated in at 150 Sullivan Street.
Here's a look inside the tiny yet functional home in SoHo.
Finished in 2016, the apartment was inspired by a "less but better" concept that emphasizes simplicity and highly functional spaces. The home features herringbone oak floors and walnut cabinetry in the living space.
All of the furniture was designed to serve more than one purpose. The sectional can be reconfigured within the space and the table can be used at coffee table height or elevated to serve as a dining table.
With the table adjusted to eating height and the smaller section of the couch moved to the other side of the table, the living space can transform into a dining room.
The room can be rearranged to match whatever the occasion calls for. The listing describes the apartment's living space as "a room that transforms from bedroom to living room to dining room to boardroom."
On why his apartment costs $370 more per square foot than the Manhattan average, Hill says, "There are very few places that have that much consideration and thought, so yes it’s going to be a little expensive."
The home was designed to be technologically advanced. It includes Insteon lighting controls, Amazon Echo voice control, an Apple TV, Kanto speakers, motorized blinds, and energy-efficient LED light bulbs. For security and health purposes, there are Nest security cameras, an air quality monitor, and an air purifier.
Hill came up with several different floor plan options, depending on whether you want to use the apartment as a studio or to host guests. Shown here is the sleeping arrangement for two people in one bed.
Source: LifeEdited
Another arrangement allows for an extra bed to fit into the home office and sleep an additional two people.
Source: LifeEdited
Another plan shows how the space can be configured to host a dinner party for 10 people.
"Every square inch of the apartment is utilized," Corcoran agent Jerrie Butler said of the studio in the New York Times. "It's modern but timeless — space-savvy never goes out of style in New York."