BrickUnderground
ContactPosts by BrickUnderground:
We're going with a hard number this week: $500,000. In many other places (outside the tri-state area, L.A. and San Francisco, our erstwhile rival in unaffordability—all of which is getting spendy), a half-million would buy you a nest so feathered, you wouldn't want for much. Here in NYC, well, as parents have long been teaching their preschoolers: You get what you get and you don't get upset. (Then again, these are pretty sweet for various reasons.)
We'll admit it: We've embraced the cult of spare and spartan living. We've Marie Kondo'd our closets (and shared tips and videos with you on how to do so); enlisted experts to organize our apartments and extolled the virtues of living a clutter-free life.
In the dubious race called "lack of affordable rentals," San Francisco continues to trump New York City. That's according to a recent report released by real estate database Zumper. In fact, Fog City tops the list when it comes to one-bedrooms, asking a median of $3500 a month, with NYC in hot pursuit at $3100.
To file under "this world is going to hell in a hand basket": Jezebel reports that flyers started popping up in one Irvine, California rental community "reminding" residents to simmer down and be quiet after 10 pm. This, we get.
It's the same story, different day—or so it seems: Mom-and-pops closing as neighborhoods transform. According to an interview with writer D. W.