Narrowest home in NYC is just over 8ft inside & sold for $3.25M

8ft 4in is the widest interior space to be precise.

Pics at link

The narrowest house in Europe is just 2m wide. Another Amsterdam contender is just one metre wide, but widens out to the back.

Meanwhile, $3.2 million buys you this home in North Dakota.

Pity about the commute.

Or you could buy six parking spaces in London, with a bit of change left over. (£300k = about $470k)

Or all of Detroit.

The littlest house in Great Britain is 6 feet wide, 10 feet deep, and a little over 10 feet high, with 2 “floors”.

I’ve been in that. It’s *really *tiny. Really really tiny. The pics of the house in the OP make it look a lot bigger inside than it sounds. Four floors and a backyard.

And have you seen these tiny little things? For the little trailer houses my level of WANT is up to eleven…

Yeah, the pictures do make the house in the OP look remarkably livable. I mean, 990 square feet isn’t that small, but spread out over four floors it does seem a bit claustrophobic. Very pretty and clean-looking inside.

Tiny House (video).

I’ve been in the Great Britain house, too, back in 2004. I spent a month in the UK just touring, and Conwy was one of the places I went.

True, but I’d like to see what it looks like with furniture and stuff in it.

This building: http://www.canadacool.com/COOLFACTS/BRITISH%20COLUMBIA/VancouverNarrowestBuilding.html (which used, at least, to house apartments) is just 6’ (1.8 m) wide and is supposedly the narrowest building in the world.

After reading this, I feel much better about paying significantly less than $3.25 million for my home in NYC, which is significantly wider than eight feet.

I’ve been there, too. Conwy is one of my favorite places in the world. When I sell my Manhattan apartment for a lot less than $3.25M, I’d love to get a place in Conwy.

It’s lovely though! And it has a garden!

Honestly, to those of us used to London flats, it doesn’t even look that narrow.

The OP may be the narrowest house in NYC, but I may have been in the narrowest apartment. It was so narrow, you could sit on the sofa and touch the opposite wall with your feet. It had the type of restroom and kitchen you’d find in airplanes (plus a tiny shower). The apartment was originally a hallway, and like the OP, was in the West Village (I believe Perry Street).