I’m going to be living/working in NYC from Aug thru Oct, my office is in Meatpacking, and the basically furnished apartment my company has found for me is at 103 St/Central Park W. They’ve sent pics of the model apt and I have a fair idea of what to expect, furnishing-wise. They’re paying rent and utilities.
Subway seems to be a straight shot between home and work, the apt is a 4th floor walk up, I’ll have to use a nearby laundromat as there’s not on-site laundry, and I’ll have to ship at least a few things to myself there as I’ll be flying there to move in.
The only question for them that I can imagine at this point is whether there is a locked entrance and how to receive shipped items. Not sure what to expect safety-wise.
The question I have for you, NYC dopers, is what your experience of this area is, safety-wise, during the day and at night, what kind of markets/stores are in the area (obviously my grocery shopping/cooking habits will be different- the kitchen is like a doll house!), and what advice/cautions you may have or questions I might need to ask my employer that I’m not thinking of right now.
He works in the area near Lincoln Center.
Upper Upper West is a great place to live.
Is it a doorman building? Then the doorman will sign and hold the packages till you get home. I don’t live in a doorman building. What happens with me is that the UPS guy will buzz many apartments and then leave the package inside the locked (second door) Typically the first door is open all the time, there is a small “vestibule” where the mail boxes are, then a locked door to get in the building lobby.
Probably most anything you need is going to be on Columbus Ave and of course you have the park right there.
I’ve never lived there, but from what I’ve seen it’s a nice, clean and safe area that’s considered very desirable. I’m sure it won’t be very hard to find a laundry place. A lot of buildings don’t have in-building laundry, so there are plenty of laundromats around town. I was going to recommend shopping at Fairway but it’s probably too far from you to be convenient.
It’s a bit chi-chi (is that how that’s spelled? You know, fancy and upscale). Your biggest concern will probably be double-wide strollers that cost as much as a car. NYC is the safest large city in America, and UWS is a neighborhood that’s been consistently desirable even when NYC as a whole was a bit of a shit show in the 70s & 80s.
Nowadays, You have to go waaaay out of your way to find an even semi-questionable neighborhood. Sheeee-it, even Bushwick’s respectable now, and Bed-Stuy is downright trendy.
One thing I did learn about this apartment is that from the reviews that were posted about it, it sounds like there’s a daily or at least weekly maid like cleaning service. I wonder if I’ll have to be concerned about personal items/jewelry like one often does in a hotel situation. I guess the quick answer to that is probably yes, which is kind of a bummer. I’d like to be able to set that space up the way I want it and not have to do it hotel style.
Man, you’re right. I’m acting like my life shouldn’t be different when I’m there, but it will be utterly different in every way. I guess I’ll let 'em clean up after me too.
Enjoy yourself, is all I’m saying. I’d swap with you in a heartbeat. (Of course, I don’t know what your job is, so maybe I wouldn’t want that, I don’t know, but I’ll sure take the apartment.)
I could make the job sound sexy, but in reality it’s not going to be. I’ll basically be doing creative brand stewardship for our parent company, whose branding is so awful and rife with so many problems that it will make the job very stressful. The end goal is to try to bring some of that work back to our home office where we have a robust creative and production team that can hopefully improve and expand the rather limited guidelines that exist now.
I’m sure the apartment will be the least of my worries, but then again, I don’t need any worries outside of this crazy job.
I lived in that area (109th & Riverside), but it was so long ago, I’m sure I wouldn’t recognize it. But it was a great place to live then; it’s gotta be even better now.