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| neighborhood profile |
| NoLita and NoHo |
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| Nolita shopper
in front of Café Habana. (Photo credit:
Kristine Larsen) |
The basics:
Above Houston, lawyers, bankers, and their arty spouses live in
Viking-appointed lofts. Below, filmmakers and fashionistas nest
in renovated tenements, drawn by nightlife and shopping. Oh, and
don’t forget the celebrities (David Bowie and Iman, Lauren
Hutton) in Lafayette Street’s airy conversions.
Boundaries: NoHo is roughly bounded by Houston Street on the south, the Bowery and Third Avenue on the east, 8th Street on the north, and Broadway on the west. NoLita is south of NoHo, bounded on the north by Houston Street, on the east by the Bowery, on the south roughly by Broome Street, and on the west roughly by Lafayette Street.
Borders: SoHo,
Lower East Side, Little
Italy, Chinatown
Subway stops: 6 to Astor Place
or Bleeker Street for NoHo; F to 2nd Ave. or J or M to Bowery for
NoLita |
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OUTLOOK
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What's new:
As tenements south of Houston are renovated, Noho-Nolita
is becoming a Tribeca-Soho, albeit grittier and with fewer tourists.
There’s also a handful of new high-end buildings. At 57 Bond,
on the corner of the Bowery, for example, a 1,700-square-foot penthouse
goes for nearly $2 million.
Bargain hunting:
Older buildings near the Bowery are cheaper (some buyers
are scared away by truck fumes and flophouses). Quality varies widely
here, so “look for a building that’s not freshly painted,
that has mortar missing between the bricks, that has graffiti—all
the signs of a building that doesn’t have the money to maintain
itself,” says Siim Hanja of Stribling & Associates.
Prediction: This classic dot-com-boom
neighborhood came back to reality somewhat in 2002. Look for increases
in the better buildings on the side streets—“but only
if they’re in turnkey condition,” says Hanja. The battered
buildings on the Bowery and on the fringes of Chinatown are likely
to lag.
Profile from the March
10, 2003 cover story of New York Magazine
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| APARTMENT
PRICES |
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TO BUY
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2001
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2003
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| Studio/1BR |
$250K-$680K |
$200K-$900K |
| 2BR |
$520K-$750K |
$595K-$1.6M |
| Loft |
$990K-$6M |
$1.5M-$8M |
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TO RENT
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2001
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2003
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| Studio/1BR |
$1,750-$4,200 |
$1,200-$2,500 |
| 2BR |
$3,800-$7,500 |
$2,000-$7,000 |
| Loft |
$6,500-$19,000 |
$2,500-$10,000 |
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NEIGHBORHOOD
BROKERS
Tarter
Stats Realty
Meisel Real Estate
BEST CITYWIDE BROKERS
Brown
Harris Stevens
Douglas Elliman
Corcoran
Halstead
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COMPARE THIS NEIGHBORHOOD...
How good are the schools? How many violent crimes have taken place lately? How many pothole complaints have been filed? The city of New York has put the data online. Pour over stats and pit one neighborhood against another. Just fill out your address in the "My Neighborhood" box and select the topic of interest schools, transportation, public safety, and more.
NYC.gov
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RELATED
FEATURES
Best
of New York: SoHo/NoHo/Little Italy
(March 25, 2002)
Real
Estate 2001: NoLita and NoHo
(March 12, 2001)
THE SCENE
Dining
BONDST:
Crowd: cool. Rooms: cozy. Waiters: pretty. Food: (surprisingly) fresh,
original, and vibrantly spiced.
6 Bond St.;
212-777-2500
Joe's Pub:
The kitchen no longer takes a back seat to what's on stage. Also named
Best
Cabaret of 2001.
425 Lafayette St., 212-539-8778 or joespub.com
Il Buco:
Funky, cluttered antique shop-cum-restaurant serving Mediterranean
fare.
47 Bond St., 212-533-1932 or ilbuco.com
Sui:
Western chefs have co-opted Japanese ingredients and flavors for years,
but culinary appropriation goes both ways.
54 Spring St., 212-965-9838
Peasant:
A stunningly backlit brick-walled kitchen that features only open-fire
cooking and an incredibly appealing Tuscan menu.
194 Elizabeth St., between Spring and Prince Sts.;
212-965-9511
Rialto:
This throwback to the late nineties continues to turn out ambitious,
exacting renditions of vaguely American-Mediterranean comfort food.
265 Elizabeth St.; 212-334-7900 or rialtonyc.com
More
Noho Restaurants
Drinking
Bleecker Street
Bar: Pool, darts, pinball, jukebox... It's the anti-NoHo
NoHo bar.
58 Bleecker St., at Crosby St.;
212-334-0244
Fez:The
Moroccan decor upstairs has been upstaged by the downstairs live performances.
380 Lafayette St.; 212-533-2680
Five Points:
An easygoing bistro.
31 Great Jones St., between Lafayette St. and Bowery;
212-253-5700
Von:
An intimate, candlelit wine and beer bar for East Village epicureans.
3 Bleecker St.; 212-473-3039
Vig Bar:
Yet another paint-by-numbers lounge, distinguished only by a solid
DJ and chance visits from local Mafioso types.
12 Spring St.; 212-625-0011
More
Noho Bars
Shopping
Language
It's a global village in this international-artifacts and clothing
boutique in NoLIta.
238 Mulberry St., near Prince St.; 212-431-5566 or language.com
Resurrection Some
of the finest vintage clothes and accessories around.
217 Mott St., near Spring St.; 212-625-1374 or resurrectionvintage.com
Sigerson Morrison This chic little shoe shop makes picking shoes as easy as painting by numbers.
28 Prince St., near Mott St.;
212-219-3893
Tutu
You will find clothes from all over the world in this elegant little shop.
55 Spring St.; 212-219-9548
More
Noho Stores
RECOMMENDED SITES
NoHo
Walking Tours Guide
to Soho and Little Italy: From NY.com
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