[EVG photo from June 30]
There are more details now about the rebranded Eleventh and Third, the 12-story residential building at 200 E. 11th St. that Benchmark Real Estate Group paid $57 million for late last year.
The first unit as well as building renderings are now on Streeteasy. A two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment is asking $9,350. (No broker's fee!)
Here's the description via Streeteasy:
High-design gets a downtown attitude at Eleventh and Third where the only rules to live by are the ones that keep life interesting. With just 53 studio, one-, and two-bedroom homes – some with private terraces, most with amazing views, and all with top-shelf interior finishes – it’s a boutique building fueled with serious style.
Building Features:
- 24 Hour Doorman
- In Unit Laundry in All 1 Bedroom & 2 Bedroom Apartments
- Communal Roof Terrace Outdoor Space
- State-of-the-art Fitness Room
- Yoga / Meditation Studio
- Private Massage Studio
- Laundry Room
Apartment Features:
- Brand New Glass Panel Windows In Every Apartment
- Walnut Flooring
- Built in A/C and Heating
- Polished Concrete Counter tops
- Bertazzoni, Fisher & Paykel, & Bosch Kitchen Appliances
- Brizo, Lacava & Toto Bathroom Fixtures
- Self Closing Drawers and Cabinetry
What would you call this look? According to the Eleventh and Third website: "Residential interiors are what we’d call ‘organic with an urban twist’. A gallery of windows invite tons of natural light, and a neutral palette soothes the soul."
There are open houses this week in the early evening by appointment only if you'd to check it out yourself and sooth your soul.
Previously on EV Grieve:
Someone actually paid $57 million for this East Village building
Reimagining this 12-story East Village building, now on the market
NY Copy & Printing forced out of longtime E. 11th St. home, opening second location on E. 7th St.
Rebranded 'Eleventh and Third' will have rentals upwards of $10k
Retail space housing The Smith and M2M asking $25.5 million on 3rd Avenue
I wish someone would put together a coffee table book of real estate listings because the writing is so horrid, the English language so butchered, the cliches in such an abundance, that I'd gladly give it as a housewarming gift.
ReplyDeleteEleventh and Third, where the only rules to live by are the ones that keep life interesting
ReplyDeleteEleventh and Third, where 8 of 10 commandments are only "suggested"
Eleventh and Third, where the halls are carpeted with baby seals
Eleventh and Third, where there is no such thing as "age of consent"
Eleventh and Third, where Sodom meets post-apocalyptic anarchy
Eleventh and Third, where people sometimes disappear
Eleventh and Third, please don't spit
Now if we could only get Morning 2 Midnight to leave we could open a Dave and Buster joint downstairs
ReplyDeleteIt's great if you want to always feel like you're living in a soulless chain hotel.
ReplyDeleteThird Ave. is looking more and more like Downtown White Plains, NY.
ReplyDelete#NOONEUNDERSTAAANDS
What would I call that look? Um, let's see...bland, formulaic, generic, done to death, soulless, imagination-free, sterile, vacuous, pretentious, boring, vapid - and that's just for starters. And don't get me started on the giddy hyperbole passing as a serious listing; now I know what happened to all the people who used to write liner notes for albums in the ate 60s-early 70s.
ReplyDeleteLol, those "luxury" apartments look like the Ikea showroom.
ReplyDelete"at Eleventh and Third where the only rules to live by are the ones that keep life interesting." HAHAHAHA!!
ReplyDeleteYes, and everyone who lives there will play rockin' electric guitars (as per the pic), while paying over $9,000.00 in rent.
It's becoming increasingly hard to tell now where parody ends and life begins. Maybe that should be their advertising slogan.
Eleventh and Third, where your IQ and manners will both go into permanent remission.
ReplyDeleteI call it Nouvelle American Robot Chic, NARC for short.
Self-closing drawers are definitely worth $9K.
ReplyDeleteI'd call that look Institutional Dream.
Glass panel windows? What will they think of next?
ReplyDeleteWhat used to be at this corner? Was it a parking lot?
ReplyDeleteI live across the street and don't get me wrong, the design isn't winning any awards but why isn't anyone just thankful that we no longer have to look at the enormous eye sore that this building was??
ReplyDeleteI live across the street and I'd like to know how they expect anyone to pay that kind of money when they'll walk out of their door to a Times Square level of pedestrian traffic Thurs, Fri and Sat nights. Not to mention the NYU dorm directly across the street. It's a freaking zoo around here now.
ReplyDeleteek: Agree with you 100%. Have lived around here a long time but things are getting more zoo-like with every passing month.
ReplyDeleteRe this particular building: Self-closing drawers?! Really, how effin' lazy can people be?
Do those self-closing drawers have sensors to tell them when you don't have your hands in there rummaging around anymore? What about when you want to tidy your drawers? How many seconds, exactly, would I have to take out a few messy t-shirts, refold them and put them back before the drawer retracts itself? And how are they powered? What if there's a grid failure...is there a manual override to the drawers?
ReplyDeleteTalk about a problem that never needed solving before...this is like the auto-dispensing towels in public restrooms that spit them out at you as you walk by.
Eleventh and Third: Raw dog or no dog.
ReplyDelete"Boutique building" = You're overpaying on rent b/c you believed the trendy/cool BS in the ads.
ReplyDeleteAnd the developers are laughing all the way to the bank every month as they deposit your big fat rent check.
ek: This IS a dorm. Who do you think will be paying that kind of $$?? Wealthy NYU parents.
ReplyDelete