Tuesday, November 15, 2011

I have the keys!!

It is official, Blake and me have an apartment in Manhattan to call our very own.   Now, I expect each of you to start considering a trip to visit, if only to step in and tell me how crazy I am to spend so much money on so little space! I will take you outside and prove why we are so fortunate...hopefully Blake feels the same when he actually sees the place in December. He put a lot of trust in me! Okay, pictures...sorry, I can't figure out how to place them properly, so they are kind of all over the place.

"Eat-in kitchen"
Living room
Dining area looking into living room
View from the kitchen down the hall - bedroom is on he left

"Huge" closet according to broker




Living room closet

View from bedroom into hall
My dinner tonight was ramen and green beans - buyer's remorse
Bedroom
Small closet in bedroom






Hallway view from dining area





Kitchen.  Good windows all over

Kitchen - look at the dishwasher!!
Bathroom

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Hopefully this is not premature...

Big News! 

I have an appointment to sign a lease tomorrow!  Big change from yesterday's post, right?!  If all goes as planned, I will have inside pictures in a few days when I get the keys.  It is a one bedroom (more like a junior one bedroom...) near 2nd Avenue and 75th Street.  It is very pretty and newly remodeled.  I know, I am doing the bad thing and getting my hopes up, but at least this time I have a lease-signing appointment.  We won't even get into the scary thoughts that come along when signing a lease or the crazy amount of cash I have to bring with me to the appointment, but I guess that is the risk we have to take to be so lucky and live in Manhattan.  Hope to post more later!


2nd Avenue and 75th street

75th Street

Byrant Park - not in the UES, but I walked there tonight and the fountain and ice rink was so pretty!

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

The NYC marathon

Sunday, I had the fantastic and lucky opportunity to watch runners participating in the NYC marathon.  Prior this experience, going to the high-fashion floors at Barney's was #1 best thing about the City so far...but I think this wins!

I went into the City around 8:30 a.m. on Sunday, got a Starbucks pumpkin spice latte (weekend treat ONLY, or I would gain 20 lbs), and walked to Central park.  The runners were still a few hours from the finish line, so I picked out a nice sunny spot to read.  Families and dogs all over, so it was very nice.  After a but, I went to and stood along the fences between marathon mile marker 26 and the "300 yards" sign.  For some reason, standing there in the sun, in the park, with all the spectators and a high-rise backdrop, I remembered I so lucky to be here!  With the new job, apartment search and crazy daily commute to Brooklyn, I haven't really enjoyed and remembered how awesome it is that I am in New York.  Blake and I spent so many nights talking and dreaming about this opportunity, and it is in process.  So nuts. :)

Back to the marathon.  So, after just a bit, the 'professional' women's race came through first.  I could hear the announcer discussing the race for probably the last three miles.  The leader, who was on record pace through most of the race, was fading and two others were on her tail.  It was all so exciting, and when they came down the road, everyone was cheering and ringing the cowbells which were handed out to all spectators.  Then, the men's race came through.  The winner, who had also won the Boston marathon earlier this year, ran through and finished with a course-record 2:05 (and seconds).   Crazy fast!

After the professionals (olympians, world-record holding runners, etc.) ran through, all the normal people started to follow.  It is so inspiring to watch individuals who dedicate themselves, no matter their busy family and work life, to finish the marathon.  So cool.  It is a big dream, but I would love to run a marathon some day.  Super accomplishment!

devin
Central Park - near the marathon course

Apartment search

So much for my plan to be a good blogger... I have an excuse for not writing anything for a bit, and it is called apartment searching in Manhattan.  Beyond work, I can't think of anything else besides apartments, fees, dogs, fees and neighborhoods.  Prior to moving here, I knew to expect high rent and fast pace.  So far, the prices are what I expected, but the pace of the market is crazy!  It doesn't help that I get emotionally attached to nice apartments the second I walk through the door; this is something I am working on with every apartment I apply for and don't get. :)

Our first plan was to find an apartment "on our own" a.k.a. no broker.  I started looking on Craigslist for no-fee or by-owner apartments, even though friends warned me these apartments are often fake.  They were right.  I emailed probably 20-30 Craigslist ads, and almost all of them lead back to a broker.  I even went to see a few that were by-owner, and a broker met me at the door.  Also, the pictures on Craigslist may not even be the apartment you are going to see.  So, on to plan two, use a broker.

I will be nice and start with the good side to using a broker.  They have access to more apartments than I could every find on my own time, and they do work decently hard on your behalf (because they want their fee, of course).  Yesterday, one woman I am working with ran across 1st avenue in front of  a bus to turn in my application (her fee is 12% of annual rent.)  She also emails me with apartment options as they become available. 

Now, the bad.  They basically STEAL your money.  As mentioned, the broker fee we will likely pay is 12-15% of annual rent.  Yes, annual rent.  For our price range, this is around $3000.  I hope they are willing to run across the street, at noon, in front of a bus, in the rain, in heels, with a backpack...you get the picture.  People here just deal with this, but I know all of you in Springfield will think this is nuts, right?  This is a major reason I want to find a good apartment.  We can not afford this fee every year!

Now, to the pace.  I have seen quite a few apartments and put in appliations in on four apartments.  On each, I was supposedly the only applicant when I wrote the check/got the cash for the application fee.  On each, there have been multiple other applicants which the broker "didn't know about."  Maybe they don't know, but it seems so strange how it happens like that every time.  So, with multiple applicants, it has come down to first, credit score, and second, if we are willing to pay more rent.  This is where I wonder about the truth in all this...are the brokers/landlords just doing this to get more rent?  The problem is, I will never know and I don't have the luxury of waiting to find out because some other person is taking the same risk as me.  In one case, the rent magically went up $150/month.  Hum?  Also, I lost one because the other applicant's salary was 80x monthly rent.  I don't know why I am competing with someone who makes a fortune for a one bedroom apartment East of 1st avenue...move to Madison!

All of this is made worse by the fact that I am in a new job, so I can't leave every few hours to go look at potentials which is what the brokers want.  And, of course, Blake is trying to help me from 1200 miles West.  Our teamwork on this process was a little rough at first, but we are learning to work together better.  He tries to find nice places online and I go look at them.  But, that doesn't make up for the fact that I see the apartment, along with the block and neighborhood, and he doesn't.  I think he also gets frustrated at my becoming emotionally attached too early.  Whoops.

Over all, I think we will find something, but it will likely cause more stress and cost more in fees than it is worth.  Oh well, I am the one who wanted to move here, so I better suck it up and try again tomorrow!

Love and miss you all!

devin