A Nice Place For a Sleepover: The Ups and Downs of a Night in a Micro-Unit
✉️ Want to forward this article? Click here.
Welcome to Property Week, a week-long UrbanTurf series devoted to intriguing residential properties in the DC area and beyond. From a DC version of Wrigleyville to a Trinidad apartment building that will only offer five-bedroom apartments, this week is all about cool residences both near and far. Enjoy.
While New York City is no stranger to small tenement-like apartments, Carmel Place, the city’s first micro-apartment development, embraces the new thinking (which many local developers believe in as well) that living small is what renters want these days.
The building, a partnership between Monadnock Development and the Lower East Side People’s Mutual Housing Association, began leasing late last year, and residents moved in last week. Ranging from 260-360 square feet each, the nARCHITECTS design is constructed of prefabricated modules.
For a recent New York Times article, a writer spent a night to test out one of the complex’s units, which are run by co-living start-up Ollie.
story continues below
loading...story continues above
The 302 square foot apartment that was tested has a market rent of $2,670 a month. As expected with a unit this small, the writer found the experience resulted in a lukewarm review.
For example, located in the wall above the sofa is a bed that folds out; while the writer found the bed supportive and comfortable, it was also heavy and cumbersome to fold down.
Another multipurpose furniture piece was a small desk that expanded and, with insets, converted to a larger dining table that seats 8-or-so people. A nice dual-purpose item, but when the table is extended, one cannot open the fridge or push the chairs back.
The kitchen area is a large portion of the unit, but there is no conventional oven and the writer ended up ordering out when she stayed there for the night. Lighting sources in the unit are varied — under-shelving, task and floor lamps in addition to recessed lighting — but the author found that none of these enabled her to read while in bed.
Among the resident benefits are a weekly tidy-up service and monthly in-depth cleaning, and an app, Hello Alfred, can be employed to outsource various errands. However, if you reside in one of the buildings 14 affordable-housing units, you must pay for these services at-cost.
Overall, the Times piece shows that living in a micro-unit is likely a constant experience of trade-offs and compromises. The author aptly described it as “a nice place for a sleepover.”
See other articles related to: micro units, micro-units, microunits, nyc, ollie
This article originally published at https://dc.urbanturf.com/articles/blog/one_night_in_an_nyc_micro-apartment/11350.
Most Popular... This Week • Last 30 Days • Ever
Find your perfect home in Alexandria’s newest luxury condominiums.... read »
Buffett called the five-bedroom listing home when his father, Howard Buffett, was ser... read »
Monument Realty has filed updated plans with Arlington County to redevelop the former... read »
What Republican control could mean for DC; the Post wants people back in the office; ... read »
A single home has come up for sale at Beale Square: an acclaimed, carriage-style town... read »
- A First Look at the The Whitley -- High-End Living in the Heart of Old Town Alexandria
- The Oracle of Spring Valley: Warren Buffett's Childhood Home in DC Hits the Market
- 142-Unit Development At Inn of Rosslyn Site Moves Forward
- Friday's Must Reads
- A Uniquely Private, Carriage-Style Townhome Hits the Market in Bloomingdale
DC Real Estate Guides
Short guides to navigating the DC-area real estate market
We've collected all our helpful guides for buying, selling and renting in and around Washington, DC in one place. Start browsing below!
First-Timer Primers
Intro guides for first-time home buyers
Unique Spaces
Awesome and unusual real estate from across the DC Metro