The Hamilton Spectator

New York experiment­s with tiny ‘micro’ apartments

New units are roughly the size of a one-car garage

- KATHERINE ROTH

NEW YORK — New York City’s first “micro” apartment complex is open for business, challengin­g the limits of minimalist living. What the tiny dwellings lack in square footage, they try to make up for in amenities.

Carmel Place, a 55-unit complex that opened June 1 in the Kips Bay neighbourh­ood of Manhattan, represents the first time in decades that the city has allowed apartments to be built this small — ranging from 260 to 360 square feet. That’s roughly the equivalent of a one-car garage.

It’s the latest entry in a national trend toward smaller urban housing. The rise in single-person households — now nearly a third of New York City’s households — and ever-higher rents led the city to approve the experiment­al project. Carmel Place got city land and a waiver from New York’s 400square-foot minimum on new apartments, set in 1987.

Frank Dubinsky of Monadnock Developmen­t, which built Carmel Place along with the Lower East Side People’s Mutual Housing Associatio­n, said there would probably be more new micro-apartments in New York soon.

Compared to other modern buildings in its neighbourh­ood, Carmel Place offers relatively modest rents, and services and amenities — such as multi-functional furnishing­s — that are aimed at making small-scale living a little easier. Architectu­ral elements like eightfoot windows and nearly ten-foot ceilings are also meant to make small spaces more livable.

The complex of services and amenities were put together by a company called Ollie, its name inspired by the words “all inclusive.”

“Just because people need a living room and a bedroom doesn’t mean they need a designated living room and a bedroom.

They just need the functional­ity of both rooms,” explains Chris Bledsoe, co-founder of Ollie, which did design work on the apartment interiors as well. The firm nArchitect­s designed the interior and exterior of the building.

The amenities are meant to save tenants time and money, and create a sense of community, he said. Carmel Place is “a more plug-and-play living experience — one that solves a housing need for the next two years of someone’s life, not forever. You don’t need to buy your own furniture or hire a cleaning company. Everything is set to go,” he said.

In addition to Internet and Wi-Fi, rent includes a weekly tidying service and a monthly deep clean, along with dog walking, dry-cleaning pickup and even a butler app called Hello Alfred, for customized errands. The nine-story complex also includes shared spaces.

Thirty-two of the units are market rate, with rents from $2,446 to $3,195. Another 14 apartments have rents set by affordable-housing programs topping out at $1,490 per month; 60,000 people applied for those in a lottery.

“In cities, space is at a premium and the only real solution is to make living spaces smaller,” said Lisa Blecker, spokespers­on for Resource Furniture, which provides most of the furniture included in the microapart­ment units.

The furniture — much of it made by the Italian company Clie — emphasizes slim lines and multi-functional­ity. The 9-foot-long sofa converts into a queen-size bed. A tiny cube of an ottoman transforms into dining chairs. A slim console table expands to seat 10.

Although the pieces are pricey — Resource Furniture’s Swing wall-sofa-bed surrounded by cabinets costs between $10,000 and $15,000 — Blecker says clients see savings in housing costs and “the realizatio­n that 350 square feet can feel luxurious if it’s well designed with the right furniture.”

Bledsoe said micro-apartments’ convenienc­e and affordabil­ity can be particular­ly appealing to young singles, empty nesters, long-distance commuters, and baby boomers in transition or looking for an urban pied-a-terre.

Of course, tiny apartments in New York are not exactly new. Veteran appraiser Jonathan Miller estimates there are about 3,000 older apartments city-wide that measure less than 400 square feet. And some real estate agents say New York’s young profession­als are increasing­ly seeking small studios, willing to sacrifice space to be near work and away from roommates.

Cities from San Francisco to Boston have OK’d some micro-apartments in recent years, seeking to address housing squeezes.

 ??  ?? The new micro-apartment building Carmel Place in New York City.
The new micro-apartment building Carmel Place in New York City.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The interior of a unit in the micro apartment building Carmel Place.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The interior of a unit in the micro apartment building Carmel Place.

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