Los Angeles Times

Living in a teeny- weeny space

New York City may fit more ‘ microapart­ments’ into the housing picture.

- By Jennifer Peltz Peltz writes for the Associated Press.

NEW YORK — The apartments in a new Manhattan building boast little balconies, tall ceilings, dishwasher­s and storage space. All in 360 square feet or less.

It’s micro- living in the nation’s biggest city, and New Yorkers could be seeing more of it. Planning officials are proposing to end a limit on how small apartments can be, opening the door for more “micro- apartments” that advocates see as affordable adaptation­s to a growing population of single people. Critics fear a turn back toward the city’s tenement past and question whether less space will really mean less expensive.

At Carmel Place, the Manhattan building that marks the city’s first experiment in decades with building super- small dwellings, the pitch is that little can be just enough.

“An efficientl­y designed micro- unit,” says developer Tobias Oriwol, “is just a nice apartment.”

Due to open early this year, Carmel Place features 55 apartments ranging from 265 to 360 square feet. By comparison, a typical onecar garage can be about 200 square feet.

As an experiment­al project, Carmel Place got city land and a waiver from New York’s 400- square- foot minimum for new apartments, set in 1987. A proposed eliminatio­n of that minimum would allow smaller studios in buildings with a mix of apartment sizes, but entire micro- unit buildings would continue to need waivers.

“For us, it was really important to demonstrat­e how small space could be an enhancemen­t to quality of life,” said Christophe­r Bledsoe of Stage 3 Properties, which designed the interiors and amenities at Carmel Place.

Long, f lat walls without columns maximize furniture- arranging options, although some units come furnished with fold- out wizard- ry, including a desk that expands into a 12- seater table and a retractabl­e bed that pulls down tidily over a love seat. Developer Monadnock Constructi­on and architectu­re f irm nArchitect­s worked inch- by- inch — sometimes by eighth- inch — to meet such requiremen­ts as a wheelchair- accessible bathroom within the small space.

Forty percent of the units have rents set by affordable­housing programs topping out at around $ 1,500 a month, but market- rate ones rent for $ 2,650 to $ 3,150, roughly on par with many studios in the nearby Murray Hill neighborho­od. About 20 people have applied and hundreds requested informatio­n for eight market- rate units so far, while over 60,000 have entered a lottery for the affordable ones.

Mayor Bill de Blasio’s housing plan says Carmel Place and other projects show “developers can build compact units that are livable, safe, healthy” options for small households.

Of course, tiny apartments in New York are not exactly new. Veteran appraiser Jonathan Miller estimates there are about 3,000 older apartments citywide that measure less than the 400- square- foot minimum. 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 in a nation where 28% of households are people living alone, up from 13% in 1960. It’s higher in some cities including New York, where about a third of households are single people.

Tiny units haven’t always been welcomed. A micro boom in Seattle spurred complaints from neighbors and new regulation­s last year. Still, some housing advocates see micro- apartments as improvemen­ts on cramped quarters some people endure in shared apartments.

“People are spending $ 1,800 a month renting a room that’s 10- by- 10 and living with strangers that they met on Craigslist” in New York, said Sarah Watson, deputy director of the Citizens Housing Planning Council, an advocacy group.

But critics see microunits as a step backward in the city’s affordable housing crunch — still pricey, just smaller.

“It just, on some level, is offensive: The only way we can manage to house people is to stick them in a closet,” says state Assemblywo­man Deborah Glick, a Manhattan Democrat who knows the limits of living small herself. She and her spouse live in an apartment that Glick says measures a bit over 400 square feet. But they moved in together only after acquiring a more spacious weekend home.

“There was no way two lives could reasonably exist in the space that we have,” Glick said. “We get along extremely well, but we do have a safety valve.”

 ?? Photog r aphs by Julie Jacobson Associated Press ?? CHRISTOPHE­R BLEDSOE shows one of the “micro- apartments” at Carmel Place, whose interiors his f irm designed. Critics see such units as a step backward in New York’s housing crunch — still pricey, just smaller.
Photog r aphs by Julie Jacobson Associated Press CHRISTOPHE­R BLEDSOE shows one of the “micro- apartments” at Carmel Place, whose interiors his f irm designed. Critics see such units as a step backward in New York’s housing crunch — still pricey, just smaller.
 ??  ?? THIS RETRACTABL­E BED pulls down over a love seat. “Small space,” if well designed, can be “an enhancemen­t to quality of life,” Bledsoe says.
THIS RETRACTABL­E BED pulls down over a love seat. “Small space,” if well designed, can be “an enhancemen­t to quality of life,” Bledsoe says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States