Comments
[deleted] t1_itvszqw wrote
[deleted]
Flivver_King t1_ity928x wrote
Meanwhile the Bronx has the best neighborhood in the whole city.
MyGoalOf1811 t1_itycr5u wrote
Lol what neighborhood is that? Certainly is nowhere near East Bronx.
Flivver_King t1_itydgzb wrote
City Island
P0stNutClarity t1_itzcfrz wrote
I’ve still never been. I’ll make the trek next spring.
sysyphusishappy t1_itvmybf wrote
I just need a time machine and $300,000.
Ghost_of_Hicks t1_ity4sjn wrote
You know what? For 150k (give or take) you can buy in the Bronx in places that are livable.
Pros:
multiple train lines
cheap, fresh produce and meat
45 minutes to mid-town
No hipsters
Cons:
Noisy abuelitas playing bingo... They get ornery (fly) like a G6...
Amateur stunt cyclists (they never meat crayon, disappointingly)
That one murder of crows that knows my face.
The weird neighbor with the startling sneeze.
dropdeadbarbie t1_ityb6bb wrote
don't spoil the secret
Due_Masterpiece_3601 t1_iuaanl8 wrote
Nah I'm good. That borough is cursed, that's why it's cheap.
Ghost_of_Hicks t1_iubuiop wrote
Good, cursed and cheap... you just handed me a yo' mama joke on your own mama.
doctor_van_n0strand t1_itwi69z wrote
>1 .Long Island City
>
>2. Astoria
>
>3. Sunnyside
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>4. Forest Hills
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>5. Ridgewood
>
>The most searched neighborhoods in Queens are some of the most affordable.
>
>Besides Long Island City, the other neighborhood on StreetEasy’s most-searched list for the last five years is Astoria. The median asking rent was $2,650, and the median asking price was $798,913.
I knew it. It's over for Astoria. Get ready for New Park Slope.
Ice_Business t1_itxm8mc wrote
I feel like people have been saying the same thing about Astoria for the last 10 years. It's still not the the new Park Slope.
PostPostMinimalist t1_itxigzm wrote
It'll probably get more expensive but I don't think it'll ever be "new Park Slope". I mean, the architecture is so different, it'll always have one subway line, and it won't have the huge park next to it. It has pluses, just different.
PoopEmoji8618 t1_itzti35 wrote
Is this referring to LIC? Because that’s very wrong if it is. 7/E/G/M are within 10 mins. Huge park is gantry. Is it the size of prospect? No, but you’re also comparing two different things - inland park and waterfront park. Both of which have their pros and cons
PostPostMinimalist t1_itzukv2 wrote
They said “It’s over for Astoria. Get ready for New Park Slope”. So yeah, I was talking about Astoria. LIC sure won’t ever be like Park Slope. High “luxury” towers as far as the eye can see.
PoopEmoji8618 t1_itzuw6i wrote
Got it. Sorry didn’t understand haha
myassholealt t1_itxj4ye wrote
>The most searched neighborhoods in Queens are some of the most affordable.
Id like to know what the writer's bar for affordable crossing over into unaffordable is. Cause numbers 1, 2 and 4 are not affordable for a solo person looking for a 1B who doesn't make six figures or more.
09-24-11 t1_iu52c90 wrote
Average Astoria rent reportedly 2600. 100k wouldn’t pass the 40x rule for one person.
kolt54321 t1_itwy78u wrote
Much of Forest Hills doesn't even have train access if I remember correctly. It's a bus to the train, and a bad one at that.
Edit: I was thinking of Kew Garden Hills one neighborhood over, my mistake.
doctor_van_n0strand t1_itx0egn wrote
Forest Hills is awesome, and super close to the city via express. I can 100% why people would want to settle down there.
kolt54321 t1_itx30a7 wrote
E train, right?
Unfortunately the train basically stops after Forest Hills. I remember commuting from KGH and it was a 1hr+ nightmare every time.
Queenv918 t1_itx8zhi wrote
E & F trains both run express from Lexington Ave to 71st-Continental in Forest Hills, then continue all the way to Jamaica. The M & R local trains are the ones that dont go beyond Forest Hills
kolt54321 t1_itx9el8 wrote
Yep, but they continue downwards - not east.
This is how KGH has no train access.
valoremz t1_itz8u3i wrote
How has Forest Hills changed over the past 10-20 years? When I lived in Queens, Forest Hills was a predominantly middle class, upper middle class, and even wealthy (Forest Hills Gardens). A lot of blue collar jobs and also working class families and also Western European families. Has it changed at all? Do wealth folks who want to stay in NYC still live in the Gardens?
guccigenshin t1_iu5l48n wrote
I feel like it's more or less the same, but probably leaning wealthier simply bc more people know about it now, especially ever since the opening of the stadium has gotten out-of-towners to visit regularly. I remember walking on austin st on a concert night and overhearing a bunch of rando's saying things like, "wow this place is so cute should i move here??"
[deleted] t1_ity3qip wrote
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Darrkman t1_itwp1el wrote
I don't know if I would call Forest Hills or Sunnyside or even Astoria affordable.
barrystrawbridgess t1_itvobj6 wrote
The rent is too damn high
[deleted] t1_itxh3tt wrote
Thank God my neighborhood isn't listed.
sassbayc t1_itvuiq3 wrote
Even if you got a decent rent deal between how overpriced food is, going out, Uber, etc you aren’t leaving your house without spending at least $100 if you do anything.
porkedpie1 t1_itzb2ra wrote
Lol. Maybe just maybe they are the most searched for because they are cheaper. Otherwise it’d be all East/West Village
Guypussy t1_itvs8jr wrote
>[StreetEasy] used search data to determine which places in three boroughs — Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens — are the most popular so far this year. Notably, the Bronx and Staten Island were excluded from the report.
Oof.