This three-bedroom home at East 100th Street masterfully balances pre-war soul with modern utility. Sun floods across authentic exposed brick, illuminating a contemporary granite kitchen and the absolute convenience of in-unit laundry. It is a solid, efficient layout where every square foot serves human life.
The structural location is unmatched, placing you exactly halfway between the 6 train on Lexington and the Q train at 96th Street. You sit a mere four blocks from the breathtaking Conservatory Garden-Central Park's premier hidden masterpiece. With the M15 Select Bus outside your door, this is an axis of perfect urban connectivity.
Harlem is enormous. Stretching from the East and Harlem Rivers all the way to the Hudson, Harlem has three micro-neighborhoods that make up this huge area. East or Spanish Harlem is vibrant and colorful, Central Harlem is energetic and cultural, and West Harlem is more suburban and chill. From 110th to 155th, Harlem has something for everyone.
Harlem is so huge that each spot has its own unique history. For example, West and Central Harlem were burned to the ground during the American Revolution, whereas East Harlem wasn't really developed until the 1860's. However, one fact remains consistent for all of Harlem: That the population of the area exploded once a prominent Black neighborhood was destroyed to make room for Central Park.
The Harlem Renaissance began around WWI and the cultural impact the neighborhood would have on the world began. Becoming a major player in the worlds of art, literature, music, and civil rights, Harlem became a mecca for…
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