Sun-filled one-bedroom combines contemporary design, full-service convenience, and an exquisite Murray Hill location to create a comfortable Midtown East home with excellent value and easy city living. This well-proportioned 1BR offers a spacious living area, sleek separate kitchen with stainless steel appliances and stone countertops, good closet space, and a tranquil bedroom sized for a queen bed and additional furniture, all enhanced by hardwood floors and clean, modern finishes throughout. In this elevator doorman building, residents enjoy a professionally maintained lobby, helpful staff, laundry facilities, and secure entry, providing everyday peace of mind and a polished residential experience. Set near Grand Central, major subway and bus lines, and key commuter routes, this address offers a straightforward commute to Midtown offices and beyond, while also placing you close to neighborhood supermarkets, pharmacies, cafes, and everyday services. A wide range of dining, bars, fitness studios, and nearby green spaces add to the lifestyle appeal, with central Manhattan cultural and entertainment destinations easily accessible. All interested renters are invited to schedule a viewing or request more information about this residence today.
Murray Hill, Midtown East, doorman building, elevator building, one bedroom apartment, modern finishes, stainless steel appliances, on-site laundry, Park Avenue area, NYC rental
Application fee: $20 or less per applicantBetween 32nd and 42 street one the east side of Manhattan lies Murray Hill, the affluent neighborhood that's never lost its classy image. A long time favorite neighborhood for NYC's elite, Murray Hill is full of high end establishments and homes.
In 1762, successful merchant Robert Murray decided to build a Mansion and farm on a desolate portion of Manhattan. His farm started from modern day 32nd street and extended north to about modern day 38th. The Murray estate would go on to play a major role in the Revolutionary War when another member of the Murray family, Mary Murray, invited the British to tea, giving the defeated American army enough time to escape Manhattan.
The land would remain in the hand of the various Murray's until 1835 when a fire swept the land that the Murray's had been renting to various people and government bodies. Around the 1850's row houses began being built in the area, and they soon became very popular with the…
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