All The Apartments I've Lived in New York City
Just like the City itself, New York City apartments have all its quirks. There are the pre-war buildings that arrange the shower in the same room as the kitchen, the shoebox apartments in the most central locations, and then the ones that seem to have it all - reasonable price, plenty of space, great location - but only has one window that faces the dead of an alleyway, making them resemble jail cells.
Like any other average resident in the city, my journey of finding the perfect place took some time to happen. For the first two years, I was living in a flexible bedroom - a rather common setup pre-pandemic for first year NYC dwellers, so that two roommates can live in a one bedroom apartment and share rent. My room was basically a living-room-turned-bedroom, with half a wall just around 6 feet tall as a divider and a curtain as a door. There was no privacy - I not only shared the space, but also the noise, the smell, and for 1.5 years, the mice, of the entire communal space of the apartment. Still, I didn’t care so much, because I was never in my apartment. If you were doing New York right, people said, your apartment was just where you slept anyways. So, I went on living life like a “true” New Yorker. Based in Hell’s Kitchen, everything was 20 minutes away. Tourists went to Times Square for sight-seeing; I went to Times Square to buy eggs.
When the pandemic hit, I upgraded my living situation and moved into the master bedroom of another apartment in Murray Hill. It felt so nice to finally have a door. Sunshine filled the entire room, and I even had a view of the Empire State Building. The caveat, though, was that it was located right on the busy Third Avenue, and I could hear traffic 24/7. During the WFH days, I even had to mute myself sometimes during client calls, in order to mask the loud ambulance and honking cars.
So, the three years in New York City taught me a lot of valuable life skills. I learned to sleep with the sound of the cars. I became a rodent expert who knew all about mice’s favorite foods (it was not cheese). And I learned the best way to air out an apartment when I just had a major cook out. Living in Manhattan was no longer fun - it was noisy, stressful, difficult. Immersed in a huge concrete jungle, there was no place for me to escape. Everywhere I went, there were people, cars, skyscrapers. Dirty water, trash, air pollution.
Exhausted, I decided to live normally for the first time in three years. My salary also increased to a level where I could live more comfortably. And that was when I found my favorite apartment so far in NYC. It is a studio apartment in Long Island City, not far from the East River. The neighborhood is quiet, clean and cozy, quite opposite from the busy, stressful concrete jungle that is Manhattan.
With this apartment, I became an indoor person. There is nothing better than a day staying in, working on a weekend cooking project, or curling up to read with the sweet fragrance of my candles. I was finally able to find the peace I was craving for a long time. It was great.
Overall, the three apartments I’ve lived in NYC witnessed a fast changing period of my life. Through my ongoing apartment hunting journey, I evolved from a fresh university graduate tangled up in the messiness that is Manhattan, to someone in her late twenties who retrieved to a more “adulthood” lifestyle. Time went by real fast, and I can’t wait to see what’s next!
*Title image from istockphoto.com