NYC Summer Associate Housing
Posted: Thu Jan 24, 2013 12:50 pm
Anyone have any tips/websites/etc for finding a sublet for the summer in Manhattan?
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I have checked NYU's housing, but my SA begins in the first half of May and runs through the first week in August. NYU doesn't cover a stay that long. I will check on Columbia and New School. Thanks. Definitely has to be a studio/1 BR as my spouse will be coming alongaces wrote:A lot of the schools (NYU, Columbia, New School, etc.) in the area have summer residency programs, which have the benefit of usually being able to accommodate your exact start/end-date without much difficulty. Most rooms are singles in suites, but NYU and Columbia have some good studios as well. You might end up with annoying undergrad roommates and it might be a little more expensive than finding a roommate through Craigslist, but you're also guaranteed a clean, furnished room (including kitchen) in a building with a doorman. You'll also have a non-scummy landlord and most of the locations are reasonably convenient.
Thanks. That may work. They are earlier than NYU, but still not early enough. But crashing on a friend's couch for a week and then sending for the spouse may just workAnonymous User wrote:I stayed at a School of Visual Arts dorm. I had a room + bathroom/kitchen to myself in a great location for about $2100/month. Quiet building and free laundry. No extra utilities or anything. The NYU dorms were also too late for me as well, but SVA dorms open a week or two earlier.
Um... it depends what neighborhood you want to live in, what degree of privacy you want, how nice the accommodations are, etc. Last summer an NYU affiliated dorm was I believe $3700 all inclusive for 12 weeks. If you want an average studio in midtown or downtown it should run 2000-2500 total per month. I was surprised to hear that some other summers had paid a month's rent to a broker for a 10 or 12 week sublet. That's definitely not the rule.Anonymous User wrote:What would you all consider to be a reasonable price to pay for the entire summer? I know some people pay for utilities, broker's fees, etc., so I'm trying to figure out what's a good all-in limit.
Many places I've looked into require half-month's rent as broker's fee for a summer rental. I think this may be more of a rule if you're not looking to go the dorm route.Wholigan wrote:Um... it depends what neighborhood you want to live in, what degree of privacy you want, how nice the accommodations are, etc. Last summer an NYU affiliated dorm was I believe $3700 all inclusive for 12 weeks. If you want an average studio in midtown or downtown it should run 2000-2500 total per month. I was surprised to hear that some other summers had paid a month's rent to a broker for a 10 or 12 week sublet. That's definitely not the rule.Anonymous User wrote:What would you all consider to be a reasonable price to pay for the entire summer? I know some people pay for utilities, broker's fees, etc., so I'm trying to figure out what's a good all-in limit.
No shit? I'm surprised I didn't run into you amidst the numerous fashion school girls.sharkweek wrote:I stayed in the SVA dorms last summer. Nothing glamorous, but super cheap and convenient. Their dates exactly matched my 10 week summer and I paid $3100 for the ENTIRE summer (bills, internet, everything included). It's just a basic furnished room, but you do get your own bathroom. I stayed in the one on 23rd and Lex but they have a few different buildings I think. They have a no alcohol policy but it is "loosely enforced." And if you do decide to stay there don't be tricked into paying more for a "large single," the sizes all vary and the rooms my friends had that were larges looked no different than my regular room.
Was the place you stayed at relatively clean, i.e. not too many, if any, rats, roaches, etc?sharkweek wrote:I stayed in the SVA dorms last summer. Nothing glamorous, but super cheap and convenient. Their dates exactly matched my 10 week summer and I paid $3100 for the ENTIRE summer (bills, internet, everything included). It's just a basic furnished room, but you do get your own bathroom. I stayed in the one on 23rd and Lex but they have a few different buildings I think. They have a no alcohol policy but it is "loosely enforced." And if you do decide to stay there don't be tricked into paying more for a "large single," the sizes all vary and the rooms my friends had that were larges looked no different than my regular room.
If you're pulling in 30k+ as a summer associate in NYC, you do not need to, nor should you want to, live in a 1BR with 2 other people or a studio with 1 other person. I mean, come on, bunk beds???ATR wrote:Does anyone have any experience with living in an NYCIntern Midtown apartment (see http://www.nycintern.org/)? The rates seem reasonable, the location is great, and the applications seems to allow for them to match you with compatible roommates.
Ah, I didn't realize that the apartments housed three people in one room... I read that wrong. Definitely not living there.Sup Kid wrote:If you're pulling in 30k+ as a summer associate in NYC, you do not need to, nor should you want to, live in a 1BR with 2 other people or a studio with 1 other person. I mean, come on, bunk beds???ATR wrote:Does anyone have any experience with living in an NYCIntern Midtown apartment (see http://www.nycintern.org/)? The rates seem reasonable, the location is great, and the applications seems to allow for them to match you with compatible roommates.