Loading...
The Quick-Change Artist - South of FifthCMYK NxMB,2013-02-17,RE,001,Bs-4C,E1 4THE HUNT4 STREETSCAPES Buildings consider their rear One way to track facades. BY CHRISTOPHER GRAY downa house with 6GETTING STARTED money-making Finding energy savings at potential. home. BY JOYCE COHEN BY SUSAN STELLIN OWNERSRENTERSFINANCINGDEALSSUNDAY, FEBRUARY17, 2013 MB Sun City Its Not SomeUpper West Siderscant imaginea better place to live out their lives.Their buildings are adjustingand adapting. By CONSTANCE ROSENBLUM When the co-op conversion wave began in New York City in the 1960s, singles and young married couples flocked to the Up- per West Side hoping to get a piece of the action. Some of those people, now in their 70s, are still there, cemented in place by apartments bought for a song or equally treasured rent-stabilized units. The kids have left,Ž said Aaron Shmule- witz, whose law firm, Belkin Burden Wenig & Goldman, represents more than 250 of the citys co-op and condo boards. The dog has died. But these people stayed put.Ž As the neighborhoods population has grayed, someapartment houses have morphed into what social scientists call NORCs„ naturally occurring retirement communities. The most recent census esti- mates indicatethat 22 percent of Upper West Siders, or 46,000 people, are 60 or old- er, compared with the citywide average of 17 percent. Attracted by convenient shop- ping, abundant mass transit and a wealth of cultural activities, many older residents hopeto remain in their apartmentsthe rest of their lives. Most programs tailoredto this popula- tion are found in public housing projects and buildings likeMitchell-Lama develop- ments, where the government helps keep rents low. In many suchcomplexes, so- called NORC programs financed with city and state money provide services includ- CONTINUED ON PAGE8 The walking group of Bloomingdale Aging in Placedoesnt let snow interfere with a constitutional in Central Park.Inset: Claire Toise is a member of the packedclassical literature class at Lincoln Towers. MARCUS YAM FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES; INSET, YANA PASKOVA FOR THE N BIG DEAL ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO The Quick-Change Artist In a decade, South of Fifth has Last year, a penthouse at one of two what they envision will play out „ some- Continuum towers soldfor $25 million, day. gone from rags to riches; it is then the highest sale for an apartment in Thats what happened in the South of nowhome toMiami Beachs Miami Beach. In late December,a pent- Fifth Street neighborhood, where the city house at the neighboring Icon tower sold took on an ambitiousGerman real estate most expensive real estate. for just under $21 million, a record for a investor in the struggle to redefine an area bay-facing apartment in the city. A lower- thatcriminals and castoffs had all but tak- rise 50-unit development, One Ocean, has „High-end neighborhoods en over. MIAMI BEACH yet to start construction, but has only come and go, thoughfew swing from Almost implausibly, South of Fifth has three apartments that are not spoken for. blighted status to the height of luxuryliv- emerged as the most expensive section of Todaythe areas streets are clean, the ing in just one decade. Miami Beach. A string of high-rise condos vagrants are gone and the lower-lying Art But in Miami Beach just about anything along the water, which were at the center Deco buildings the city fought to preserve seems possible. There is no shortage ofof the struggle over the citys development by establishing a historic district have dreamers and visionaries, and men with15 years ago, are selling apartments for DIANA ZALUCKY FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES the tenacity to battle to the bitter end forrecord prices. A view of the South of Fifthneighborhood in Miami Beach. CONTINUED ON PAGE6