Real Estate in the New Harlem
is the ultimate affirmation of the New Harlem, which is now annually welcoming hundreds (if not
thousands) of value savvy, upwardly mobile new home owners of varying backgrounds. These are
sophisticated urban pioneers, who will settle for nothing less than the finest apartments in conveniently located Uptown Manhattan
condominium housing. They range from successful singles in the caring professions, seeking studios and one bedrooms,
to participants in all the arts, needing spacious live-work environments, to upper West Side and East Side families,
whose walls have simply squeezed in on them, to Wall Street movers-and-shakers with an eye for trophy units with
massive entertaining spaces.
Their common denominator is a belief that the New Harlem is the emerging neighborhood of the early 2000s,
and that participating in its growth will bring them similar benefits to those garnered by those who purchased homes, apartments and
condos in such areas as the Upper West Side, Chelsea, and Tribeca during the 1980s and 1990s.
With their arrival comes a new energy, which, supplementing the past decades’ efforts by longtime residents and
community leaders, is furthering the transformation of the New Harlem into a prosperous, diverse and dynamic
community. Major banks and national retailers, who previously had never set foot in Harlem, are now vying for
space along all its major thoroughfares.
The prior dearth of decent day-to-day shopping has been supplanted by a rush to open by a multiplicity of established
supermarket and pharmacy chains. And, restaurants, clothing boutiques, and service providers, such as dry cleaners and
shoe repair shops, are springing with amazing rapidity.
Finally, and perhaps most encouraging, Harlem’s cultural and entertainment life, once its strongest calling card, is once again showing real vigor.
Our Neighborhood
is situated at the corner of world renowned Fifth Avenue and 120th Street, facing historic Mount
Morris Park (aka Marcus Garvey Park), generally considered the most beautiful, historically
significant, and well-appointed park in Harlem. Among the park’s numerous recreational facilities are several
basketball courts, Harlem’s Little League field, two playgrounds, a dog run, an olympic-size swimming
pool, and an oft-used outdoor concert pavilion.
The area surrounding Mount Morris Park (much of it designated a landmark district) contains many of
northern Manhattan’s finest examples of late 19th Century residential and religious architecture.
Primarily because of its attractiveness and its proximity to both East Side and West Side mass transportation,
it has been the focus of more brownstoning and condo/coop development than any other Harlem neighborhood from
the late 1990s onwards. As would be expected, this configuration of favorable circumstances has also attracted an influx
of shops, restaurants, and service providers well beyond the generality of ever-improving Harlem lifestyles.
Restaurants
- DINOSAUR BARBECUE
- LES AMBASSADES
- MAKE MY CAKE
- MELBA’S
- MISS MAUDE’S
SPOONBREAD TOO - REVIVAL
- SOCIETY COFFEE
- SYLVIA’S
- THE TERRACE
Arts, Culture & Entertainment
- AARON DAVIS HALL
- APOLLO THEATRE
- DANCE THEATRE OF HARLEM
- HARLEM SCHOOL OF THE ARTS
- MAGIC JOHNSON THEATRES
- NATIONAL BLACK THEATRE
- SCHOMBURG CENTER FOR
- RESEARCH IN BLACK CULTURE
- STUDIO MUSEUM OF HARLEM
Boutiques
- THE BROWNSTONE
- B.J. OYAMA
- CAROL’S DAUGHTER
- MONTGOMERY
- PIECES OF HARLEM
- DENIM LIBRARY
- XUKUMA
Supermarkets
- CITARELLA
- FAIRWAY
National Retail Chains
- AEROSOLES
- ASHLEY STEWART
- CHILDREN’S PLACE
- CVS
- H&M
- MAC COSMETICS
- MARSHALL’S
- MODELL’S
- NINE WEST OUTLET
- OLD NAVY
- RITE AID
Banks
- COMMERCE BANK
- JP MORGAN CHASE
- MCU FINANCIAL CENTER
- NORTH FORK BANK
Recreation & Health
- CENTRAL PARK
- CURVES
- HARLEM YMCA
- LE PAVILLION GARRIES
- MORNINGSIDE PARK
- ST. NICHOLAS PARKs











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