| | Photo: Corey Melton/OnPoint New York | | Want more on real estate, city life, and design? Subscribe now for unlimited access to Curbed and everything New York. | $2,200: During the peak of pandemic rental discounts, we were seeing plenty of newly renovated one-to-two-bedroom Bed-Stuy spots at this price point. Now, we hardly ever are — making this updated one-bedroom with some nice details (decorative fireplace and moldings, mostly), a big kitchen, and backyard access a rather rare find. (For a one-bedroom with a totally private backyard, here's a fairly charming one to consider.) | $4,800: If you can stomach pretty much living at the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Fourth Avenue, this is a good price for the amount of space (three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a peninsula-equipped kitchen, plus actual dining space). | $3,600: The photos aren't doing this Union Street three-bedroom any favors, but it appears to have great bones (a bright corner layout, original marble fireplace, 12-foot ceilings) and a private roof terrace. | $4,495: You'll find this neatly renovated, dishwasher-and-private-deck-equipped three-bedroom in a very handsome brownstone building with a twin arched entrance. | $2,350: Very low price on a one-bedroom if you're willing to be a bit farther out west (on Hicks Street) and don't mind a railroad layout. Also unusual for the price point: two marble mantels, intricate ceilings (tin tiles and moldings), and a kitchen actually large enough for eating in. | $2,013: There are a ton of period details in this 800-square-foot one-bedroom, including several scalloped-arch doorways (one of which frames the tub in the pink-and-green-tiled bathroom). Plus: It's right by the Beverley Road Q train. | $1,975: This fourth-floor walk-up feels worth the trek since it's gut-renovated with all new appliances, down to the in-unit washer/dryer. | Spotlighting particularly worth-it rentals that are only available for a limited time. | A $3,300 Morningside Heights Two-Bedroom — The selling point: an unusually fancy white-and-emerald-green living room (where there are board and batten walls, an intricate ceiling medallion, and a chandelier). | A $13,000 Tribeca Loft — Massive original wood beams and columns meet exceedingly sleek all-white kitchen and bathroom. | $3,650: The main appeal of this two-bedroom is the unusually spacious, almost square-shaped living room, which also has high (and slightly slanted) ceilings, three windows, and a stately (working) fireplace against a white-painted brick accent wall. | $12,000: The renovations in this 1,860-square-foot full-floor corner loft on Bleecker Street are a bit vanilla (except for pops of highlighter-yellow tile in one of the two bathrooms), but your attention will be fully on the 12 gigantic ceiling-height windows throughout (which feel generous even by loft standards). | $2,400: Just a very sweet one-bedroom with a really convincing oversize casement window and a kitchen with a modern-farmhouse thing going on (white upper cabinets, grayish-blue lower cabinets, and butcher-block countertops). | $1,900: The cheapest studio in Prospect Heights that also comes with a surprisingly spacious kitchen (which has a dishwasher, a full-size stove with a vented hood, and a large window). | $2,575: This one-bedroom on Broadway has ten-foot ceilings and three sets of built-in bookshelves, and is actually listed for slightly lower than it was during the height of the early pandemic. | Did someone forward you this email? Sign up to get the Listings Edit in your inbox every week. | | | |
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