New York Nabes: Up-n-Coming or Down-n-Out?
When choosing real estate, articles generally discuss what is recommended. But learning from failure is as important as learning from success; indeed, the two are symbiotically intertwined. And thus, following up on the previous installment’s discussion of desirable but still affordable New York City neighborhoods, we will consider the worst of the worst here by way of steering you to properties elsewhere!
A borough-by-borough run-down concludes as follows:
Staten Island: generally speaking, the areas closest to the ferry terminal will be the worst, with crime, noise, and other social ills most prevalent.
Manhattan: a much more diverse set of circumstances here, but a good rule-of-thumb principle holds that areas north of Central Park should be avoided (though gentrification has made many such areas much better than previously was the case). With the exception of Chelsea and Upper East and West Side areas like Lincoln Center, avoid all areas with a public housing project.
Bronx: the whole borough should be avoided (but for Riverdale on the west coast and Throgg’s Neck on the southeastern one).
Queens: the most complex situation in the whole city, with many neighborhoods fairly mixed ethnically, racially, and socio-economically. But clearly inferior places include vast tracts of Jamaica and surrounding areas, especially towards points south near Brooklyn. Ravenswood is another problem area, next to Astoria in Long Island City. Roosevelt Island is deliberately mixed, but as is always the case, the bad will drive out the good, and it’s a debate whether gentrification can work there. East Elmhurst (but not all of Elmhurst proper) should also be avoided for the mix of noise, crime, and other social ills presented by many of its denizens. Jackson Heights is on the borderline, once a nice nabe but now host to a vast illegal immigrant community.
Brooklyn: another complex case, though rather more clear-cut than that of Queens noted above. Sunset Park is gritty and working-class but at least somewhat safe relatively speaking. Definitely avoid Bushwick and environs, as well as Flatlands and even, nowadays, Canarsie. Bedford-Stuyvesant and Crown Heights are not very desirable areas and have a history of violence, as is the case with Ocean Hill and Brownsville. East New York should be avoided like the plague. Coney Island is also often bad, though the City of New York is finally committed to a wholesale revitalization effort.
Tough stuff? Hardly. One cannot be too truthful when it comes to the persisting pockets of urban blight. For those new to New York, such “color” is often fascinating. But for many others, peace and quiet is desired above all for thinking, studying, and enjoyment of being.
The neighborhoods listed are anathema to those values, peopled as they are by those of a disposition, whether cultural or otherwise, towards noisy commotion and even physical violence. Yet because the city bursts with new arrivals each day, property prices and rent will still be very expensive, even when compared with more desirable spots in the same city. For example, Kingsbridge and Bedford Park in the Bronx, ghetto to the core, can still command rents only a couple of hundred less than those in Riverdale or Throgg’s Neck.
Author Bio: Barbra I. Miller writes frequently on real estate topics for various online publications. Please visit USARealEstates.com for more great articles from industry insiders such as Isaac Toussie and others!
Category: Real Estate
Keywords: real estate, new york, nyc, residential, property, property markets, realty, advice
