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§ Neighborhoods

New York, by neighborhood.

Each of the neighborhoods below holds at least one residence in the Mayell portfolio. The pages include the context that matters when you’re weighing where to live — transit, landmarks, architectural character — plus the specific buildings we represent there.

The Index16 neighborhoods across 3 boroughs, holding 28 represented buildings.

Manhattan

13 neighborhoods

  • № 015 buildings

    Tribeca

    Cobblestone lofts, cast-iron landmarks, and Manhattan's most expensive residential zip code — quietly.

  • № 022 buildings

    Kips Bay

    Mid-rise rental anchor between Gramercy and Murray Hill — NYU Langone's hospital corridor and the Second Avenue subway extension.

  • № 032 buildings

    Midtown East

    Grand Central commuter gateway, UN Plaza riverfront, and the upper-floor prewar cooperatives that set the citywide standard.

  • № 042 buildings

    SoHo

    Cast-iron landmark district, global flagship retail, and Manhattan's original artist-loft neighborhood.

  • № 051 building

    Chelsea

    Gallery-district brownstones, elevated rail parkland, and design-forward new construction between the Meatpacking District and Hudson Yards.

  • № 061 building

    Financial District

    Wall Street's weekend residential conversion — prewar banking lofts, post-9/11 new construction, and waterfront access on three sides.

  • № 071 building

    Gramercy Park

    The two-acre private park at the heart of 19th-century Manhattan — and the key-access residential district around it.

  • № 081 building

    Hudson Yards

    Manhattan's newest neighborhood — 28 acres of purpose-built residential, retail, and cultural anchors over the LIRR rail yards.

  • № 091 building

    Lincoln Square

    Lincoln Center's cultural anchor, Central Park's southwest corner, and some of Manhattan's tallest residential towers.

  • № 101 building

    Lower East Side

    Tenement-museum heritage, bowery-adjacent new construction, and New York's densest independent music and dining scene east of Broadway.

  • № 111 building

    Midtown West

    Broadway theaters, Ninth Avenue restaurants, and the densest cluster of new rental towers in Manhattan.

  • № 121 building

    NoHo

    Six landmarked blocks of prewar loft conversions between the East Village and SoHo — quieter than both.

  • № 131 building

    West Chelsea

    The slice of Chelsea west of Tenth Avenue — galleries, the High Line, and the tallest concentration of starchitect residential in the city.

Queens

1 neighborhood

  • № 013 buildings

    Long Island City

    Queens' waterfront skyline — new-construction rental towers with Manhattan views, one subway stop from Grand Central.

Brooklyn

2 neighborhoods

  • № 012 buildings

    Gowanus

    Post-industrial canal-adjacent neighborhood in its most active rezoning cycle — new mid-rise residential between Park Slope and Carroll Gardens.

  • № 021 building

    DUMBO

    Belgian-block streets, Manhattan Bridge arches, and Brooklyn's first converted-warehouse residential district.

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New York residences represented by Nana, Mayell Real Estate.

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