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  • $4,350,000

    28 E 10th St APT 4H, New York, NY 10003

    2beds
    1,534sqft
    Condominium
    Built in 1928
    -- sqft lot
    $2,494,000 Zestimate®
    $2,836/sqft
    $2,375/mo HOA

    What's special

    Home officeSecond bedroomLandscaped roof deckEuropean-style courtyardCenter islandStorage spaceBuilt-in bar
    It begins — as many good New York stories do — with an elevator. Not just any elevator, though — the kind that makes you feel like you’ve already made it home... even before you've taken off your shoes. You step inside — into an entry foyer that doesn’t just welcome you, it introduces you. To the apartment. To the light. To the life you always imagined you'd have one day, when things finally made sense and the dishes matched. And then—there it is. The living and dining room, perfectly proportioned and absolutely charming, with coffered ceilings and sash windows that look out over East 10th Street like they’ve been doing it since the 1930s. Outside, trees lean in like they’re part of the conversation. Through the living room, there’s a home office — smart, subtle, and beautifully designed — because even in a romantic comedy, someone has to answer emails. That leads to the den, which could easily be a formal dining room, or a library, or a place to relax and read books you’ve only half-finished. It’s open to a kitchen that could win awards — a real, actual, cook-here-and-host-friends-and-laugh-until-midnight kind of kitchen. There’s a center island, milk glass pendants, white crystal-glass countertops that sparkle like a Nancy Meyers set, a Subzero fridge, a 6-burner Wolf range, and even a wine fridge — because of course there is. Oh, and just between the living room and the kitchen? A built-in bar. Polished. For your best crystal..and your Friday night favorites. Because details matter when you live in a city that never forgets them. Storage? You’d think it wouldn’t matter in a place like this — but it does. And here, it’s been thought about. Window seats double as cabinets. Closets abound. There’s even a storage space, which feels luxurious in that very New York kind of way. And then, through a quiet hallway — the bedroom wing. There’s a second bedroom that’s comfortable and calm, next to a fully renovated, windowed guest bath with heated floors. Yes, heated floors. The kind you only appreciate on cold mornings when the city is being a little too honest. And then… there’s the primary suite. Magnificent. That’s the word. Two closets — one’s a walk-in. The en suite bath is marble, windowed, and, yes, it also has radiant heated floors. You’ll never wear socks again. But here’s the thing — all of this would still just be a very nice apartment… if it weren’t in Devonshire House. Designed by Emory Roth — who knew a thing or two about timeless beauty — the building wraps around a European-style courtyard that feels like something out of a daydream. The lobby? Think coffered ceilings, rich wood paneling, elevator doors that are too beautiful to be real. There’s a landscaped roof deck, a playroom, a gym, cold storage for your farmers market flowers, and a staff that knows your name and your dog’s. Outside, the Village hums — quietly, but with intention. Il Cantinori is just a few doors down, which means your “local place” could also be someone’s anniversary dinner. Fifth Avenue leads you to Washington Square Park, and beyond that — Soho, lunches, bookstores, bad dates that turn into great stories, and maybe, just maybe, the life you didn’t even know you were waiting for. Because sometimes, the right home doesn’t just fit. It knows you. And all you have to do is say yes.
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