The following keywords are shown to be the best source of text to search the internet for new york no fee rentals,apartments for rent in new york city,apartments for rent in nyc,apartments in new york city, apartments in nyc, no brokers fee new york, no brokers fee new york city new york no brokers fee, apartments new york city, apartments nyc, apartments westside manhattan, luxury apartments in new york, manhattan lofts, manhattan no fee apartments, new york city apartment rentals, new york city apartments, new york city apartments for sale, new york city apartments rentals, new york city no fee apartment rental, new york city rentals, new york city upper east side apartment rentals, new york no fee apartment rental, new york no fee apartments, new york no fee rentals, newyorkcitynofeerentals.com, no fee apartment rental no fee apartment listing new york city no fee apartment listing, no fee apartment rentals, no fee apartment rentals new york city, no fee apartments in new york city, no fee apartments new york city, no fee rental, no fee rentals,no fee rentals new york, no fee rentals nyc, no fee apartments upper west side, no fee apartments upper east side, no fee apartments west village, no fee apartments soho, no fee apartments midtown, nyc apartment rentals, nyc apartment sales, nyc no fee apartment rental, nyc no fee rentals, soho apartments, no brokers fee
New york city no fee and low fee rentals and bayside queens
NewYorkCityNoFeeRentals.com - Now Low Fee Too!
We have your New York City Low Fee and No fee rental apartment. Luxury full-service buildings
when you want them, where you want them. It's your new home...Live it Up!

We've added a new BAYSIDE APARTMENT RENTAL and CO-OP AND CONDO SALES section
(of course these are all low fees)
Call 347-249-9884 or email for information nycnofeerentals@aol.com
map of new york city upper west side no fee rentals upper east side no fee rentals chelsea no fee rentals union square no fee rentals midtown no brokers fee rentals west village no brokers fee east village no fee rental apartments soho no fee rentals little italy chinatown no fee rentals tribeca no fee apartments financial district wall street no fee rentals stuyvesant town no fee apartments harlem no fee rentals
Web site designed by
MultiMedia Design Company
wwww.mmdc.com

2003 Copyright NewYorkCityNoFeeRentals.com
SOHO
Within only a quarter of a square mile, SoHo has an estimated 250 art galleries, four museums, nearly 200 restaurants, and 100 stores. The blocks south of Houston (pronounced HOW-ston) and north of Canal streets are home to the city's largest concentration of the cast-iron fronted buildings, built as warehouses and manufacturing spaces, but converted to living spaces, called "lofts," for artists and sculptors who appreciated the larger spaces. These huge, 19th-century architectural gems (Victorian Gothic, Italianiate, and neo-Grecian among them) are prized by preservationists and the well-heeled bohemians of SoHo who call the neighborhood home. The Museum for African Art, New Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Alternative Museum are all in SoHo. The New York Fire Museum on Spring Street displays a nostalgic and inspirational collection of hand-pulled and horse-drawn apparatus, engines, sliding poles, uniforms and fireboat equipment from the 18th through the 20th centuries - a good place to pay respects to our heroes from 9-11. Robert Lee Morris sells jewelry that is wearable art; Canal Jean Company sells authenic Levi's, cutting-edge shoes, and sportswear at discount prices; Vintage New York features only wines and food from New York State; The Scholastic Store sells Scholastic brands including Clifford the Big Red Dog and Harry Potter - in an interactive, multimedia environment; and the Ward-Nasse Gallery has the largest selection of original art in SoHo. If you work up an appetite after all the shopping, head to the Cub Room or Zoë for dinner, and afterwards to NV/289 Bar Lounge, S.O.B.'s (Sounds of Brazil) for a little samba, or the SoHo Grand Hotel for a drink in an international and sophosticated environment. When SoHo became too upscale for starving artists, many moved further downtown to another, then-half-abandoned industrial district, TriBeCa (the Triangle Below Canal). TriBeCa also became a hot destination, most notably for dining. TriBeCa restaurants include Nobu, Tribeca Grill, Montrachet, Alison on Dominick Street, Capsouto Freres Restaurant, City Hall Restaurant, F.illi Ponte, and Dylan Prime.