Thriving in one of Manhattan's classic residential neighborhoods, Carnegie Park has it all. There are museums to muse in and bookstores to browse, gourmet shops to raid and celebrated restaurants for dining. Carnegie Park's warm, sumptuous lobby of mahogany, marble and granite, is attended twenty-four hours a day with concierge service and a doorman.
This large, red-brick rental apartment tower at 200 East 94th Street is one of the few buildings in Manhattan with a major curve, which provides many apartments with very broad bay windows. More than a decade later, several other apartment buildings with similar curves began to appear in Midtown East.
This 31-story building has a fitness center, a bicycle room, a skylit recreation room and sundeck, a private garden and video security, and it permits small dogs. It also offers maid, valet and dry cleaning services. Its tower is flanked by low-rise bases on the avenue and the sidestreet, and the building's red-brick facade nicely complements the large Ruppert Plaza development a couple of blocks south on the avenue. A subway station is at Lexington and 96th Street, and crosstown bus service is also available on 96th Street. The building overlooks the Carnegie Hill neighborhood, one of the most desirable in the city, to the west. This area has become very lively in the mid-90's; there are many restaurants and nice shops in the vicinity.









