FREE Apartment Search – Find Millions of Apartments and Houses for Rent Today!
spacer spacer
Moving & Settling In
 
« Previous Article
E-mail this Article Email this Article
Next Article »
Print this Article Print this Article

6 Ways to Really Discover Your New Neighborhood

(Rate this article)

Moving to a new city, or even to a new neighborhood in a city you think you know well? Well, here are a half dozen smart ways to get to know the neighborhood you’re moving to.

1 – Where are You, Actually? Chances are, you’re not moving to an island. So take a look around not just your own neighborhood but check out the surrounding areas too! In densely populated areas like New York’s borough of Brooklyn, for instance, many newcomers are unaware that just a mile away from upscale Park Slope there’s the ethnically diverse Chinese-Latino neighborhood of Sunset Park, where things are cheaper, including rent.

2 – Walk, Don’t Just Drive Around. You’d be surprised at how much more you can learn about a place when you walk, rather than drive, around it. In a city like San Francisco, Philadelphia or Austin, walking helps you get a sense of the history and architecture. The feel of the street life can change literally from block to block. If you’re in a suburban setting, walking enables you to see who is a rose gardener, who has a messy yard and on which streets there are kids playing outside.

3 – Talk to Locals. Try to pick up conversations. You can ask who has the best diner breakfast, where they go for a picnic or what the best dry cleaner in the area is. Talk, talk, talk!

4 – Get Familiar with More than One Source of Local News. Check out local freebie newspapers, the local columns of your citywide newspapers and take some time to scan community Web sites or blogs.

5 – Get to Know Your Local Hardware Store Folks and Your Elected Officials. It always pays to know someone who can help you find a plumber, electrician and repairman and who better than the local hardware store? It is also smart to know who your elected officials are, at the city, state and federal level. Their staffs know a lot about the area you live in and you can always call them for a suggestion.

6 – Identify the Local Community Hub. Some of the most wonderful sources of information and contacts in a new community are the basics: the local diner, firehouse, church or synagogue or mosque and park. If you want to really discover what your new neighborhood has to offer, identify the local hub and make a few visits.


Ellen Freudenheim is a veteran travel writer and the author of several comprehensive guidebooks to New York City . Her 500-page guide to over 20 neighborhoods of Brooklyn is called Brooklyn: the Ultimate Guide to New York’s Most Happening Borough (St. Martin’s Press, 2004). Her most recent book is Queens: What to Do, Where to Go (and How Not to Get Lost) in New York’s Undiscovered Borough (St. Martin’s Press, 2006). (www.queensguidebook.com).Both are available from online booksellers.

© Ellen Freudenheim 2006. No part of this article can be reproduced without the author’s permission.



Post a Comment

 
     


  Comments  
     
 
aisha


okay this is the deal i’m a travel agent and my boy friends a porter.we make about 3100 amonth together.we want to find a cheap apt for about 750 to 875 a month we just want to live in a ok neighbor hood not exactly ghetto a studo with a bedroom or a large studio that can be divided to make a bedroom with a five year to lease. we have no credit which is a big problem i mean this will be our first apt so what can we do we need a place to live????we are born and raised in nyc but it’s hard for the middle to i guess poorer classes of people i understand there are a lot of well off people but still if you can help i’ll appreciate it.i’ve made a public housing application but i know it takes a long time due to people in the shelter system
should i talk to a realty agent?



If you don’t have any credit and need a place soon, consider searching roommates.com. You might find some people looking to sublet or are trying to find another person for a 2/3 bedroom. Then you can live there for a bit til you find something better.

As for getting credit, the easiest thing would be to either get a credit card or find someone to add you on theirs. My sis added me on her Amex and I only used it for emergencies. Then 2 or 3 years later, then sent me an application for one in my own name and I was approved! Just make sure you don’t spend more then 35% of your credit limit and pay your bills early.

 
 
 

  Post a comment  
spacer spacer spacer
 
     
*Name:  
     
*Email:  
     
URL(if any)  
     
Comments
 
500 characters remaining
     
 
 

 

 
spacer

Sponsored Links


Sponsored Links