Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a semi-regular column that explores what one can rent for a set dollar amount in various New Orleans neighborhoods. Is one man's studio another man's townhouse? Let's find out! Today, we're looking at apartments renting around $1,300.
Built in 1869, this restored Creole cottage bed and breakfast overlooks Washington Square on Frenchmen Street. The bed and breakfast sits three blocks from Esplanade Avenue and a block from Elysian Fields Avenue.
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a semi-regular column that explores what one can rent for a set dollar amount in various New Orleans neighborhoods. Is one man's studio another man's townhouse? Let's find out! Today, we're looking at apartments renting around $1,300.
Built in 1842 is this completely renovated barge-board cottage. When Tad Breaux first bought the home in 2014, it was unkept and uninhabitable. After a groundbreaking renovation, the home transformed into an outstanding single-family home.
Located on Chartres Street is a multi-family camelback that is two blocks from Frenchman Street and Esplanade Avenue. The neighborhood has a Walk Score of 90.
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a semi-regular column that explores what one can rent for a set dollar amount in various New Orleans neighborhoods. Is one man's studio another man's townhouse? Let's find out! Today, we're looking at apartments renting around $1,400.
Built in 1887 is a recently renovated Queen Anne Victorian home located on Royal Street. The home is two blocks from Elysian Fields Avenue and three blocks from Crescent Park.
his past Monday, the Short-Term Rental Administration—a part of the City’s Department of Safety and Permits—opened applications to apply for short-term rental permits. Registration for rental permits is required by April 1, 2017.
On Wednesday, January 25, Robért Fresh Market announced its plans for its 26,000 square foot full-service grocery store, and a 15,000 square foot retail parcel, which will both service the Bywater and Marigny neighborhoods.
After years of planning, A Robért Fresh Market is expected to open in the Marigny within the next few months, and serve as a much-needed fresh food hub.
It looks normal from the inside, but this 180-year-old Marigny Creole Cottage has a lot of artful touches that will remain with the next owner. It was on the market last spring, hopped off the market, and now is back once again asking $1,650,000.
Marigny residents got a look at the Hampton Inn planned for the neighborhood last night, and neighbors want the hotel have a design more in step with the neighborhood. The hotel is planned for the former site of a planned Sean Cummings' development.
Renovated in 2014, this cute two-bay Creole cottage in Marigny just got a price cut. Originally asking $445,000, it’s now down to $429,000. Warm details make the 1,240 square-foot Frenchmen Street one-bedroom super cozy. Take a look inside the place.
According to WDSU, Sweet Lorraine’s Jazz Club is reopening after the club took severe water damage from Hurricane Issac in 2012. The club has been on St. Claude for the last 30 years. The club's reopening coincides with that of the Rampart streetcar.
A hotel developer recently bought the Marigny warehouse once planned to be the site of Sean Cummings’ Elisio Lofts and according to Gambit, the developer is planning on building a Hilton Hampton Inn Hotel at the site. It's expected to take 18 months.
Once planned as the site of Sean Cummings’ controversial Elisio Lofts, a warehouse at 501 Elysian Fields Ave. has sold to a hotel developer, CityBusiness reports. A group specializing in hotel construction bought the 36,200 square-foot property.
A run-down eight-plex has been renovated into a contemporary condo complex in Marigny, and now its units are on the market. The building’s four units are 1,295 square feet each, with two bedrooms and two-and-a-half bathrooms. Take a look inside.
Last week the group Sculpture for New Orleans installed Jason Kimes’ "ELEVEN," a tribute to the victims of the Deepwater Horizon disaster. The 11 life-sized sculptures on the Elysian Fields Avenue neutral ground are made of salvaged metal disks.
The new streetcar line along N. Rampart Street and St. Claude Avenue, an extension of the line further upriver on N. Rampart, should be ready for riders the first week of October. NOLA.com reports the RTA has no plans of sacrificing bus routes for it.
The long-vacant former NOPD horse stables in Bywater and an old eight-unit apartment building in Marigny are being redeveloped right now. The owners are preparing to lease the stables to a retail tenant, and converting the eight-plex into condos.
It’s a curious case for this corner store-turned-home in Marigny: After hitting the market in December 2015 at $772,000, the property recently relisted at $749,000, and then quickly got knocked down to $720,000. It boasts a beautiful pool and patio.
This 818 square-foot shotgun, located in the Marigny Triangle, just hit the market at $375,000 (that’s $458 per square foot). After a thorough renovation, the cute house is in move-in shape. There's even a sunroom and back deck. Take a look inside.
Our Lady of Lourdes church Uptown, which had been on the market since last spring, sold at the end of April to 616 Girod LLC for $1,300,000. The Napoleon Avenue church flooded after Hurricane Katrina and was never returned to use.
This home right on the French Quarter/Marigny border is a funky palace filled with interesting artistic touches. The fairly normal exterior belies what's happening on the inside. In total, 27 artists were hired to paint throughout the house.
This Marigny cottage is as colorful as a box of crayons, and it's in a great location, too. Built in 1916, the 1701 square-foot home is freshly painted, both inside and out, with bold colors—orange, purple, mint green, pale lime green, pink and more.
Stymied by neighborhood opposition and a lawsuit, the plan to convert an abandoned gas station into a Cafe Habana restaurant (originally called Habana Outpost) remains in development limbo, four years after the developer originally submitted plans.
Today a judge dismissed the claims of a lawsuit against Wendell Pierce and Troy Henry that would block the demolition of a controversial Marigny property.
Marigny residents and neighborhood groups are suing the business partners, as well as the city, over the demolition of a historic property on St. Claude Avenue.