Meatpacking District
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- Nightlife
- Shopping Options
- Eating Out
- Parks & Recreation
- Internet Access
- Cost of Living
- Peace & Quiet
- Parking
- Clean & Green
- Lack of Traffic
- Trendy & Stylish
- Tourists
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Reviews
"Stylish and Hip"
- Safe
- Interesting spots to eat and drink
- Industrial but cool looking
- Pricey
- Dismal looking in places
- noisy especially at night
- Tourists
- Trendy & Stylish
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Resale or Rental Value
- Public Transport
- Medical Facilities
"Meatpacking District – Great If You Like Living In Scene-ville"
Warm spring and summer weekends are when the neighborhood is in its glory. Restaurants and bars have seating that spills onto the sidewalks, lending to a party atmosphere. The energy can be frenetic, but noise can be a problem.
Meatpacking District kids have it made. In addition to A-rated schools in the area, they are near the Hudson River, can play hide-and-seek in the area’s twisty, turn-y stone-covered streets, and can easily grab buses and subways to visit their friends or take advantage of everything New York has to offer.
The latest and greatest addition to the Meatpacking District is the Highline. An extensive length of elevated train track, it has been reclaimed and provides residents and visitors to the Meatpacking District with access to nature year-round. It is extremely beautiful and a wonderful community meeting place where you’ll see hipsters walking along bohemians, slow-moving seniors sharing the path with racing toddlers.
The price to live in this tony neighborhood ranges from $450,000 for a studio to $20 million for a penthouse. For people interested in purchasing one of the Meatpacking Districts historic townhouses, expect to pay up to $2,000 per square foot if you want a ‘desirable’ location near the High Line...$1,200 per square foot elsewhere in the area.
- Interesting spots to eat and drink
- Pricey
- noisy especially at night
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Public Transport
"Eh, trendy and not in a good way"
Little West 12th Street is where most of the action is and on the weekends, it is packed. It is impossible to get in and out of there on a weekend night because the cabs are so backed up. And, there are drunk people everywhere. There is a place called Bagatelle that does weekend brunch nightclub so people are already tossed by 3 pm. There are famous restaurants like Pastis and Buddakkan and they're both pretty trendy (still) and pretentious. But, Pastis is actually awful -- I hate to admit it, but Buddakkan is actually really good. I also love Fatty Crab on Gansevoort but that isn't really a "meatpacking" restaurant. That place is the only reason I go into the neighborhood. Oh, and the Apple store on 14th. It's massive but always packed. I want this neighborhood to be great because it is so cool looking. It actually used to be a real meatpacking area but there are only two butcher stores left in the area. There are about ten nightclubs in the place where the rest of them used to be.
The nice thing about the Meatpacking is that there is a lot of space in the restaurants and apartments. Being that the buildings are all former factories, they offer a lot more room than most of Manhattan. The bad thing is that that space is filled with a bunch of dingleberries coming into the city to be part of the scene. It's pretty chaotic there. And, it always looks dirty. If I were to live there, I'd live close to Washington or 9th and south of Little West 12th to try to avoid the noise. And, I would only do so if I found an incredible apartment. It's just not worth the pain.
- Industrial but cool looking
- noisy especially at night
- Dismal looking in places
- Pricey
- Tourists
- Trendy & Stylish
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Resale or Rental Value
- Public Transport
- Medical Facilities
"Meatpacking District: Up and Coming Small Area with a Lot of Potential"
Some wonderful restaurants to check out are the Fatty Crab on Hudson Street, the Fig & Olive on 14th Street, and the Old Homestead Steakhouse on 9th Avenue. This area is not really for the stroller, but since you are close to the water you can always walk over and catch some equisite views of the river if you so choose.
- Interesting spots to eat and drink
- Dismal looking in places
- Pricey
- Tourists
- Trendy & Stylish
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Public Transport
- Medical Facilities
"Slaughterhouse District Turned Hipster Haven"
Residence here may not be the most expensive in the area but may only be worth it to someone who works in the area or really needs a place to live. The rents are far too high for the level of area this is, the people are rude and at night they form massive lines everywhere. You are right by Chelsea and West Village but that is the only benefit of living here.
For tourists, you will soon realize that the Meatpacking District does not hold on to its historic past and there is little outside of overpriced fashion boutiques and overpriced bars and clubs to check out.
Really, the highlight of the area, and the only reason someone living in Lower Manhattan might actually go here, is the Apple Store. If you want history or better living options, go elsewhere. If you need a new iPod and you're in the area, this is the place.
- cobblestone streets
- Boutique shopping
- Busy bar scene
- Apple Store
- expensive
- Awful people
- Drunken wailing hipsters
- Trendy & Stylish
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Public Transport
"Where You'll Find the Bridge and Tunnel Crowd"
When the subcultures left, though, so did any coolness. While there are still stores belonging to some of fashion's greatest - ie, Alexander McQueen - there's little other reason to visit the Meatpacking District unless you want to drink with Bridge and Tunnelers or coked-out wannabe models. Everything is oh so very fabulous here, including long lines behind velvet ropes, $18 cocktails, mini dresses that barely exist and clubs that you'd only bother going to to say you went to. The nightlife isn't actually fun, because if you got caught having fun in one of these lounges, you wouldn't be cool anymore. There might be a cool fashion crowd in these parts, but they're probably hanging out where you can't get in, so you're stuck with the over-gelled Jersey population. Saving graces? The cobblestones are still cute, though you can find them in the West Village and Soho, the Highline is an awesome elevated park worth the visit, Pasti's, while now known by every tourist nationwhide, still serves up pretty delicious food in a Parisian setting and Chelsea Market is a high end take on a food court that is basically amazing, from Jaques Torres chocolates to fresh seafood.
- cobblestone streets
- Boutique shopping
- expensive
- flashy area
- Awful people
- Nightclubs
- Wannabe Carrie Bradshaws
- Now attracts the 'bridge and tunnel' partycrowd
- Tourists
- Trendy & Stylish
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Resale or Rental Value
- Public Transport
- Medical Facilities
"Ugly Part Of Town"
The only thing this area has going for it are the meatpacking facilities where they take care of the meat that is sold in stores. Otherwise, the place does not have the slightest bit of charm or sophistication.
- cobblestone streets
- Boutique shopping
- Tons of restaurants
- great restaurants
- expensive
- Awful people
- loud
- Drunken wailing hipsters
- Now attracts the 'bridge and tunnel' partycrowd
- Pasts its prime
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Resale or Rental Value
- Public Transport
- Medical Facilities
"Flashy, just plain flashy"
- great bar scene
- great restaurants
- cobblestone streets
- flashy area
- expensive
- loud
- Tourists
- Trendy & Stylish
- Neighborly Spirit
- Clean & Green
- Pest Free
- Peace & Quiet
- Eating Out
- Nightlife
- Parks & Recreation
- Shopping Options
- Gym & Fitness
- Internet Access
- Lack of Traffic
- Parking
- Cost of Living
- Resale or Rental Value
- Public Transport
- Medical Facilities
"For Scenesters and Hipsters only"
This gritty and grimy area which has a distinct industrial feel to it was the domain of slaughterhouses and meatpacking outfits ever since 1949 when the Gansevoort Meat Market was established here. Since the late 1990s, however the area has cleaned up somewhat so that it now functions as New York’s premier party district which has within its environs countless designer boutiques and stores as well as many hip and happening restaurants and clubs which are exceedingly popular with tourists and locals alike.
Located in the heart of the Meatpacking district is the stylish, boutique Gansevoort Hotel which is favored by celebrities and the beautiful of New York City, whose rooftop bar is an especially popular hangout spot during the balmy New York summer evenings. Some of the most popular restaurants of the Meatpacking district include joints like Pastis, Bagatelle, Budakkan, Fatty Crabs and Spice Market which are known as much for the food that they serve and the good looking and stylish patrons that they attract. However the newest attraction of Meatpacking district is the newly opened Highline Park which has been created along an old elevated freight rail line that used run from Gansevoort Street to 34th Street.
- The annual New York Food and Wine Festival which is hosted in the area
- cobblestone streets
- Boutique shopping
- Busy bar scene
- Tons of restaurants
- Now attracts the 'bridge and tunnel' partycrowd
- expensive
- flashy area
- loud
- Awful people
- Drunken wailing hipsters
- Nightclubs
- Pasts its prime
- Wannabe Carrie Bradshaws
- Tourists