Boasting a gracious layout and brimming with prewar charm, this oversize 1-bedroom home is a Beekman jewel! The elegant entrance gallery with exquisitely inlaid floors is perfect for showcasing one's art collection and flaunts three large closets, one of which has been custom outfitted to house a built-in home office! The large living room with high beamed ceilings is made for elegant entertaining. The windowed eat-in kitchen offers a sizable separate dining alcove. The bedroom flaunts double exposures, beautiful open city views, and two large closets. The windowed bathroom has been completely renovated with high-end finishes. The home is further enhanced by beautiful strip hardwood floors, new high-grade casement windows, and a private storage cage measuring 9' tall by 4'-6" wide by 4' deep! Welcome home! Built in 1932, 2 Beekman Place is a Rosario Candela-designed white-glove cooperative. Residents enjoy 24-hour doorman, elevator operator, resident manager, beautiful Art Deco lobby, private storage, bike storage, renovated laundry facility, building-wide Culligan water filtration system, bulk-billing reduced rates for both electricity and cable/internet service, and a landscaped, furnished roof deck with gorgeous river and city views and complimentary WiFi. Pets are permitted, as is up to 50% financing. 2% flip tax paid by purchaser. Beginning on 49th Street and terminating on 51st Street, the coveted Beekman Place enclave is a serene, tree-lined stretch of stately prewar buildings, making one feel completely removed from the frenetic energy of the city, yet placing one within short walking distance of every residential convenience. Transportation is a breeze with the 6 train at 51st and Lex, the E/M trains at 53rd and Third, and the M50 crosstown bus on 50th. Beekman Place has long been synonymous with old money and has been home to multiple members of the Rockefeller family as well as Huntington Hartford, heir to the A&P supermarket fortune. Additional famous residents of the neighborhood include Gloria Vanderbilt, Irving Berlin, Greta Garbo, Ethel Barrymore, Anne Morgan, Elisabeth Marbury, Rex Harrison, Katherine Cornell, Van Santvoord Merle-Smith, William S. Paley, Alfred Lunt, Lynne Fontanne, Mary McCarthy, John P. Marquand, Paul Jones, and modernist architect Paul Rudolph.