Apartment C3 at 41-25 44th Street sits on a quiet, tree-lined block in Sunnyside, Queens, the kind of street where the sycamores arch overhead like an old-world canopy and neighbors still nod good morning. The building, a sturdy, unpretentious co-op with an elevator and laundry room, rises three stories above the sidewalk, humming softly with the sound of daily life. Perfectly situated on the third floor, this one-bedroom line is rare in a building where apartments rarely come up . Each room - living, sleeping, cooking, bathing has its own window, and the light that filters through carries with it the subdued calm of the street below.
Inside, the layout is practical, unhurried, as if shaped by the slow rhythm of the neighborhood itself. The kitchen and bathroom are both windowed, and there’s an ease to the space, a quiet dignity. The building is well-kept, its halls clean, its systems sound. It doesn’t clamor for attention—it simply works, like much of Sunnyside.
Outside, the hum grows louder: Skillman Avenue just a short distance away, with its cafés, grocers, and familiar faces. The 7 train waits a few blocks off, ready to slip you into Manhattan in under twenty minutes. But C3 doesn’t rush. It stays behind the trees, in no hurry, bathed in sunlight and stillness.
Apartment C3 at 41-25 44th Street sits on a quiet, tree-lined block in Sunnyside, Queens, the kind of street where the sycamores arch overhead like an old-world canopy and neighbors still nod good morning. The building, a sturdy, unpretentious co-op with an elevator and laundry room, rises three stories above the sidewalk, humming softly with the sound of daily life. Perfectly situated on the third floor, this one-bedroom line is rare in a building where apartments rarely come up . Each room - living, sleeping, cooking, bathing has its own window, and the light that filters through carries with it the subdued calm of the street below.
Inside, the layout is practical, unhurried, as if shaped by the slow rhythm of the neighborhood itself. The kitchen and bathroom are both windowed, and there’s an ease to the space, a quiet dignity. The building is well-kept, its halls clean, its systems sound. It doesn’t clamor for attention—it simply works, like much of Sunnyside.
Outside, the hum grows louder: Skillman Avenue just a short distance away, with its cafés, grocers, and familiar faces. The 7 train waits a few blocks off, ready to slip you into Manhattan in under twenty minutes. But C3 doesn’t rush. It stays behind the trees, in no hurry, bathed in sunlight and stillness.
Listing Courtesy of Redfin Real Estate