This 220-Square-Foot NYC Apartment Has a Terrace, Abundant Light, and No Bed Frame
Cullen Ormond
Cullen OrmondHouse Tours Editor
I write about house tours (but I love a good kitchen and kids' room article). My work can be found across AT Media, including The Kitchn and Cubby. I’ve been writing about home-related topics for nearly five years and love seeing how people make their homes unique.
published now

This 220-Square-Foot NYC Apartment Has a Terrace, Abundant Light, and No Bed Frame

Cullen Ormond
Cullen OrmondHouse Tours Editor
I write about house tours (but I love a good kitchen and kids' room article). My work can be found across AT Media, including The Kitchn and Cubby. I’ve been writing about home-related topics for nearly five years and love seeing how people make their homes unique.
published now
Add Us
See more Apartment Therapy stories when you search on Google.
We independently select these products—if you buy from one of our links, we may earn a commission. All prices were accurate at the time of publishing.
Bedrooms
Square feet

220

Sq ft

220

Studio apartment living usually requires a little bit of guts and sacrifice. For content creator Joseph Carano, he’d lived in a Manhattan studio before, so he knew the game. After a breakup (and living in a 3,000-square-foot home), he returned to the city and found a 220-square-foot studio in Manhattan’s Upper West Side. 

House tour cover

Can't-Miss House Tours Straight to Your Inbox

Keep up with our latest house tours each weekday with our House Tour of the Day newsletter

Credit: Kiritin

What drew Joseph to the over-100-year-old building was the apartment on the top floor. “Baby, this is basically a converted attic apartment,” he jokes. While it has a small footprint, the abundant lighting, views of a park and river, and private terrace were features he absolutely adored. 

Credit: Kiritin

Joseph is known socially and on his platforms for being an avid gardener and outdoor enthusiast, so he needed a place for his plants to thrive (spoiler: He has several indoor and outdoor plants and they’re doing wonderfully) — even if that meant giving up a traditional bed.

Credit: Kiritin

It wasn’t that the apartment was too small for a typical bed; Joseph could’ve fit a full- or even a queen-size bed. But knowing how often he hosts, he didn’t want guests to be sitting on a mattress when they visited. 

“People think I am crazy for sleeping on a Japanese Tatami mat at night,” Joseph explains. “Every comment I get is filled with people telling me to get a ‘real American bed.’ But I know myself. If there was a bed in my sight, I’d want to get in it! This helps the apartment function properly in the daytime.” 

Credit: Kiritin

Thinking outside the box, like Joseph’s sleeping arrangement or creating a standing desk using just basic shelving, makes his apartment feel spacious. In 220 square feet and within only a few months, Joseph has created separate areas in his home that cater to his lifestyle, which is full of gardening, hosting, creating content, and being creative. 

Thanks, Joseph!

This tour’s responses and photos were edited for length/size and clarity.
Share your style: House Tour & House Call Submission Form