Furniture shortage boosts sales of furnished homes in NYC

Josh and Nicole Slavitt are model homeowners — and not only because they got their Long Branch, NJ, beach home up and running some 12 hours after they bought it.

It’s because the roughly 1,700-square-foot model unit at The Lofts Pier Village — with three bedrooms, partial ocean views and two balconies — came fully furnished with a plush sofa, a dining table, beds and weather-resistant furniture for the outdoor spaces. It was all included in the deal, which closed in July. (Units now start at $619,000.)

Not only did buying a turn-key apartment help the family of five get the most out of summer — the furniture also kept the Slavitts from risking exposure to COVID-19. They didn’t have to go inside home stores or interact with deliverymen, movers and furniture assemblers.

“We wanted to mitigate that,” said Nicole, 39, a Century 21 real estate agent, of the need to avoid contact with strangers during the pandemic.

“It was kind of a no-brainer … we really liked what they had,” said Josh, a 44-year-old derivatives trader, of the display décor, which includes a living room coffee table from Article, a sectional from CB2, and a Room & Board bed in the master bedroom with custom nightstands by Melanie Morris Interiors. “It really just worked out.”

Moving into furnished dwellings has long provided ease for residents, such as short-term renters, those who move for work and owners of second homes, who value efficiency. But turnkey living in the tri-state area has become even more in-demand during the pandemic, with real-estate sources telling The Post they’re selling and renting more of these decked-out units — if not fielding more inquiries about them — than they previously had.

“Prior to this, it would be one out of every 50 people who called … and most of it was [for] the short-term [rentals],” said Joshua Young, vice president of market rate operations at Clinton Management, who oversees leasing at the 554-unit Level rental in Williamsburg.

Today, he said that “the demand … has doubled” and one in every 20 to 25 people who call are asking for fully furnished spaces on longer leases, as well as for short-term ones.

At Level, a roughly 1,400-square-foot apartment with three bedrooms and three bathrooms rented this fall to roommates who got a dining-room table, coffee tables and accessory lighting — with labels including Anthopologie, West Elm and Design Within Reach — included as a concession in the $11,000-per-month lease. That group snagged the deal for reasons of efficiency, according to Young, but he added that other prospective tenants have requested furnishings because of the pandemic. Like toilet paper, and flour, the outbreak impacted the nation’s supply of furniture.

“Everything is backed up — it’s very difficult,” said Young, and not just for residents. He added that in order to pull off this recent furnished rental, his team had to cobble together display pieces that were in storage from previous model units.
Lockdown meant that Americans were spending more time that ever at home. A great number of people used that opportunity to redecorate — and with stores shuttered, customers went online to shop.

Furnishings sales — from companies like West Elm, Crate & Barrel and Joybird — skyrocketed since spring, according to Rakuten Intelligence, which tracks online shopping behavior. In September, sales reached a year-over-year peak of 69.1 percent. In October, the most recent data available, sales climbed 53.6 percent from October 2019.

The huge influx of orders clogged up shipping services. Companies including Article and Bed Bath & Beyond have faced delivery delays. Worse still, the pandemic halted manufacturing across the globe.

“We are absolutely seeing a huge slowdown and backlog,” said Cheryl Eisen, the CEO of interior design and marketing firm Interior Marketing Group (IMG), known for its staging of luxury home listings.

A townhouse-style condo at 117 W. 21st St. in Chelsea, a 5,644-square-foot triplex marketed by John Gomes of Douglas Elliman for $7.5 million, sold with 70 percent of the staged furniture amid the pandemic-related crunch. (The sale price has not entered city records; the furniture — with labels including Modway and CB2 — sold for an additional, and undisclosed, sum.) It’s one of more than 50 IMG-staged homes in NYC that have sold furnished this year — up from 37 in 2019.

“We’re seeing an uptick and it’s for obvious reasons,” said Eisen, and with COVID-19 cases jumping to a 7-day average of 3 percent, many residential buildings are limiting the number of outsiders — like delivery services — who enter, making the furniture problem even worse.

While COVID remains a major concern, some homeowners are just too busy to wait on furniture.

“It really was to my taste,” said Vicki Schneps-Yunis, the president and co-publisher of Schneps Media — whose holdings include amNewYork and Dan’s Papers — who bought a fully furnished model unit at the 230-unit Ritz-Carlton Residences in North Hills, LI, which she’ll keep as her primary home. “It was quality, it was elegant — [and] it was done! So I’d like to get on with my life.”

She snapped up the unit in the spring (available condos range from $1.8 million to $4.9 million). But the fact that her two-bedroom spread came with tables, dressers and beds — furnishings she couldn’t get on her own due to her hectic work schedule — made it a must-get.

“All I need to bring is a toothbrush,” she said.

Hers is one of five turn-key model residences to have closed since March, a more-than-normal amount, per Joe Graziose, executive vice president of residential development and construction at RXR Realty, which developed the Ritz-Carlton Residences.

ARO, a 426-unit rental at 242 W. 53rd St., has also seen elevated interest in furnished homes, while experiencing the headaches of ordering furniture first hand.

This week a 65th-floor penthouse listed for $19,500-per-month furnished, or $16,200 without all the fixings. But Hilary Feshbach, a partner at Algin Management, which developed the building, wants to test it out. After all, it took three months to get the couch delivered.

If a tenant wants to move in with their own furniture, that’s fine, said Feshbach “we’ll … move the furniture to another unit — and then we don’t have to wait three months for another couch.”

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