100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 09, 1997 - Image 50

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1997-05-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Discover the secret to landing a terrific place

C.T1
CO THE D ETR OI T J EWIS H NE W S

LYNNE MEREDITH COHN STAFF WRITER

inding a place to live in metro
Detroit is not easy — or it is. It
depends on where you'd like to
live, when you must move, how
much you can afford to spend
and perhaps most of all, who
you know.
Landing a terrific apartment
or flat in one of the trendier sub-
urbs (Royal Oak Berkley, Birm-
ingham and increasingly
"Fashionable" Ferndale) takes
luck. You can find a place you love, but
chances are, you'll be accompanied by
dozens of others who share the same strong
emotion — and who miraculously get there
before you.
First, project a budget, with a ceiling
amount you can spend on rent. If you want
to live alone, know that you'll be spending
considerably more — rent for one-bedroom
apartments usually falls about $100 un-
der the cost of a two-bedroom.

while throwing a little flexibility into the search.

PHOTOS BY DANIEL UPPITT

Alone, you can get away with spending a week. Hey, I moved away from home to
$400 on rent in far-out (read: distant lo- establish my own rules, not to get a whole
cation) suburbs for a not-so-new, few- new set.
Next step: Ask around.
amenities-if-any place. Or an older, spare
Jennifer Zalenko, 26, spent two days dri-
pad in a trendy enclave.
Roughly $500-$600 is a safe bet for a ving around Birmingham and Royal Oak
charming older flat or a relatively new, with her mother, looking at apartments.
small apartment with some utilities in- She wanted central air, dishwasher,
garbage disposal; she ended
cluded.
Having moved home in No- Jennifer Zalenko stumbled up with a Royal Oak two-bed-
upon what became her
room with no amenities.
vember, I aimed for a move-
Royal Oak apartment.
By responding to a news-
out-of-the-parents' date
around May 1 and began look- No amenities, lots of style. paper ad, Jennifer found a
management company that
ing in late March. First, I
looked in the Sunday classifieds of the De- owns several properties. "I asked if they
troit News and Free Press, the Observ- had other places that fit my description
er /Eccentric, the Mirror and the Royal better — it turns out they had one that
Oak Tribune newspapers. Called a few hadn't gotten listed yet. So I was one of the
ads, left name and number, got minimal first people to see it."
She suggests checking local newspapers,
_calls back.
One place in Royal Oak sounded fan- not major metropolitan dailies. "Check
tastic, but the landlord imposed a rule of work bulletin boards; if you have e-mail,
no sleepover guests more than one night look on the Internet for listings. Talk to

friends, let people know you're looking."
For two years, a woman I work with
lived in a Ferndale flat, near Nine Mile and
Woodward. She raved about the terrific
landlord, so I called. He had no vacant
properties.
A number of services that promise to
help you find that special someplace are
available, but not really a wise investment.
I sought out Apartment Search (which my
mother kept nudging me to call) and
Rental Professionals.
An Apartment Search professional
plugs into a computer your wish list of
specifications — location, amenities, in-
cluded utilities — and comes up with a list
of possibilities. You pay nothing. What's
the catch? The landlord pays to list with
them.
And that's exactly the problem. Since
the apartment lister has to show the mon-
ey, only nicer complexes are going to sign
on. And if you're looking for a flat

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan