Rent NoHo Retail

Expert Tenant Broker "No Fee"
We represent you, not the landlord

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  • Direct Rent NoHo Retail Direct
  • Sublease Rent NoHo Retail Sublease
  • Coworking Rent NoHo Retail coworking

Rent NoHo Retail

Class Address SF Monthly Rent
B
Broadway & Bleecker Street
21,600
$ Negotiable
B
Broadway & Bond Street
7,100
$ 35,400
C
Broadway & Bond Street
4,000
$ 14,400
C
Broadway & Bond Street
3,700
$ Negotiable
B
Mercer St & Mercer Street
1,900
$ Negotiable
B
Broadway & Bleecker Street
1,900
$ 21,800
B
Broadway & Bleecker Street
900
$ 10,200
Class Address SF Monthly Rent
B
Broadway & Bleecker Street
17,600
$ Negotiable
B
Broadway & Bond Street
8,400
$ 42,000
C
Broadway & Bond Street
4,000
$ 14,200
C
Broadway & Bond Street
3,700
$ Negotiable
B
Broadway & Bleecker Street
1,900
$ Negotiable
B
Broadway & Bleecker Street
1,900
$ 21,600
B
Broadway & Bleecker Street
900
$ 10,200
Rent Coworking Office
Type of Space Class A/month Class B/month Class C/month
Windowed office/person $ 2072 $ 1250 $ 750
Interior office/person $ 1322 $ 750 $ 500
Team Rooms $ 10072 $ 8000 $ 5000
Suites $ 20072 $ 12000 $ 7000
Class Address SF Monthly Rent
B
Second Ave & 1st Avenue
40,400
$ Negotiable
C
Spring St & Spring Street
25,000
$ Negotiable
A
Madison Ave & East 23rd Street
16,500
$ Negotiable
A
Broome St & Varick Street
7,900
$ 56,800
C
Avenue A & Twenty 3rd Street
5,000
$ 33,200
B
E 4th Street & Broadway
4,600
$ 34,200
A
Broadway & East 10th Street
2,000
$ Negotiable
B
Delancey St & Ludlow Street
2,000
$ Negotiable
C
Delancey St & Norfolk Street
1,900
$ Negotiable
C
Avenue of the Americas & West 17th Street
1,800
$ 43,200
B
Greene St & Broome Street
1,000
$ 5,600
B
Broadway & Grand Street
900
$ Negotiable
C
W Broadway & Spring Street
800
$ Negotiable
C
Grand St & Elizabeth Street
700
$ 2,800
A
Lafayette St & East Houston Street
600
$ Negotiable
Retail Tenants Rented / Leased NoHo
  • HealthQuarters leased 14,000 SF at 632 Broadway
  • Clean Market leased 2,600 SF at 40 Bleecker Street
  • LNA Clothing leased 730 SF at 648 Broadway
  • Zero Bond leased 20,000 SF at 0 Bond Street
  • DeVOL Kitchens leased 3,450 SF at 28 Bond Street
  • Showfields leased 14,707 SF at 11 Bond Street
  • Dig Inn leased 1,800 SF at 691 Broadway
  • FitHouse leased 5,500 SF at 712 Broadway
  • BIA leased 6,225 SF at 676 Broadway
  • Bandier leased 27,500 SF at 670-674 Broadway
  • BRKN CENT 4TH STR leased 1,300 SF at 15 East Fourth Street
  • IMA Pizza Store 23 leased 1,483 SF at 740 Broadway
  • Box and Flow leased 1,400 SF at 55 Bond Street
  • Fish Cheeks Restaurant leased 1,400 SF at 55 Bond Street

NoHo


Geographic Boundaries

NoHo ("North of Houston Street") is a compact Lower Manhattan neighborhood bounded by Houston Street to the south, 9th Street to the north, Mercer Street to the west, and the Bowery/4th Avenue to the east. Key thoroughfares include cobblestoned Bond Street, Great Jones Street, and the Astor Place cultural hub at its northern edge.

Businesses and Retail

NoHo's retail scene blends historic charm with contemporary sophistication. The neighborhood features designer boutiques along Lafayette Street, artisanal home goods stores tucked into cast-iron buildings, and specialty food purveyors near Cooper Square. Fine dining establishments range from Michelin-starred tasting menus to intimate French bistros housed in 19th-century carriage houses. The eastern Bleecker Street block retains Federal-style storefronts now occupied by high-end leathercraft shops and cocktail bars.

Historic Attractions

The 125-building NoHo Historic District preserves the neighborhood's artistic legacy through landmarks like the Astor Library (1849), now housing the Public Theater complex where "Hair" premiered in 1967. The Bouwerie Lane Theatre (1914) continues Off-Broadway programming in its original space, while the Bayard-Condict Building (1899) stands as Manhattan's first steel-frame skyscraper. Colonnade Row's surviving Greek Revival mansions (1833) on Lafayette Street mark the last remnants of elite 19th-century residential architecture.

Architectural Landscape

NoHo showcases New York's architectural evolution through Federal-style row houses, Italianate cast-iron facades like 24 Bond Street (1893), and modernist interventions such as 51 Astor Place's crystalline office tower. The De Vinne Press Building (1886) exemplifies neo-Romanesque design with terracotta ornamentation, while the neighborhood's eastern edge transitions into Bowery loft buildings housing contemporary art galleries.

Transportation Infrastructure

NoHo enjoys exceptional transit access through the IRT Lexington Avenue Line's Astor Place station (6 train) and BMT Broadway Line's Bleecker Street station (B/D/F/M). The M103 bus runs north-south along Bowery/4th Avenue, while CitiBike stations cluster near Cooper Union. Multiple Bluebike stations and walkability to NYU/Washington Square Park make it a prime pedestrian zone.

Zip Code Adjacency

NoHo primarily falls within 10003, bordering 10012 (SoHo/Nolita to the south), 10009 (East Village/Alphabet City to the east), and 10011 (Greenwich Village/Chelsea to the west). The northern boundary near 8th Street touches 10009's western extension.

Corporate Presence

Creative industries dominate NoHo's office spaces, particularly in modernized loft buildings. Tech startups specializing in AR/VR often occupy floors in converted printing houses, while fashion showrooms cluster near Broadway. The neighborhood hosts satellite offices for publishing houses and architectural firms attracted by its central location and historic ambiance. Notable tenants include digital media companies in the Astor Place tower and boutique consulting firms in renovated 19th-century buildings.


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Tenant Representation: Optimal Spaces acts exclusively as a "Tenant Broker," only representing tenants, never landlords.
⚖️
Unbiased Service: Avoiding conflicts of interest, they provide impartial service, showing a wider range of properties and negotiating the best price.
🗂️
Comprehensive Process: Agents guide clients end-to-end, offering market surveys, floor plans, pricing expectations, and industry contacts.
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Cost Savings: They negotiate rental price and identify/abate "hidden costs."

Why Optimal Spaces –
Tenant Broker

  • No fee for clients renting space.
  • We work for YOU, not the landlord.
  • Save 15–20% on your business costs.
  • Save 100–200 hours of research.
  • Access to all available spaces.
  • Specialized real estate expertise.

Alone or with other broker

  • Miss deals and hard-to-find spaces.
  • Potential conflict of interest (often represent landlords).
  • Only 10% of available spaces are online.
  • Lack of specialized expertise.
  • May not get the best terms or uncover hidden costs.
Why Use a Tenant Broker: Your Advocate in Commercial Real Estate
1. The Crucial Distinction: Whose Side Are They On?
Landlord Rep (Listing Agent) — Fiduciary Duty: Landlord. Highest rent, best terms for landlord.
Tenant Rep (Tenant Broker) — Fiduciary Duty: Tenant Only. Lowest rent, best terms for tenant. Levels the playing field.
2. It Almost Always Costs You Nothing
3. Access to “Hidden” Inventory
4. Negotiating Beyond Base Rent
Landlord pays the broker fee — free expert representation for the tenant.
Access to hidden inventory: off-market listings, subleases, and future availabilities via broker databases and networks.
Negotiating beyond base rent: free rent, TI allowance, OPEX caps, and lease flexibility for renewal or expansion.
5. Time Savings & Process Management
6. Mitigating Risk (the “Gotchas”)
Tenant broker handles searching, scheduling, and RFPs — your outsourced real estate department with curated options and timeline management.
Mitigating risk: spotting pitfalls in LOI and lease such as restoration clauses and holdover penalties.
Summary: Don’t rely on the landlord’s agent. A tenant broker is your advocate, provides better data, negotiates a complete package, and typically costs you nothing.

Retail Buildings in NoHo

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