It will be simply swept away from your feet by this residence on the upper eastern side, which is now on the market for $ 1.19 million.
The pre -war residence is available, on 4 E. 70th St. , Off Fifth Avenue, from Helen Fisher.
A famous biological anthropologist, the late Fisher used famous brain tests for 17 university students to conduct a pioneering study in 2005 on the chemical nature of love. She, with her collaborators, confirmed for the first time that love is difficult in the brain-and he was the first to determine the areas in the brain associated with the early romantic love stages.
Fisher, who died due to cancer last August at the age of 79, is also attributed to finding the flag behind the phenomenon of being preserved. Match.com, Match.com Science Advisers, said that her research “is everything we do.”
One spacious bedroom comes with a renewable bathroom and a stylish kitchen. It opens with a lobby and leads to a large living room. Details include Herringbone, nine windows and a lot of light. Maintenance fees $ 2713 a month.
Fisher divided her time between this unit and its widow time, John Turney, in Bronx.
Manhattan's apartment bought $ 250,000 in 1994, according to her family.
In a series of best -selling books, Ted Talks and more explained how to believe, through her research, that people are divided into four types of characters and how they fall in love. For Match.com, I reached a questionnaire, which is Fischer's mood stock test, to help people understand their type.
List brokers for her unit are Mark d. Friedman and Richard Rosental from Brown Harris Stevens.