The condo is positioned to continue to grow in value. Keep it old buddy; this high-rise space is one valuable asset. Rationale : Okay, Frasier: Time to sell your condo. In that case, a quieter market like this one should better fit your disposition. Greater values face headwinds given the age of the building and dated finishes, although there is some value associated with the celebrity residence.
Frasier is going to find some competition, however. Ironically, we are creating a Frasier-inspired floor plan that will comprise approximately 2, square feet on floors 33 through 37 just below the two penthouse levels. Adorning the northwest corner of this tall and slender tower, with two bedrooms plus den, nine-foot, six-inch ceilings, expansive window walls, and a large terrace with a picture-perfect view of the Space Needle, prospective buyers will soon have the opportunity to live this very Frasier lifestyle.
Broker: John L. Buyers are exhausted from five-plus years of heated competition for housing, coupled with interest rates inching upward and salaries not keeping pace with the double digit appreciation.
Despite these factors, as John L. After divorcing his wife Maris, Niles has to temporarily seek refuge at a highly discounted apartment complex ironically called the "Shangri-La". It's completely unbecoming his refined tastes it has a Murphy bed, after all , but he makes do because anything is better than living with Maris.
If you look closely at his apartment, though the furnishings are different, it's the same set used for Robert's actor Brad Garrett's apartment in Everybody Loves Raymond. Both series were filming in , and the film schedules allowed the series to swap out furniture as needed for taping episodes.
Frasier's apartment is roughly to 1, feet from the Space Needle, inside what's known as Seattle Center. His fictitious apartment building Elliott Bay Towers is between the Seattle Repertory Theater and the International Fountain, and his apartment number indicates that he would be on he 19th floor out of Fans have painstakingly researched the view from Frasier's apartment and given the fictitious area his apartment building would have been in, there would have been no view as spectacular as the one Frasier boasted.
The skyline simply wouldn't have been oriented that way, and the Space Needle wouldn't have been visible. After Niles' separation from his wife Maris in , he moved into the Montana, an even more luxurious apartment building than the Elliott Bay Towers.
We know this because the doorman for the Montana lives in Frasier's building, implying that if he has enough money to do that, the inhabitants of the Montana must be even wealthier than anyone living there. The ground floor of Niles' apartment has an enormous living and dining room, with an enormous staircase in the center that leads up to the landing of the 1st floor.
The 1st floor contains Niles' bedroom, a gift wrapping room, a study, and a library. It may have more rooms, as while lost on the 1st floor, Martin once discovered a secret door to a hidden chamber. There's even a 2nd floor, but the layout is barely discussed. While it's difficult to surmise a full floor plan, especially since some areas seem overly large the living room while others seem relatively small the corridor with Daphne's bedroom , the square footage for it is roughly 2,, or the size of a small house.
We know this because in the episode "You Can't Tell A Crook" , Jimmy the con explains he's visually outlined the floor plan and he guesses it to be 2, square feet, which Frasier confirms. A 3 bedroom, 2. When you're as neurotic as Niles Crane, it makes sense that you'd want a sanctuary to retreat to at day's end.
After he graduated college, he would have had to complete medical school and then a residency, both of which take about four years each. Then, he started his gig as a radio announcer in I called them up and a kindly employee helped me access their historical data. However, they only had public records on their website that went back to She stepped in and sent over older statistics from the Occupational Outlook Handbook. Then there was that period he was laid off for most of season six.
So, no. At this point, I could just willfully suspend disbelief and move along. But Mark Ruffalo does not stop until he finds the truth, and neither do I! I called up Joe Keenan, who wrote for Frasier for various seasons from two through the finale. Could he afford his place?
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