Skip to main content
Fulltext search
FILTER RESULTS BY:
RECOMMENDED IN RENT
Moving to NYC after college? Here's how to find a rental apartment
RECOMMENDED IN BUY
How buying real estate in NYC is unlike anywhere else
RECOMMENDED IN SELL
A guide to using a no-fee renovation loan from a NYC real estate firm
RECOMMENDED IN IMPROVE
How to make your NYC renovation more pet-friendly
BEST REAL ESTATE WEBSITE!
National Association of Real Estate Editors
BEST REAL ESTATE WEBSITE! National Association of Real Estate Editors
Brick Underground
Social Links
follow:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • search
Brick Underground
☰ Brick Underground
Brick Underground
Brick Underground
☰
Brick Underground
  • Buy
    • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
    New York City old historic apartment building in the East Village of Manhattan, NYC with a clear blue sky background
    Co-ops
    NY state legislators propose bills to protect land-lease co-ops from land rent hikes
    Image of a set of buildings in New York City
    Sales Market
    What is a pied-à-terre? What makes it different from a typical NYC apartment?
    Matthew Sloane
    Co-ops
    From Greenpoint to Sunnyside: After sublets and apartment shares, I wanted the security of owning a place
  • Rent
    • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
    Looking up at a row of colorful old brick residential buildings with fire escapes along a street in Williamsburg Brooklyn of New York City
    Roommates + Landlords
    Everything you need to know about New York’s Good Cause eviction law
    New York City style apartment buildings exterior view with windows and fire escapes
    The Search
    Rents grew seven times faster than wages in NYC last year
    A rendering of the building at 5123 Beach Channel Dr.
    Affordable Housing
    Housing lottery launches for 134 rent-stabilized apartments in Far Rockaway
  • Sell
    • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
    Broadway from West 106th Street
    Sell
    Manhattan co-op and condo deals fall to lowest level in three years
    West 106th Street and Hudson River in New York City
    Sell
    Are NYC sellers paying smaller commissions to buyer’s brokers?
    Greenpoint, Brooklyn
    Sell
    Once again, Brooklyn sales decline but this time it's good news
  • Live
    • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
    FlatRate moving brick underground
    Live
    How to troubleshoot your move in advance
    Sponsored By flatrate
    Fire escapes on a NYC building
    Troubleshooting
    A fire safety checklist for your NYC apartment building
    Broken sidewalk along Eighth Avenue in Brooklyn
    Troubleshooting
    Who is responsible for repairing a broken NYC sidewalk?
  • Improve
    • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
    image
    Renovation
    How I turned a storage shed behind my Brooklyn house into an art studio
    Flood damaged parquet floor
    Renovation
    6 steps to deal with flood or water damage in your NYC apartment
    peel-and-stick wallpaper love vs. design brick underground
    Renovation
    Love wallpaper but hate the hassle? Here's a low-commitment and customizable DIY solution
    Sponsored By LOVE vs. DESIGN
  • Boards & Buildings
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
    • Advertise with us
    • Sponsored Content
    • Experts
    FlatRate moving brick underground
    Live
    How to troubleshoot your move in advance
    Sponsored By flatrate
    Manhattan apartment buildings
    Rent
    Ask Sam: My landlord claims to have no record of several rent payments. How do I prove him wrong?
    Sponsored By Himmelstein McConnell Gribben & Joseph LLP
    Fire escapes on Greenwich Village apartment buildings
    Roommates + Landlords
    Ask Sam: Can a landlord evict me from a rent-stabilized apartment so that his relative can move in?
    Sponsored By Himmelstein McConnell Gribben & Joseph LLP
  • About Us
  • About Us
Email Address
Fulltext search
FILTER RESULTS BY:
New Main menu
  • Buy
    • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
  • Rent
    • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
  • Sell
    • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
  • Live
    • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
  • Improve
    • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
  • Boards & Buildings
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
    • Advertise with us
    • Sponsored Content
    • Experts
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
  • About Us
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER →
Social Links Footer
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Search
Suburbs [ SPONSORED ]

4 reasons you should move to Chappaqua, New York

By The Westchester Living Team  | February 4, 2021 - 12:30PM
ADVERTORIAL
image

Chappaqua has an award-winning school system, strong sense of community, quick commute to NYC, and better value for home buyers.

The Westchester Living Team 

SHARE:
Share to Facebook
Share to Twitter
Print
More...

Many New York City families plan on moving to the suburbs at some point in the future, but 2020 accelerated that decision. The need for more space to work from home, go to school online, enjoy the outdoors safely, and simply live and play, prompted many buyers to put their plan into motion now, says Sari Shaw, a Compass real estate agent who lives and works in town.

Choosing to leave is one thing; deciding where to go is another question entirely. Fortunately, there’s one community that makes this decision easy. Perched on the east bank of the Hudson River, just 35 miles north of Midtown Manhattan, the bucolic hamlet of Chappaqua might be tiny—with a population of 1,800 and an area that’s just under a square mile—but it's rich with community spirit, diverse housing options, and urban-quality amenities in a town-and-country setting, and is also part of the town of New Castle, which has a population of 18,000 with 5,800 households. For all those reasons and more, Niche.com named Chappaqua the number one place to buy a house in the New York City area.

Here are four good reasons to consider moving to woodsy, accessible, charming Chappaqua.

image

An award-winning school system

Westchester County public schools are among the best in the nation, and Chappaqua’s schools are perhaps the best in Westchester. In 2020, U.S. News & World Report ranked Chappaqua’s three elementary schools in the state’s top 75 and its two middle schools in the top 20. 

Meanwhile, the prestigious Horace Greeley High School consistently rates as one of the best public high schools in the country, topping Best College’s national ranking in 2015 and finishing in the top percentile of U.S. News & World Report’s 2020 rankings. The National Merit Scholarship committee routinely rewards over 10 percent of graduating seniors, and the school gets high marks for college preparedness, with almost all students taking at least one Advanced Placement course.

Parents also have a strong voice in their kids’ education, as the Chappaqua Central School District is renowned for having a strong PTA. 

image

An overarching sense of community

Chappaqua has a tight-knit community with a warm and welcoming vibe. 

“Sometimes you move to the suburbs and you have a hard time finding your way because people aren’t friendly,” says Sari. “But Chappaqua is a place where if you smile at someone, they’ll smile back,” she says.

The central hub of community activity is the quaint downtown, ringed with family Run and resident owned businesses, farm-to-table cafes, stylish boutiques, a farmer’s market, and a gazebo where summer concerts are held (socially distanced now, of course). These days, community members also stay connected through Facebook groups like Chappaqua Moms and Living Chappy Happy, and organize virtual events and classes through town message boards.

That sense of community manifests in other ways, as well. Chappaqua residents demonstrate an abiding commitment to localism by shopping small and giving back. The hamlet has a number of philanthropic organizations, including the Horace Greeley Scholarship Fund, Chappaqua School Foundation, and 914 Cares. 

Chappaqua residents like keeping business in the community as well, which contributes to the sense of local pride—not to mention makes small business owners happy. “As a parent and resident of Chappaqua there is no where I feel more connected to our community than in my downtown gift store,” says Susan Maher, owner of Breeze Gifts. “My customers have become my friends and family; they are also my neighbors, my children’s teachers, town officials, and other merchants.”

Joe Quartararo, proprietor of the classic-dining favorite Le Jardin Du Roi, echoes the sentiment: “We want our customers to feel like this is an extension of their home,” he says.

Location, location, location

Chappaqua’s quick train ride from Midtown Manhattan, with a recently renovated station on the Metro-North Harlem line, will have you at Grand Central in under an hour. (You’re pretty much guaranteed parking, with a nine-acre lot offering plenty of space for everyone.) That’s convenient for working professionals who are still commuting to the office, but also for the work-from-home types: When things finally return to normal in NYC, you’ll still have access to everything it has to offer.

The town itself is beautiful and walkable, with a wealth of recreational activities: jogging and pickup soccer games at 126-acre Gedney Park, swimming and tennis at the Chappaqua Swim and Tennis Club and the Birchwood Swim and Tennis Club, and much more.

Beyond Chappaqua, residents have easy access to not only NYC but other tony suburbs like Greenwich, plus the rest of Westchester County and the Hudson Valley—with its hiking and biking trails, waterways for kayaking and canoeing, abundant state parklands, and vibrant, walkable downtowns to explore.

More bang for your buck

Chappaqua’s housing stock is primarily single-family homes (however, the downtown is being revitalized for mixed-use), and the market is surging because of its desirability. According to the Hudson Gateway Association of Realtors, sales of homes in Chappaqua are up 66.5 percent.

With top-notch schools, no crime, “big-small town” cachet, and a strong community spirit, it’s easy to see why Chappaqua is hot right now. But it’s not too late to invest in a better lifestyle for you and your family in this historic hamlet. Homes in Chappaqua come in a variety of styles and with a range of lot sizes, meaning there’s something for everyone’s price point. If you’re considering a move to Chappaqua, here is a taste of what you'll find. Reach out to Sari Shaw to discover all that Chappaqua has to offer!  

image
Caption

This four bedroom, three and a half bath, 10 Hemlock Hollow, is listed for $1,699,999. 

Credit

Compass

image
Caption

This six bedroom, five and a half bath, 21 Kerry Lane, is listed for $2,199,999.

Credit

Compass

image
Caption

This five bedroom, three and a half bath, 62 Kathleen Lane, is listed for $995,000.

Credit

Compass


See something you like? Want to see more listings, or find out more about Chappaqua? Contact Compass real estate agent Sari Shaw at [email protected] or 917-597-7394.

Brick Underground articles occasionally include the expertise of, or information about, advertising partners when relevant to the story. We will never promote an advertiser's product without making the relationship clear to our readers.

topics:

family outdoor space parks schools suburbs transportation Westchester
SHARE
TWEET
BRICK’S PICKS
a row of new york city apartments with trees in front.
What’s the average flip tax for a condo or co-op in New York City?
image
I won a $908 studio in Long Island City in NYC's housing lottery, but I didn't count on the culture shock
how to deal with a noisy neighbor NYC
How to ask a noisy neighbor—or even your landlord—to keep it down
penthouse terrace brick underground
The pros and cons of buying a penthouse apartment
image
Should I sign a one- or two-year apartment lease in NYC?
cooking odors brick underground
How do I stop my neighbor's cooking smells from wafting into my apartment?
Follow Brick on Instagram
@brickunderground | #brickunderground
Brick UndergroundBRICK UNDERGROUNDREAL LIFE. REAL ESTATE. REAL NEW YORK.
Social Links Footer
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Search
Main menu footer
  • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
  • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
  • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
  • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
  • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
  • Escape
    • Beach
    • Mountains
    • Suburbs
    • Vacation Rentals
    • Second Homes

Get more news you can actually use...

Email Address

Delivered to your inbox twice weekly - for free.

*By signing up you agree to receive occasional emails on behalf of our sponsors

Footer Menu
  • About Us
  • Advertise

Copyright 2009-2024 by BND Ventures Inc | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Ad Choices | Login