RetireNet.com

Communities Net Premier community living featuring affordable to upscale living in planned active developments. Worldwide resource for active planned new home communities, rv/resort homes, golf course homes, vacation homes and luxury country club lifestyles. Communities Net is the most comprehensive resource of premier master planned communities throughout the world featuring site built homes, manufactured homes, waterfront living, gated communities, golf course home and more. See also: New Homes, Golf Course Homes, Mortgage Information, Pre-Owned Homes, Resales, Second Homes, New Home Buyers, For Sale By Owner, Country Club Living, Resort Living.

Please Note: You are currently viewing the non-styled version of our website. Either your browser does not support Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) or support is disabled. Upgrading to a newer browser that features CSS support is almost always easy and free, and will allow you to enjoy enhanced functionality on other sites as well. We recommend Mozilla Firefox for all Windows and Linux systems, and for Macintosh OSX.

The world's largest and most complete directory of community living.

 

Find Your Ideal Retirement Community

NYC Metro: RV Lifestyles

 

View Community Listings

The New York City Metro is the most populous metropolitan area in the United States and the fourth most populous in the world (after Tokyo, Seoul, and Mexico City).

The metropolitan area is defined by the United States Census Bureau as the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), with an estimated population (as of 2005) of 18,747,320. The MSA is further subdivided into four metropolitan divisions. The 23-county metropolitan area includes the seven counties that constitute New York City and Long Island, twelve counties in northern New Jersey, three counties north of New York City in New York State, and one county in northeastern Pennsylvania.

 

Of Interest

Latest Local News from the New York Post Online Edition

The future of Detroit's reeling car industry is riding on a new technology already rolling across New York City and its northern suburbs - a vehicle that uses no gas and produces only water from its ...

 

The former busboy suing Justin Timberlake's Upper East Side restaurant for stiffing him is the stand-up employee who happily accepted a $200 tip for returning a $200,000 watch a guest had dropped. ...

 

A Boston College student from Long Island snapped yesterday while arguing with her engineer boyfriend - and stabbed him in the neck with a broken beer bottle at an East Village nightclub, cops said. ...

 

Rising construction prices, design changes and a dearth of bidders have more than doubled the cost of a gigantic water-filtration plant being built 10 stories beneath a Bronx driving range, budget ex...

 

'Tis the season to give - but New Yorkers might want to think twice before opening their wallets to four area non-profits that got lousy ratings from a top charity watchdog. Celebrity magnet TJ Mar...

 

It might not be a Christmas miracle, but brisk sales of toys, electronics and clothing spurred weekend receipts that kept retailers from going over the edge - at least for now. US shoppers spent an...

 

Bottled water and water coolers are draining taxpayer money and should be banned from city offices, two councilmen say. "Water is one resource we have plenty of [and] is essentially free and a...

 

Tina Fey has revealed the secret behind the scar on her face - barely visible here. The beautiful funnywoman vamps it up for the January edition of Vanity Fair (below), where she and hubby Jeff Ric...

 

Even when the subway and bus fare goes up from $2, New Yorkers won't get taken for a ride - at least compared with commuters in other major world cities. The predicted $2.50 fare will still be a hu...

 

More New Yorkers signed up for welfare checks in October than in any other month this year, in keeping with an annual trend, records show. An additional 5,607 city residents enrolled in the welfare...

 
 

Local News from The NY Times

Consider a detour to Long Island City, Queens, one subway stop from Grand Central Station, where there are inviting restaurants.

 

Cyclists are urging the installation of a protected bike lane on Queens Boulevard.

 

A park destabilized by construction and closed in 2004 is finally going to reopen.

 

Since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in August 2005, the Saints crowd at Bar None has grown steadily.

 

Halal Live Meat and Poultry Market in Queens was opened to serve the Muslim community, but has unexpectedly come to draw a broad, polyglot clientele.

 

Surrounded by vending machines and a hallway of lockers, the New Day United Methodist Church held services at the Bronx High School of Science.

 

Many cafes and coffee shops around the city charge for wireless connections, but rare is the charge for electricity.

 

The bear looms and there is financial disarray downtown. But the beat goes on.

 

She challenged the dreaded ?major capital improvement? ? which passes a landlord?s costs for improving rental property to tenants ? and she lived to tell the tale.

 

If intersections are the city at its most intense, the places where the pulse of life quickens and unexpected things happen, New York is the richest city in the world.

 
 

See more articles