There comes a moment in every search when the pace slows. When the steady stream of options gives way to a quieter recognition--that perhaps a different kind of space exists. One that feels less like compromise and more like alignment.1703 Monsey Ave is a 3-bedroom, 1.5-bath half-double apartment in Green Ridge, Scranton. Utilities are tenant-paid. The home includes a full unfinished basement and a large unfinished attic. Landlord may consider a pet. First floor half bath and laundry room with hook-up. Current tenant will be vacating shortly.Green Ridge is one of those neighborhoods that asks nothing of you. It simply continues -- Victorian rooflines, mature canopy, walkable blocks, the quiet institutional gravity of Marywood University nearby. Streets like this don't announce themselves. They persist. And the buildings on them carry that same quality: built when permanence was assumed, not promised.This apartment occupies a half-double of considerable scale. The word half understates it. The rooms move with a generosity that Victorian construction understood and modern construction has largely forgotten -- ceiling height as a given, not a luxury. The architecture has opinions. You may already begin to notice, as you picture it, that there's a difference between a space that performs comfort and one that simply has it.At a certain point, you may find yourself comparing this to everything else you've seen... and noticing what's missing elsewhere. Space. Structure. A sense of quiet confidence.When that picture feels clear, the next step is simple.Reach out. Ask what you want to know.Walk through it in person and let the space answer the rest.