
This $1.1M Providence Condo Has Stunning Skylights. Reddit Has Some Questions About That.
The listing for Unit D1 at 116 Chestnut Street in Providence's Jewelry District describes a gallery-like entry hall, a skylit main living space, professional appliances, radiant-heated floors, and elegant stone throughout. Reddit's response was a detailed list of practical concerns that the listing, perhaps intentionally, had not addressed.
The Condo
The 2,351-square-foot unit occupies what appears to be a converted former garage or industrial bay in an 1887 building in Providence's historic Jewelry District — a neighborhood steps from Waterfire, College Hill, and a stretch of acclaimed restaurants. The space is genuinely striking: a cavernous single-story layout flooded with natural light from ridge skylights running along the roofline, with warm brick and wood textures, a gas fireplace with radiant-heated floors, a showstopping kitchen with professional appliances and elegant stonework, a large primary suite with a walk-in shower, and a second ensuite bedroom. The listing calls it a "one-of-a-kind property" and notes that "this home cannot be replicated anywhere in downtown or Eastside neighborhoods." At $1,100,000 for a standalone unit with a $620 monthly HOA fee, it is priced for the finish level and the location.
The Questions the Listing Didn't Answer
Reddit's top commenter — with the measured tone of someone who has lived in a cool-looking space before — raised several questions in rapid succession. The ridge skylights that bathe the main space in natural light also run along the top of the building, meaning pedestrians walking above can look down into the living area. There is no mention of retractable shades anywhere in the listing. The windows along the upper portion of the walls require a ladder to reach. What you'd see through them, at street level, is moving legs. The rooftop — described as an area that seems ideal for outdoor seating — appears to be off-limits or inaccessible. The A/C condensers are on the roof directly above the living space, raising noise questions that the listing likewise does not address. And the final observation: "What was there before? Covered garage?" — which, given the conversion evidence, may be the most accurate single-sentence description of the unit's architectural history. All of which is to say: the interior is genuinely cool. There are also some things worth asking about before you sign.
The Internet Has Thoughts
Naturally, this listing caught the attention of Reddit's r/zillowgonewild community. See what people are saying about it here.
Radiant floors, professional appliances, stunning skylights — and a few open questions about shades, noise, and the roof. View the full listing here.



















