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Whoa! Several readers emailed this new listing at 35 Prospect Park West to us yesterday, and with good reason. If the nine-room co-op ends up fetching anywhere near its asking price of $6,500,000, it’ll roughly double the highest price we’re aware of a co-op in Brooklyn ever going for. This could do it, too. We’re talking about 3,500 square feet of interior space over two floor in one of the (if not the) best prewar apartment buildings in Park Slope; throw in another 2,300 square feet of wrap-around terrace space and you’re looking at a pretty killer pad. As for the price, this is one of those unique places that defies comps and simply hinges on the question of whether the right super-rich person will walk in the door and fall in love. Note: This is a co-exclusive between Corcoran and Brown Harris Stevens.
35 Prospect Park West Penthouse. [Corcoran] GMAP P*Shark
35 Prospect Park West Penthouse. [Brown Harris Stevens]


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Here’s what I do know: seems to be a well run building. clean, good workers coverage (hence the mntc $). Pain in the butt super and doormen who think they own the neighborhood. old school environment. views ok. priced too high

  2. RE: “Supposedly Marty Markowitz lives in a building on PPW with a major bedbug infestation. Is this that building?

    Posted by: Henry at June 13, 2007 1:50 PM”

    No, Marty lives further down PPW – closer to 9th Street.

  3. Since I’m not a real estate I’m not sure how to compare apartments but there are certainly a whole lot of apartments in the upper east side that are in the 600-700/sqft range and there are plenty of apartments in Brooklyn that are in the 1000/sqft range. Granted, the 1000/sqft apartment in brooklyn is high-end and the $600/sqft apartment in Manhattan is low-end, but i think there is enough room between these numbers to make a case that Brooklyn is on par with some Manhattan neighborhoods.

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