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A big upgrade is underway at 153 Lincoln Place. The beautiful, 9,000-square-foot Queen Anne mansion sold for $5,500,000 in June. The new owner is now in the process of converting it from a Class B Housing (aka a rooming house) into Class A housing (aka condos or market-rate rentals). Has anyone heard anything more about the project? We’d love to know what kind of shape the interiors are in. It must have (or had) some incredible wood work. GMAP P*Shark DOB


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  1. I live next door to the building… and have for 15 years. There was never much detail of note, even on the parlour floor. The action for this building is not the front but the side… the frescos are actually of white stone but the former owners, for some reason painted them brown… I have been told that they will not build on the lot between the conservatory and the hotel. If they try to, I will mount as much resistance as possible. It would be a terrible tragedy to lose the beautiful open space that has been there forever and is part of a plan. If you look at the side of the building, you will see. If this is not what Landmarks was about, I don’t know what is. I remember the day the hotel closed… Thanksgiving I think 2002. Construction started about 3 plus years ago. The owner / builder was an amateur and pretty sloppy, this combined with greed turned out badly. The building was totally gutted… the basement dug out, the attic extended…all about increasing square footage. Where for years I looked at a beautiful slate roof, now I see a cinder block wall… The old beams, beautiful old wood, now sits in the back area… rotting away. I tried to get a furniture maker in Maine to buy it but the the then owner had big plans for this wonderful old wood. The construction stopped and the building sat close to 3 years empty with the roof leaking and suffering from total neglect — a tragic disrespect for this fine historic building and a total disregard for the community in which it sits. Sad, but quiet… in a strange way. For years we watched the 24 hour comings and goings of the hotel’s interesting clientele. I knew when the building sold, I would miss this… and I do. The new builder appears professional and I have a much better feeling about the future propects. This is a wonderful building and it needs respect. I think it has good times ahead… I sure hope so as I ain’t going anywhere.

  2. There is absolutely not detail left in the building. It had been bought some years ago for about 2.5 million and had reportedly been in terrible shape. The previous owner said that it was a lot had to be invested to stabilize infrastructure of the building. If you pass by and look in, you will see framing doing on with absolutely no detail present. In the present incarnation, the basement has been dug out and the back has been extended. It will be a shame if they build another structure on the side yard.

  3. Park Slope could use a nice new brothel.
    It would take the kids off the street and it would give husbands -sorry, male partners- an opportunity to visit a stroller-free environment without having to go all the way to Manhattan, or the suburbs.
    It would therefore save a lot of fuel use and help slow global warming.

  4. There is gorgeous woodwork, at least at the parlor level. When I first moved into Park Slope and was planning for a visit from friends, I naively went inside to inquire about room rates. I thought it was a B&B. The clerk – behind bulletproof plexi – told me the hourly rate, something like $20.