Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: A Marine Park Tudor, a Brooklyn Heights Anglo-Italianate
The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a co-op in Clinton Hill, a brownstone in Prospect Heights and a detached brick house in Dyker Heights.
The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a co-op in Clinton Hill, a brownstone in Prospect Heights and a detached brick house in Dyker Heights.
It is another week where listings are dotted around the borough, this time from Marine Park to Brooklyn Heights. The least expensive is a Prospect Heights rental at $7,250 a month and the most expensive is a Brooklyn Heights row house asking $7.25 million.
Which would you choose?
10. While it’s not exactly cheap, this upper duplex for rent in a Prospect Heights Queen Anne row house would seem to check a lot of boxes, especially for a family. Mixing modern functionality with historic details, it has three bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms, for starters.
598 Bergen Street #2
Price: $7,250 a month
Area: Prospect Heights
Broker: Corcoran (Karen Talbott)
Family-Sized Prospect Heights Duplex With Mantels, Central Air, Garden Wants $7,250
See it here ->
9. It has the narrow width of a classic Anglo-Italianate but this renovated Brooklyn Heights two-family has an expansive five floors of living space — and the means to access it via the rare amenity of an elevator.
28 Willow Street
Price: $7.25 million
Area: Brooklyn Heights
Broker: Brown Harris Stevens (Ciro Scala)
Brooklyn Heights Anglo-Italianate With Wood Burning Fireplaces, Elevator Asks $7.25 Million
See it here ->
8. In Dyker Heights, an early 20th century semi-detached brick house with a garage is move-in ready and has fun updates as well as original details. The single-family has mini split air conditioning, three bedrooms and two bathrooms.
1032 76th Street
Price: $1,198,888
Area: Dyker Heights
Broker: RE/MAX Elite (Robert Coppolino, Joseph Madaio)
Jazz Age-Era Dyker Heights House With Garage and Three Others to See, Starting at $915K
See it here ->
7. Petite yet grand at the same time, this studio apartment on the garden floor of a brownstone offers a relatively low price tag close to amenities such as Prospect Park and Grand Army Plaza.
19 7th Avenue #BF
Price: $399,000
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Corcoran (Carol Graham, Jennifer Wilson)
Park Slope Studio With Working Fireplace, Five Windows in Neo-Grec Brownstone Asks $399K
See it here ->
6. In Red Hook, a mid-19th century brick house has lost its cornice and acquired a stucco coating but retains its historic ironwork. In use as a single-family (though it is technically two), the row house channels rustic chic with wide plank floors; exposed beams, bricks and mechanicals; and two unfitted kitchens.
91 Pioneer Street
Price: $1.595 million
Area: Red Hook
Broker: Compass (Orren Azani)
A Dutch Colonial Revival With Garage in Flatlands and Two More to See, Starting at $800K
See it here ->
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5. In the Cobble Hill Historic District, this brownstone has some period details, like plasterwork and marble mantels, along with an updated kitchen.
52 Tompkins Place
Price: $6.49 million
Area: Cobble Hill
Broker: Brown Harris Stevens (Kristi Spessard Azaroff, Michael Petrosino)
Cobble Hill Brownstone With Three Working Fireplaces, Formal Garden Asks $6.495 Million
See it here ->
4. In addition to the vintage details that might appeal to lovers of the period, this 1930s Marine Park brick Tudor also offers a garage and a location just a short stroll from the neighborhood’s eponymous park.
3615 Avenue T
Price: $865,000
Area: Marine Park
Broker: RE/MAX Edge (Gennadi B. Barmin)
Marine Park Tudor With Original ‘Domestic Science’ Kitchen Cabinets, Deco Bath, Garage Asks $865K
See it here ->
3. Here’s a 19th century apartment that has been modernized with an open kitchen, arches and some fun bathroom tile, but the woodwork and floors remain.
275 Clinton Avenue #31
Price: $1.899 million
Area: Clinton Hill
Broker: Brown Harris Stevens (Jeffrey Mandelbaum, Kenneth Gene Mandelbaum)
Big, Airy Three-Bedroom With Two Baths in 1897 Clinton Hill Elevator Building Asks $1.899 Million
See it here ->
2. A circa 1870 Italianate in the Prospect Heights Historic District has carved marble mantels, tall arched doors, wainscoting, shutters and wood floors.
149 Prospect Place
Price: $4 million
Area: Prospect Heights
Broker: Compass (Ian Mednick)
A Prospect Heights Italianate Brownstone and Two More to See, Starting at $1.595 Million
See it here ->
1. In the Stuyvesant Heights Historic District, a circa 1900 townhouse dressed in pale stone has encaustic tile in the entry, fretwork, mantels, moldings, tin ceilings, bead board and original shutters.
83 Chauncey Street
Price: $1.595 million
Area: Bed Stuy
Broker: Compass (Debra Bondy)
A Prospect Heights Italianate Brownstone and Two More to See, Starting at $1.595 Million
See it here ->
Related Stories
- Find Your Dream Home in Brooklyn and Beyond With the New Brownstoner Real Estate
- Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: A Studio in Park Slope, a Brownstone in Brooklyn Heights
- Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: A Standalone in Ditmas Park, a Row House in Bay Ridge
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