Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: A Ditmas Park Standalone, a Flatbush Co-op
The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a Williamsburg row house, a Windsor Terrace brick and a Park Slope brownstone.
The most popular listings on Brownstoner this week include a Williamsburg row house, a Windsor Terrace brick townhouse and a Park Slope brownstone.
The top 10 are scattered across the borough this week, and even into Columbia County. The least expensive on the list is a Flatbush co-op at $550,000 and the most expensive is a Brooklyn Heights brownstone at $13.75 million.
Which would you choose?
10. This circa 1870s Anglo Italianate brownstone in the Brooklyn Heights Historic District has a corner location for good light and distinctive details including leaded glass and mantels.
1 Montague Terrace
Price: $13.75 million
Area: Brooklyn Heights
Broker: Compass (Caryl Berenato)
A Carroll Gardens Brownstone With Fancy Plaster and Three More to See, Starting at $1.29 Million
See it here ->
9. In Bay Ridge, this early 20th century single-family row house offers charm on the exterior along with some period details on the interior.
465 76th Street
Price: $1.1 million
Area: Bay Ridge
Broker: Coldwell Banker (Mary Kae Higgins)
A Wood-Filled Park Slope Brownstone and Three Others to See This Weekend, Starting at $1.1 Million
See it here ->
8. A proposed revitalization hasn’t materialized and now this 19th century firehouse facing Hudson’s Public Square is in search of a new owner.
8 Park Place
Price: $1.495 million
Area: Hudson, N.Y.
Broker: Tri Hudson Realty (Robert A. Huston)
Come to the Rescue of Hudson’s J. W. Edmonds Firehouse, Yours for $1.495 Million
See it here ->
7. While not flashy, this mid 20th century apartment has many charming features of its era and a second bedroom, carved out of a dining nook off the kitchen.
601 East 19th Street, #2F
Price: $550,000
Area: Flatbush
Broker: Compass (Ronit Abraham)
Tidy Two-Bedroom With 1940s Flair, Black and White Vintage Tile in Flatbush Wants $550K
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6. This Park Slope brownstone has an interesting mix of historic and contemporary details ranging from mantels and a pier mirror to parking and solar panels.
99 Lincoln Place
Price: $4.25 million
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Corcoran (Katie A. Feola)
Park Slope Neo-Grec With Parking, Solar Panels, Chicken Coop Asks $4.25 Million
See it here ->
5. In Williamsburg’s petite Fillmore Place Historic District, where author Henry Miller lived as a boy, an 1850s brick house retains ear moldings, white marble mantels and wide floor boards.
22 Fillmore Place
Price: $2.9 million
Area: Williamsburg
Broker: Corcoran (Marvin Chu, Chris Cavorti)
A Ditmas Park Bungalow With Garage and Three Others to See, Starting at $1.95 Million
See it here ->
4. One of a row of early 20th century brick houses, this Windsor Terrace single-family offers some charm on the interior with details like wood floors, built-ins, wainscoting and vintage kitchen details.
21 Kermit Place
Price: $1.448 million
Area:Windsor Terrace
Broker: Compass (Daniella Guetta)
Windsor Terrace Row House With Wainscoting, Built-ins, Vintage Kitchen Asks $1.448 Million
See it here ->
3. In Fort Greene, a 14-foot-wide Italianate brownstone is not in the local historic district but is in the Fort Greene National Register Historic District. Built sometime in the 1860s, it is now a two-family composed of a triplex over a garden one-bedroom.
131 South Oxford Street
Price: $3.295 million
Area: Fort Greene
Broker: Brown Harris Stevens (Lee Solomon)
A Ditmas Park Bungalow With Garage and Three Others to See, Starting at $1.95 Million
See it here ->
2. An 1890s brownstone in the Park Slope Historic District catches the eye with its original ironwork and spectacular stonework, which includes intricate Celtic-style scrollwork and puffy stacked bands of brownstone.
456 14th Street
Price: $3.495 million
Area: Park Slope
Broker: Corcoran (Nathalie Roy, Charlie Pigott)
A Ditmas Park Bungalow With Garage and Three Others to See, Starting at $1.95 Million
See it here ->
1. In the Ditmas Park Historic District, this estate-condition bungalow built in 1916 is a “blank canvas” that will need a “total gut renovation,” according to the listing, which does not show any interior photos.
1612 Ditmas Avenue
Price: $1.95 million
Area: Ditmas Park
Broker: Bergen Basin Realty (Lee S. Wasserman)
A Ditmas Park Bungalow With Garage and Three Others to See, Starting at $1.95 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 Bay Ridge Row House, a Prospect Heights Brownstone
- Top 10 Brooklyn Real Estate Listings: A Park Slope Limestone, a Kensington Standalone
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