Neo-Classical Row House by Axel Hedman With Central Air, Brighter Look Asks $4.895 Million
We could write a whole special treatise on light vs. dark colors in the visual culture of brownstone...
Stephen Zacks is an architecture critic, urbanist, and curator based in New York City. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, Village Voice, Art in America, Hyperallergic, Abitare, Landscape Architecture Magazine, The Architect’s Newspaper, Architectural Record, Metropolis, Monocle, Blueprint, Mic, Curbed, and Print. He is currently writing a cultural history of New York City during the 1970s and 80s.
We could write a whole special treatise on light vs. dark colors in the visual culture of brownstone...
This week's open house picks are spacious affairs, including a well-appointed single-family home in ...
This perfectly adequate prewar one-bedroom in Prospect Heights has perhaps enough room for a small b...
This circa 1900 limestone townhouse in Windsor Terrace with pronounced bay windows and a mixture of ...
In defense of its name, when it was built in 1914, neo-Colonial architecture was in vogue and the te...
This two-story brick row house in East Flatbush originally formed part of a development built in 193...
This freestanding Colonial Revival at 60 Hinckley Place in Prospect Park South has the grandiosity o...
When the first lofts were legalized in 1961, it was because artists formed the Artists Tenants Assoc...
The three-story landmarked 1850s brick townhouse at 190 Warren Street belonged to the late Magnum ph...
It's almost Thanksgiving, which means this weekend is your last chance to tour open houses before th...